City of Las Vegas relights some favorite neon signs

The City of Las Vegas, working with the Neon Museum, has installed three neon signs from the Neon Boneyard.  Better yet, on Monday evening, the City held a relighting ceremony as the Bow and Arrow Motel, the Horseshoe "H" and the beloved Silver Slipper were turned back on.

From the Las Vegas Sun:

At first glance, drivers might wonder if there's a giant ladies' footwear sale going on near Cashman Stadium.

But no. That giant sparkling high-heeled shoe perched near the tops of the palm trees along Las Vegas Boulevard North is actually a step back into the city's neon past.

Shimmering with some 980 twinkling lights, the shoe was originally the whimsical icon of the Silver Slipper Gambling Hall that had its heyday nearly a half century ago.

But now the restored 12-by-17-foot three-dimensional shoe is a symbol of the city's commitment to step up to honor its colorful historical main drag.

The Silver Slipper, which also glitters with stories about billionaire recluse Howard Hughes and even "Mr. Las Vegas" Wayne Newton, was one of three historic neon signs turned on at dusk Monday along Las Vegas Boulevard.

With a countdown led by Mayor Oscar Goodman, the three signs were lighted during a ceremony at the Reed Whipple Cultural Center.

"It was 90 years ago, in 1929, that we had the first neon here in Las Vegas turned on," Goodman said. "... We have a unique city, with a unique art form. We preserved it and we're going to continue to preserve it."

The three signs, on loan from the Neon Museum, were lit to celebrate the designation of Las Vegas Boulevard as a National Scenic Byway from Washington Avenue to the north to Sahara Avenue to the south.

"Specifically, in an economy where things are going down, ladies and gentlemen, we continue to bring lights up in the entertainment capital of the world," said Ward 5 Councilman Ricki Barlow.

The designation, granted in October, will help the city to get federal funds to restore as many as 20 historic neon signs in the median in that corridor, Goodman said.

"The city council has made a decision that we're not going to implode our history. We're going to preserve our history," Goodman said.

"That's why we have the Neon Museum across the street, the Neon Boneyard. And now we're beginning to exhibit these things that make us really distinct from any other city. It's a lot of fun, number one. And number two, it has great significance because this is what we're all about. This is where we came from."

He said the city will use Las Vegas Boulevard's new scenic byway as a canvas for painting the city's history with its local art form, neon signs.

"This is our history," he said. "We're unique here in Las Vegas. ... No other place has the kind of art form that we have. I think it's very important when people go up and down this particular road that they're able to share our history with us and enjoy these very iconic locations."

Among dignitaries attending the ceremony was U.S. Rep. Shelley Berkley, D-Nev., who remembered one of the first things she saw upon coming to Las Vegas as a child were the glittering signs.

"I remember through 12-year-old eyes, driving down the Strip for the first time and seeing this extraordinary street with this magnificent neon," she said. "I remember thinking when I was 12 years old this is the most remarkable street I have ever seen. Forty-seven years later I drive down the same street, I have the same reaction and it takes my breath away."

A cultural corridor

City Manager Betsy Fretwell said the highest concentration of cultural institutions in Las Vegas was in the vicinity of the signs, including Cashman Center, the Las Vegas Library, the Natural History Museum, the Lied Discovery Children's Museum, the Neon Museum, the Old Las Vegas Mormon Fort, the State Historic Park and the Reed Whipple Cultural Center.

The first three vintage signed were refurbished and installed in new landscaped median islands for $1.1 million.

About a block to the south of the glittering slipper is the original sign for the Bow & Arrow Motel. At 35-feet tall and six-feet wide, it lights up the median near Bonanza Street with bright red lettering and an animated arrow being strung onto a bow.

The sign was the beacon for the motel that originally located in the downtown on Las Vegas Boulevard at Wyoming Avenue during the late 1950s or early 60s.

To the north, in the median that splits the street into a byway, is another sign that once glittered at Binion's Horseshoe Casino on Fremont Street. The sign was built by Young Electric Sign Company and installed in the 1960s.

