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Tag Archives: Strip
Daily Neon: High Hat Regency Motel
September 29, 2014
Posted by: Webmaster
Daily Neon
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Las Vegas Strip as Seen from Henderson
February 15, 2013
The Las Vegas Strip during the day, starting with the mandalay bay (far left) and ending at the Stratosphere tower (far right). Click Image to view the high resolution picture.
Photo by LasVegas360.com
Date Taken March 3, 2012
Posted by: Vegas Info
Archive, The Strip, Vegas
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Daily Neon: Las Vegas at Night
January 18, 2013
This photo was taken from the top of the SOHO Lofts looking south down the Las Vegas Strip. The large tower is the Stratosphere and it is the tallest structure in Las Vegas.
Photo By: LasVegas360.com
Posted by: Webmaster
Daily Neon
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Pinball Hall of Fame Museum
July 16, 2011
Here is another Las Vegas secret, it has the largest collection of pinball machines in the world. The Pinball Hall of Fame Museum is located in a whitewashed nondescript-looking building on Tropicana Blvd. (a mile and half off the Las Vegas Strip). The black and white vinyl sign on the plain building is the only evidence that this place exists. Upon entering the darkened museum, after your eyes have adjusted from the bright light outside, you come upon row after row of vintage pinball machines from the 1940’s to the present.
These pinball machines aren’t just for looking at you can actually play each and every one of them. There are the old mechanical types, the ones with the analog numbers that rotate behind the glass as you score goes up to the modern day multi-ball, multi-layer digital ones you can find from time to time. This place does not charge any admission fee, and most machines cost only a quarter, yes, I said 25 cents! The old bill changers from the hotels have been rescued and given a new life dispensing quarters not tokens.
This place will take you on a memory road trip from games of the past. I remember back in the 70’s the old MGM Grand Hotel (currently Bally’s) used to have a great arcade in the shopping retail area, before the fire. They had quite a collection of pinball machines like Dozer and Home Run, which are now located at the pinball museum. I even found the games that were my favorites from my local neighborhood arcade and stores like the Black Knight, Night Rider and other non-pinball classics like, Tron, Astroids, Defender, Space Invaders and Missile Command. All of these are present and accounted for at the pinball museum.
This is a hi-res 360° Virtual Tour of the Pinball Hame of Fame Museum.
Click here to take a 360° Virtual Tour
The games belong to one club member, Tim Arnold, and the pinball machines date from the 1950s up to 1990s. Since it is a non-profit museum, older games from the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s are the most prevalent, as this was the ‘heyday’ of pinball. They also include some of the early classic video games too. All profits from the museum are donated to local charities.
Most visitors to the museum seem to be in their 40’s-50’s and they bring their kids with them to show them how we use to kick it old style. This was gaming in the analog world of a magic silver ball, clicky buttons, flippers, a sharp eye and a good sense of timing.
Bring your quarters, grab the kids and plan to stay for a few hours, enjoying a blast from the past. No tokens, no tickets, no redemption booth, and no life size plush characters walking around. Enjoy!
Located at 1610 E. Tropicana on the north side of Tropicana between S. Maryland Parkway and S. Eastern Ave, about 12 blocks (1.5 miles) from the ‘strip’ straight down Tropicana. They are open daily 11am-11pm Sunday through Thursday and 11am till Midnight on Friday and Saturday.
Drag you mouse to see a 360° view of the Pinball Hall of Fame Museum
Click here for more 360°panoramic views of the Pinball Hall of Fame
Click for hi-res 360 views
Notice the detail in the glasswork, I wonder why men love pinball?
(Click the images hi-res views)
Visit their web site http://www.pinballmuseum.org/
Posted by: Webmaster
Entertainment, Locals, Vegas
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Las Vegas History
July 4, 2011
Las Vegas History
The Glass Pool Inn -Demolished in 2006. It was called Mirage Motel until 1988 and changed names due to The Mirage opening down the Strip in 1989.
Las Vegas is a relatively young town but its history can be traced all the way back to 1829, when Antonio Armijo lead a party of 60 on the Old Spanish Trail to Los Angeles. While the caravan camped about 100 miles northeast of the present site of Las Vegas, a scouting party set out to look for water. Rafael Rivera, a young Mexican scout who left the main party and headed due west over the unexplored desert, discovered an oasis. The abundance of artesian spring water he found here shortened the Spanish Trail to Los Angeles by allowing travelers to cut directly through rather than around, the vast desert. Spanish traders who used this route were thankful for the shortened trip and they named this convenient desert oasis Las Vegas Spanish for “the Meadows”.
John C. Fremont was the next visitor to the Las Vegas Springs. In 1844 he led one of his many explorations to the Far West. He is still remembered today and his name graces one of the most spectacular streets in Las Vegas, Fremont Street, located downtown.
Ten years later Mormon settlers were sent by BrighamYoung from Salt Lake City to colonize the valley. They built a 150 square foot adobe brick fort, part of which still stands today as the oldest structure in Las Vegas and is appropriately named the Mormon Fort. The Mormons spent two years here before the harsh desert defeated their ambitions. By 1857 the fort was abandoned.
Things really didn’t start happening for Las Vegas until 1904, when the San Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad laid its tracks through the Las Vegas Valley. The Railroad purchased prime land, bought the water rights and surveyed a town site for its railroad servicing and repair facilities. In 1905, the railroad held an auction and sold 700 lots. Las Vegas became a small watering stop with a few hotels, stores, a saloon and a few thousand residents.
When the government appropriated $165 million for the Boulder Canyon Project in 1928, Las Vegas received its first wave of residents. Thousands of Depression weary job seekers came to help build the world’s largest gravity dam, 40 miles from Las Vegas, now named Hoover Dam.
In 1931, construction of the dam began and the Governor of Nevada, Fred Balzar, approved the “wide open” gambling bill that had been introduced by a Winnemucca rancher, Assemblyman Phil Tobin. Up until that time gambling was outlawed in Nevada.
Hoover Dam
As people flocked to the area to work on the Boulder Dam Project the federal government didn’t want the workers to be distracted by the temptations of Las Vegas so they created a separate government town to house them, Boulder City. Gambling was illegal in Boulder City and it still remains the only community in Nevada where gambling is against the law.
The country’s attention was focused on the dam as it was completed in 1935. The dam served as a magnet for federal appropriations, thousands of tourists and new residents and an endless supply of power and electricity. Also, as the country prepared for World War II. Tens of thousands of pilots and gunners trained at the Las Vegas Aerial Gunnery School, opened by the government on 3 million acres north of town. Today this property is home to Nellis Air Force Base and the Nevada Test Site.
By the early 1940s, downtown Las Vegas had several luxury hotels and a dozen small but successful gambling clubs. In 1941 a businessman by the name of Thomas Hull, who owned a string of motor inns in California, decided to open the El Rancho Las Vegas, just outside the city limits right off the highway from Los Angeles. The El Rancho had 100 motel rooms, a western styled casino, it was located right off the highway and had a large parking lot with an inviting swimming pool in the middle. The El Rancho’s quick success led to the building of another property down the road called the Last Frontier Hotel. Thus the Las Vegas Strip was born.