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Unidentified individuals, image 001: photographic print

Date
1870 (year approximate) to 1960 (year approximate)
Description
[Not identified - is either William S. Park or John W. Park as a baby with his mother.]

Image

Unidentified individuals, image 002: photographic print

Date
1870 (year approximate) to 1960 (year approximate)
Description
Not identified - [Possibly Mary Belle Park?]

Image

Unidentified individuals, image 003: photographic print

Date
1870 (year approximate) to 1960 (year approximate)
Description
Four ladies, all are unidentified. [The one at right might be Mary Belle Park?]

Image

Unidentified individuals, image 005: photographic print

Date
1870 (year approximate) to 1960 (year approximate)
Description
Unidentified man standing by a child on horseback.

Image

John William Park, image 021: photographic print

Date
1870 (year approximate) to 1960 (year approximate)
Description
John W. Park (as a small boy).

Image

Unspecified baby room: photographic print

Date
1870 (year approximate) to 1960 (year approximate)
Description
"The baby room. Girls' dormitory is thru door in background. Baby bath is on the R. Crib is about where camera is."

Image

Gambling cartoon "Did You Ever Hold a Straight Open at One End in Poker?": postcard

Date
1900 (year approximate) to 1999 (year approximate)
Description
From the UNLV Libraries Single Item Accession Photograph Collection (PH-00171). Copyright: Cardinell-Vincent Co.

Image

Gambling cartoon "Did You Ever Get Cold Feet at Poker?": postcard

Date
1900 (year approximate) to 1999 (year approximate)
Description
From the UNLV Libraries Single Item Accession Photograph Collection (PH-00171). Gambling cartoon (postcard): "Did You Ever Get Cold Feet at Poker?" Copyright: Cardinell-Vincent Co.

Image

Photographic negatives of Helen J. Stewart's gardens and basket collection

Date
1868 (year uncertain) to 1926 (year uncertain)
Description
Photographic negatives of Helen J. Stewart's gardens and basket collection

Image

Transcript of interview with Lawrence Canarelli by Claytee White, May 1, 2016

Date
2016-05-01
Description

“At five years old, I was the youngest boy at the orphanage. This was the first time that I had lived with indoor plumbing and indoor showers.” To describe award-winning home builder Larry Canarelli as a self-made man is to grossly understate his accomplishments and his determination. Canarelli, founder of American West, Nevada’s largest privately owned development company, learned all about living without shelter as a very young boy. When he was nine years old, Canarelli, the second of his mother’s six children, encouraged his veteran stepfather to buy the family’s first permanent house for $80 down and an agreement to assume payments on the Veterans Administration loan. As his school peers dreamt of large, shiny cars, Canarelli envisaged big, beautiful houses. After self-funding his education, graduating from the University of California Los Angeles, completing two years of U.S. Army service, and earning his Master’s degree from University of Southern California, Canarelli began his career working with a large home building firm in the Los Angeles area. Three years later he switched firms, and the new company sent him to Las Vegas. In this interview, Canarelli reaches back to his childhood to explain his motivation to build houses: “All of my life, I had an interest in housing. Perhaps this is because of never having a house when I was younger.” He recalls how the Collins Brothers helped him when he founded American West. He describes the Southern Nevada “shelter market” of the 1970s and follows its evolution in style and marketing through the 1980s and 1990s; he talks about master planning and the builders who first master planned their Clark County developments: Pardee Homes in Spring Valley, American Nevada in Green Valley, and Howard Hughes Corporation in Summerlin. He speaks to the influences of interest rates and available land on housing prices; the importance of environmentally responsible housing; where the entry-level housing market will go, and ways that technology has changed home building and home buying. And throughout, he exemplifies his devotion to, knowledge of, and respect for Southern Nevada’s housing industry-its builders, its market, and its buyers.

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