The 13-by-12-foot rotating sign features a large golden neon horseshoe trimmed in blue neon lights, with an "H" at the bottom in gold flashing neon and red "CASINO" in the center.

"That's as important as any sign in the community," Goodman said. "When Benny Binion opened the Horseshoe, we established our reputation as being able to take a bet on anything and no limit. And that's what Las Vegas is all about.

Tales of the Silver Slipper

Before the ceremony, William Marion, who chairs the Neon Museum Board, told a story about Howard Hughes' and Wayne Newton's involvement with the Silver Slipper sign.

Hughes, who had moved to the Desert Inn in late 1968 and eventually bought it, had a penthouse directly across the street from the Silver Slipper sign, which was brightly lit and rotated. Hughes made a request that it be turned off.

"They wouldn't shut it off, so he told his aides to buy the property," Marion said. "That's how he got to own the Silver Slipper."

There were other rumors, too, about why Hughes bought the Silver Slipper, including he thought someone had put a camera in its toe that was pointed at his penthouse and spying on him.

Wayne Newton's involvement with the Silver Slipper sign came after Hughes had the sign taken down.

Newton had come to the sign's resting place, in the city's Neon Boneyard, to do promotional shoot years later. And when the 6-foot-3, barrel-chested singer stepped up on its toe, his foot went through it, Marion said.

Colorful characters

Goodman said he used to spend a lot of time over at the Silver Slipper, which he called "one of the original joints, so to speak."

"It had a lot of colorful people who used to hang out there at that part of the Strip," he said.

Goodman, known for his love of martinis, chuckled at the thought of how much of his favorite gin that particular Silver Slipper sign might hold. No, the mayor said. He hadn't done the math.

"Now that you mention it, it takes on a very special significance," he said, chuckling.

 

 

 

Thanks also to Jack LeVine at VeryVintageVegas.com for allowing us to use some of these images

Florence McClure, activist, has died

 

 

"Hurricane Flo" and her husband, Jim

To many living in Las Vegas, they only know her as a name on a building but for many of us of a certain age, she was one of the pioneering women of post-war Las Vegas.  In a year that has seen too many of our post-war pioneers passing away, this one makes the year even sadder.

From the R-J:

Florence McClure, nicknamed “Hurricane Flo” by the politicians she hounded and the journalists who covered her, was not the type of mother who stayed home and baked cookies, daughter Carolyn McClure Dunne recalled today.

She was a working woman before there were working women, she said.

“She was a groundbreaker, and she set an example for all of us,” said Dunne, 60. “She was a highly educated, highly charged individual, and a great role model for a daughter.”

McClure, a renowned advocate for women’s rights in Nevada and for whom the women’s correctional facility in North Las Vegas is named, died Thursday. She was 88.

Dunne said her mother, famous for pestering legislators until they listened, earned every word in her nickname.

“She was a whirlwind,” Dunne said. “She would come in and bowl over a room, bring everyone together, speak her point, and no one would say no.”

University of Nevada, Las Vegas history professor Joanne Goodwin said McClure was a formidable advocate who had her hand in nearly every women’s group in town.

McClure started what would become the Rape Crisis Center out of her home in 1974, and in 1975, she began petitioning the state Legislature on outdated rape laws, Goodwin said.

In that first year, McClure’s petitions were directly responsible for a bill that made it illegal to admit the sexual history of a rape victim as evidence in court, unless it was directly related to the case.

Today that might seem typical, Goodwin said, but in the early 1970s, marital rape wasn’t even considered a crime.

“She overcame some big hurdles. That was also the year that rape changed from sexual battery to sexual assault, a major shift in the seriousness of the crime,” Goodwin said.

Marlene Adrian, president of Women of Diversity Productions, produced the documentary “Hurricane Florence” about McClure’s life.

She said McClure would often sit with rape victims in court, and sometimes was the only person there for the victim.

