February, 2009
By John Evanoff
Casino Gaming came to Reno and especially Northern
Nevada in legal form in 1931 to offset job losses from the depression
and help the economy, but it was only in the late 1940’s through
the 1950’s that changed the west’s outlook on this previous
to sinful behavior and gambling was accepted as a form of entertainment.
Prior to 1931, the back parlors of saloons and hotels were full
of gamblers playing the games of chance of the day like poker, roulette,
craps and faro. Mind you, for a period of almost thirty years, Nevada
and especially Reno played with the moral values of the nation by
changing the period for granting divorce on several occasions until
it was eventually whittled down to a few weeks of stay before a
judge could sign and award the separation. Much of the responsibility
for these laws being enacted fell to a few flamboyant entrepreneurs
and political authorities who typically advocated the relaxation
of freedoms not to curtail civilization but to attract visitors.
Reno wasn’t much of a town without the railroad and in order
to influence folks to visit our little high desert getaway, something
had to be different to make people come. Business was business and
much of the talk of legal purism from the newspapers and government
officials west of the Missouri was quieted by our own highly influential
senators and governors of the time. Throughout the 1920’s,
30’s and 40’s, a who’s who of American celebrity
and wealth whiled away their time waiting for divorce for up to
six months and then down to six weeks in Reno hotels, dude ranches
and guest houses. Reno got a reputation for its great night life
including gambling casinos, fine hotels and theaters, among other
things. A dozen small divorce lodges built along Virginia Street
and another dozen along the old Lincoln Highway (West 4th Street)
heading west out of town were constructed specifically for the divorce
trade. Many of them had all the luxuries of the downtown hotels
but with guest quarters built like small cottages so the crying
of the lonely women didn’t wake up the rest of the guests.
Many of the men waiting for divorce stayed in male guest houses
along North Center Street, University Terrace, Ralston Avenue and
Nevada Street overlooking the skyline of Reno. They often spent
time at the many saloons on Commercial Way and in the back betting
parlors of the hotels relaxing to the sounds of a piano player and
nightclub singer. There were many female guest houses as well and
it was perfectly fine for them to enjoy the same pleasures men did
in these same night spots. Reno moneymen and political power, including
our grandiose Mayor Edwin Ewing Roberts during a period of two and
a half decades, created a place the world saw more as a playground,
a place where blue law was chastised and where contentment was the
only priority. Contentment could also be found along Lake Street
and near the Truckee River on Second Street where brothel hotels
and cribs lit their red lanterns throughout the evenings to the
merriment of the male gender. Prostitution was a going concern in
Reno although most of the citizenry looked the other way on that
form of business. Several of the small hotel-bordellos had as many
as fifty women working shifts over twenty four hours a day and a
small Chinese accommodation right next to the river had two dozen
tightly bunched rooms with nothing more than beds and bedpans in
them. All of this went on and word got out to the world that Reno
was the Sin City of the West. To make matters worse according to
the easterners, in 1931, Reno and Nevada was on its way to make
gambling legal and reduce the stay for divorces from six months
to six weeks.
Gambling was common however hidden in most big
cities in back bars and lounges but also at men’s clubs and
plush hotels wherever men bet on just about anything. In fact, throughout
the late 1800’s and well into the depression and during prohibition
San Francisco was the birthplace for many slot manufacturers and
thousands of slot machines were installed at cigar stands, speakeasies
and restaurants. The machines included everything from poker machines
to Charley Fey’s Liberty Bell that was the first to include
symbols on three reels. It wasn’t until the end of prohibition
and reform took down most of the mobsters and slot machines throughout
the United States that Nevada suddenly blossomed as the only place
to sell slot machines. Companies began to move their gaming devices
and “talent” to Reno and then to Las Vegas. If you want
to know more about the advent of the slot machine in American history
and lore, you must visit the Nevada State Museum, which has a large
Fey contribution of the earliest slot machines to be used in Reno.
In 1931 though, no one in America could believe
any state would allow gambling to come out in the open and become
legal. The influence of the towns incredibly wealthy and politically
powerful few guaranteed Reno would become the legal capital of gambling
in the United States. To the outrage of much of congress, to the
point some were calling for statehood to be yanked away from Nevada,
our then Govenor Fred Balzar signed the bill and validated what
had been going on in Reno and most of the rest of the West for more
than seventy years. All of this was done with meticulous planning
by a powerful group of men including: Banker George Wingfield; US
Senator Tasker Lowndes Oddie; Chairman of the Democratic Party Walter
S. Baring Jr.; US Attorney for Nevada Harry Hunt Atkinson; Lieutenant
Governor Morley Isaac Griswold; US Senator Key Pittman; and a few
lawyers to write the language of the bills like Bill Woodburn and
George Thatcher. There were, of course, quite a few more men and
lawyers and in fact it was said Reno had more lawyers practicing
than Sacramento. These men knew how to make money, or better yet,
how to keep it flowing. It was especially Wingfield’s compelling
insistence to measure a town by its growth-by-any-means philosophy
that led to the birth of a new era in Northern Nevada.
