We saw a postcard of downtown Las Vegas looking up Fremont Street from Main. From the age of the cars, it looked like it was from the thirties. A sign on the hotel on the corner said "Sal Sagev" Hotel, which is now the Golden Gate. I would love to know when it was built and when its name was changed.
In 1905, mere weeks after the original Las Vegas land auction in May, one of the first commercial establishments to receive water service from the incipient Las Vegas Land & Water Company was the Miller Hotel, located at One Fremont Street on the southeast corner of Fremont and Main, built by one Abe Miller. Miller bought the three prime lots for his hotel from the railroad for $1,750. The Miller Hotel was a glorified tent, with canvas walls and cots for beds, while ol' Abe was constructing a permanent structure.
A year later, in 1906, Miller opened the Hotel Nevada, a two-story 35-room corner building, the first hotel in Las Vegas to be constructed of concrete. Miller charged $1 to stay in one of the 10-foot-by-10-foot rooms, complete with electric lighting and steam radiators. In the lobby of the Hotel Nevada was a cigar store, the recipient of Las Vegas' first telephone service in 1907; the phone number was 1. There was also a small casino, with roulette and poker.
In 1931, when gambling was legalized throughout the state, Miller expanded the Hotel Nevada, adding a third floor. He also changed the name to "Sal Sagev" (Las Vegas spelled backwards). Three years later, for reasons unknown, Miller closed the casino, which remained closed for the next 20 years.
The Sal Sagev Hotel lasted another 24 years, till a group of partners from San Francisco bought the joint in 1955 and renamed it the Golden Gate, which will celebrate its 65th anniversary in the summer of 2020. It is, of course, the oldest continuously operating hotel in Las Vegas.
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Russell Beyer
Dec-29-2018
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Deke Castleman
Dec-29-2018
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Dan McGlasson
Dec-29-2018
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