“She was trying to make sure they’d feel they had at least one support person in the audience,” Adrian said.

McClure carried her work into the ’80s and ’90s, continuing to focus on the rights of women — even those in prison.

Dunne said her mother believed the women’s correctional facility should be moved closer to the city. A rural location might have been out of the public eye, but it was also farther away from the families of the prisoners, she said.

“She wanted it close enough for the kids to see their parents, so in turn the women would have incentive to rehabilitate,” Dunne said.

The women’s prison was moved to North Las Vegas in 1997 and named after McClure in 2007.

Dunne said McClure was always busy during Dunne’s childhood, and it wasn’t until Dunne was an adult that they forged a stronger relationship.

By then, the “osmosis process” had begun, and Dunne found herself participating in events with her mother.

“We’re not all meant to be exactly the same, but I got some very good things from her,” she said.

One of the little-known facts about McClure, Dunne said, was that she didn’t want every person who committed crimes against women to rot in jail forever, as was the perception.

When a male teenager’s family approached McClure about helping their son, who was being released from prison after committing a sex crime, McClure was more than happy to help, Dunne said.

“She helped him get integrated back into the work force and championed him to get his life turned around,” she said.

“That’s what she was about, what she wanted people to do — make a better life for people.”

Vegas Valley Book Festival - This Weekend!

 

  

  • November 7, 2009
    • Author Sessions 
    • 10:00 am -4:00 pm  My co-author, Carey Burke, and I will be part of the Author Sessions.  We will be selling copies of our book, "Las Vegas: 1905-1965" so come by and get your autographed copy!  I will also have copies of my DVD, "The Story of Classic Las Vegas" for sale.  By buying on Saturday, you can save up to $11.00 when you buy both!  Time: 10:00 am

    • Amelias Long Journey
      Time: 7:00 pm
    • Author and Columnist John L. Smith presents a reading from his new book, "Amelia's Long Journey".  The book is about his young daughter's struggle with cancer and how that struggle affects and inspires not only her family but those around her as well.
    • Clark County Library, Flamingo Branch.
  • November 8, 2009
    • 11:15 am:
    • Geoff Schumacher, journalist and author, Michael Green, historian, Lorraine Hunt-Bono,  and Jack Sheehan, author and humorist. From Bugsy Siegel and Benny Binion to Howard Hughes and Steve Wynn, eccentric and visionary characters populate Las Vegas history — and this panel of local experts will break down who among them was truly important and who was just colorful.
    • Closing Keynote Address 
    •  Time: 7:00 pm
    • E.L. Doctrow, one of the most respected authors of our time, will be delivering the closing Keynote Address.
  • Time: 11:00 am

    Last night's Untold Stories

    If you missed last night's "Untold Stories" about Howard Hughes, you should probably kick yourself.  It was a great evening of history, memories and stories.  Geoff Schumacher, Paul Winn and Robert McCaffery were wonderful.  We heard about Hughes' early years, in Hollywood as well as his time in Las Vegas prior to 1966.

    We heard about his almost tragic crash in Beverly Hills and how that could have been avoided.  Also, the topic of the flying boat, aka the Spruce Goose, and the effort to keep it from getting sliced up to nine different museums.

    And lastly, about Hughes in Las Vegas in the mid to late 1960s.  His relationship with Hank Greenspun, with Robert Maheu, his casino buying spree and more.

    "Untold Stories" is the only monthly series that each month focuses on a different historic Las Vegas topic.  Each month, men and women who helped build Las Vegas, who helped make our history and who watched our town grow from a dusty railroad town to the Entertainment Capital of the World, come out to share their stories and memories.

    If you aren't there, you should be because it is history, living history, at its finest.  You won't hear these stories anywhere else.  You won't get the chance anywhere else, to talk with them first hand, to see the memorabilia that they bring.

    So, come on, what are you waiting for?

    Join us the first Thursday of each month (dark in January) at the Springs Preserve for "Untold Stories" and find out more about the place we all call home.

    You won't be disappointed!