Quicker divorces and legitimized gambling were
not the only thing that Reno had to offer though. By a quirk of
legislation in California in 1927 making marriage a wait of three
days to fend off inebriated nuptials, Reno suddenly became the place
to drive from California to get married within minutes. In fact,
Reno began three decades of five to one more marriages than divorce
and the Washoe County Courthouse instituted a special license department
and hitching judge just to handle the huge influx of weddings. After
long years of long days, the judges decided to ease their part in
the department and as a result the many wedding chapels became a
regular Reno fixture all around downtown.
Legalized gambling had arrived, but the country
was busy trying to repair itself from the rigors of depression and
had little use for conversation about the Sodom of the west. A few
casinos flourished in the short term, but money was short all over
the country. Banks were hit hard and many had closed. Wingfield
himself had lost most of his fortune, but wound up expanding on
hotels he owned including the Riverside in anticipation of one day
doing better. In the meantime, World War II had begun and the war
economy surged. Barracks were built in two spots in Reno including
just north of the present fairgrounds and at Stead Air Field. The
military moved tens of thousands of military men through Reno on
buses and trains to forts on the west coast to fight in the Pacific.
Others were being trained here for the European front. When the
war was over and by the end of 1945 hundreds of thousands of military
men came back to their homes in the west, happy to be alive and
looking for work. Many of them remembered Reno and came to live
and work here. During the war, men with gaming experience were hard
to find and it was Harold Pappy Smith who decided to begin the practice
of hiring women dealers that changed how America looked at gambling.
Harold’s Club was famous for the “Harold’s Club
or Bust” signs along American roadways from Canada to Mexico
and all points between. More importantly, a new game had been picked
up by our boys coming back from Europe and more evident in England
that enticed casino owners to bring the simple game to their own
casino floors. Blackjack not only brought more people to the casinos,
but also was instrumental in bringing women across the threshold
in higher numbers, both behind the table and playing the game. Reno’s
population exploded in the 1950’s as a result of the quick
growth of this form of entertainment called casino gambling. In
less than a decade, downtown Reno grew from a dozen small casinos
to the legal gaming capital of the world. Bill Harrah embarked on
building an empire and along the way created the largest collection
of classic automobiles anywhere in the world. The Smiths grew Harold’s
Club into a world wide phenomenon with the first ever escalator
moving visitors from the first floor to the famous Harold’s
Club Gun Collection in the Roaring Camp display on the second floor.
Seven giant carbon arc searchlights atop Harold’s Club’s
roof showed bright the way to Reno from every direction every night.
Harold’s seventh floor dining room overlooked the entire city
and became the highest room to have casino games and slots installed.
Charlie Mapes built the most splendid entertainment hotel ever conceived
of for its day and entertained famous guests in the Sky Room overlooking
the Truckee River and the city. Lincoln Fitzgerald opened the Nevada
Club reputedly bought with funds from the notorious Purple Gang
and sold the best pie a la mode in town on the second floor restaurant.
Bill Fong opened the New China Club to anyone of any color and brought
entertainers such as Sammy Davis Jr to the forefront of casino cabarets.
Keno exploded as a game to be played in hotel restaurants, bars
and even in the hotel rooms. The casino buffet was created. By 1960,
Reno and gambling were synonymous.
In the meantime, in the southern Nevada desert,
a giant was to awake to seize the thunder from Reno. In 1950 and
then again in 1955 floods made a mess of downtown Reno. The Las
Vegas skyline was flooding as well, only with high rise casino resorts.
Within fifteen years, from 1955 to 1970, the strip grew from a few
tumbleweeds to more than a dozen well known resort hotel casinos
and more were well on the way. Not to be outdone, Reno prospered
through the sixty’s trying to nurture big events including
helping to bring the Winter Olympics to Squaw Valley just west of
Reno in California in 1960, the first National Championship Air
Races in 1964, and of course, every summer’s Reno Rodeo, a
Pro Rodeo Circuit prerequisite for rodeo enthusiasts. In 1978, the
MGM, the largest casino hotel in the world opened. Nothing like
it had ever been built and Reno was looking like it could take on
Las Vegas for glitz and glamour. Then, Atlantic City legalized gaming
and Resorts International opened its doors to 30 million people
in its backyard. Abruptly, Reno’s shallow years hit consisting
of politicians who began a building moratorium and citizens bent
on reversing the growth trend to turn the asphalt back to sagebrush.
Pot holes reigned supreme and the wave of tourist enthusiasm went
in a decided southerly direction to Las Vegas.
Through the 1980’s and 1990’s, Reno had a few good years
but nothing like Atlantic City and Las Vegas. Even remote places
like Laughlin were doing better than Reno. With a few exceptions,
corporations had taken over casino gaming and left few lone entrepreneurs
enough of the pie to call themselves lucky to stay alive. By now,
you know the rest of the story. California Indian Gaming took the
last strands of big time casino gaming away from Reno with the opening
of Thunder Valley near Sacramento and Cache Creek north of Oakland.
Tribal Casinos all over America opened and just recently, the final
nail in the coffin came with the building of Red Hawk Casino near
Placerville, further depleting the number of gaming tourists coming
to Reno.
Things change and you never know what might happen,
but the sponsors of Reno’s heyday in gaming history are long
gone. Some say those days will never return and Reno could become
a dusty lonely valley again. Time will tell though. Maybe Reno has
a future in senior living and high rise condominium’s close
to hospitals.
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