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Warren A. Bechtel Album of Hoover Dam: photographic print

Date
1975-01-24
Description
Pg.6 #2339 Hoover Dam, looking upstream. Railroad at Elevation 720 shown at left. Aug. 22nd, 1933. Pg.6 #2345 Hoover Dam, looking upstream. Railroad at Elevation 720 shown at left. Aug. 31st, 1933.

Letter from Walter R. Bracken to C. O. Whittemore (Los Angeles), January 17, 1908

Date
1908-01-17
Description

Letter to the president of the Las Vegas Land and Water Company complaining of the railroad pumping oil from a sump into Las Vegas Creek.

Text

Letter from E. E. Bennett to Leo A. McNamee (Las Vegas), November 24, 1952

Date
1952-11-24
Description

Discussion of the changes made to the purchase contract draft to protect railroad company water rights.

Text

Arthur Walker Gregory Photograph Collection

Identifier
PH-00197
Abstract

The Arthur Walker Gregory Photograph Collection, approximately 1900 to 1920, consists of black-and-white photographic prints, and two corresponding negatives. Two of the images depict the first train to arrive in Las Vegas, Nevada from Salt Lake City, Utah in 1905, one with railroad employees in the foreground. The remaining images depict Arthur Walker Gregory’s class photographs at the Las Vegas Grammar School when he was in the first, third, and fifth grades.

Archival Collection

Albert Purdue oral history interview

Identifier
OH-01521
Abstract

Oral history interview with Albert Purdue conducted by Claytee D. White on August 16, 2000 for the Boyer Early Las Vegas Oral History Project. Purdue begins by explaining the importance of the railroad industry and specifically the Union Pacific Railroad Company to early Las Vegas, Nevada. He discusses his family's military history and the presence of the military in Nevada during the 1940s for desert training for the North African front during World War II. He gives an overview of life in Las Vegas from the 1940s to the 1960s, and discusses how the city has changed and what the future of the city may look like. Purdue talks about when the casinos of Las Vegas were controlled by organized crime and when Howard Hughes arrived and began buying properties. Purdue also discusses racial segregation in Las Vegas and the diverse peoples who live in the city.

Archival Collection