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Transcript of interview with Irene Sprague Black by Chari Horne, March 16, 1978

Date
1978-03-16
Description
Chari Horne interviews hairdresser Irene Sprague Black at a beauty salon in Las Vegas. Born in 1919 in Delta, Utah, Black moved to Las Vegas, Nevada in 1924. During this interview Black discusses early Las Vegas, local schools, homes, friends, family life, the Mormon Church, Mesquite, Indian Reservation, Downtown, Hoover Dam, and Bunkerville, Nevada.

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Sister Rosemary Lynch and unidentified protestors celebrating Ash Wednesday: photographic print

Date
1998-04-25
Description
Protestors form a small circle at the Nevada Test Site on Ash Wednesday 1991. Sister Rosemary Lynch is on the right wearing a blue hat.

Image

Sister Rosemary Lynch and an unidentified protestor on Ash Wednesday: photographic print

Date
1998-04-25
Description
Protestors at the Nevada Test Site. Sister Rosemary Lynch is pictured in blue. Ash Wednesday 1991.

Image

John Brooks oral history interview

Identifier
OH-00257
Abstract

Oral history interview with John Brooks conducted by Jeff Kennedy on February 28, 1979 for the Ralph Roske ORal History Project on Early Las Vegas. During the interview Brooks discusses gaming, education, the early above-ground atomic blasts, the Boulder Dam, and social and environmental changes in Nevada. Brooks also discusses the Old Ranch, economic changes, religion, politics, family life, the Navy, sports, the railroad, Fremont Street, and the hotels on the Las Vegas, Nevada Strip.

Archival Collection

Wendell Bunker oral history interview

Identifier
OH-00296
Abstract

Oral history interview with Wendell Bunker on October of 1971 for the Ralph Roske Oral History Project on Early Las Vegas. Wendell Bunker (b. 1911 in St. Thomas, Nevada), discusses early Las Vegas, Nevada and the socio-economic changes that have taken place in the Valley. Bunker talks about the Boulder (Hoover) Dam and religion and education in Nevada. He also describes working for the Union Pacific Railroad and the importance of the railroad to the economic development of Las Vegas.

Archival Collection

Mass holy union ceremony performed at Gay pride, image 001: photographic print

Date
1998-04-25
Description
Gay Pride at Sunset Park, 1998. Photographer: Dennis McBride. Mass holy union ceremony performed by Metropolitan Community Church Rev. Beau McDaniels. (4-25-98)

Image

Mass holy union ceremony performed at Gay pride, image 002: photographic print

Date
1998-04-25
Description
Gay Pride at Sunset Park, 1998. Photographer: Dennis McBride. Mass holy union ceremony performed by Metropolitan Community Church Rev. Beau McDaniels. (4-25-98).

Image

Transcript of interview with John G. Gubler by Suzanne Becker, December 29, 2008

Date
2008-12-29
Description
When John Gubler's parents moved to Las Vegas in 1936, it was a simple desert community of only six or seven thousand people. John's father practiced law and his mother raised the four Gubler sons. Home was in the John S. Park area. It was a fenceless neighborhood where everyone knew each other. Parents worked hard at their various jobs and kids played on the barren stretches of desert shooting BB guns, exploring artesian wells and playing games. As the gaming industry and the city grew, the Gubler household focused on education and family. It was a life of freedom and no TV. They were a family raised in Mormon values. John went on to become a lawyer and move back to raise his own family here. Today he lives on the western side of the valley. He explains that as an adult when he drives through John S. Park Neighborhood, "I live in the past." It was a good life. As John reminiscences about growing up from the 1940s thru 1960s, his observations are vivid and range from local

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