El Cortez Hotel and Casino

Chapter 5 – Renovation and Resilience

By the 1980s, Las Vegas had changed dramatically. The Strip had become the city’s postcard, stretching like a neon river to the south, while downtown was learning a new lesson in survival. Casinos like Bally’s, The Mirage, and Caesars Palace drew visitors with fountains, themed hotels, and spectacle. Fremont Street had to find its own voice in the shadow of that growth. Jackie Gaughan, already … Continue reading Chapter 5 – Renovation and Resilience

El Cortez Hotel and Casino

Downtown in the Seventies

By the 1970s, Fremont Street had developed a rhythm of its own — a cadence between past and future, where the ghosts of The Mob lingered beside the hum of neon. The El Cortez remained a steadfast anchor, while around it, downtown pulsed with the tentative energy of reinvention. The street was narrower than the Strip, but it had personality in abundance. Signs blinked in … Continue reading Downtown in the Seventies

El Cortez Sign with a black and white image of Jackie Gaughan

Jackie’s Kingdom

Chapter 4 of our El Cortez Spotlight series When Jackie Gaughan arrived in Las Vegas in the early 1960s, Fremont Street was a street caught between memory and ambition. The Strip was rising fast to the south, promising fountains, fountains, and even more fountains, but downtown remained the beating heart of the city’s older rhythm. The El Cortez, already decades old, was quietly waiting for … Continue reading Jackie’s Kingdom

El Cortez Sign with an image of Fremont Street in the foreground

El Cortez – Fremont’s Flicker

By 1947, Fremont Street was beginning to hum with a different kind of electricity. The mob’s fingerprints were everywhere, but the town itself was still small enough that everyone knew the bartender’s name — and probably what he owed in poker losses. The desert wind carried the smell of dust, diesel, and perfume. From above, the street must have looked like a glowing fuse, inching … Continue reading El Cortez – Fremont’s Flicker

The Imperial Palace, Las Vegas Nevada

The Imperial Palace Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas

The Imperial Palace was originally opened as the Flamingo Capri in 1959 as a 180-room motel. Ralph Engelstad purchased the property in 1971, added a casino in 1972, and renamed it the Imperial Palace in 1979 when a new casino facility opened. Engelstad expanded the resort with additional hotel towers from 1982 to 1987, making it one of the largest hotels in the world with … Continue reading The Imperial Palace Hotel & Casino, Las Vegas

El Cortez Sign Bugsy and Meyer Lansky

El Cortez: The Mob Arrives

Chapter 3 of our El Cortez Spotlight series By the mid-1940s, El Cortez had become a tidy little cash machine on Fremont Street, attracting both curious travelers and the kind of men who didn’t like to explain where their money came from. The war had ended, soldiers were returning home, and Las Vegas was poised for a kind of rebirth -one that would shimmer under … Continue reading El Cortez: The Mob Arrives

Caesars Palace 1966 Black and white aerial view in 1966

Caesars Palace – The Mirage Before the Mirage

(from The House of Caesars: Power, Glamour, and the Empire of Las Vegas) Chapter 1 in our Caesars Palace spotlight series Las Vegas was still small enough in 1966 that a man could stand in the desert at night and hear nothing but his own pulse. The lights of the Strip stopped abruptly then—ending not in sprawl but in silence. And at the edge of … Continue reading Caesars Palace – The Mirage Before the Mirage

Bugsy Malone Lighting a cigar in front of the El Cortez Sign in Las Vegas

Bugsy’s Brief Inheritance

Part 2 of our El Cortez Spotlight series In the spring of 1945, the desert heat arrived early, pressing down on Fremont Street like a secret. The El Cortez had been open barely four years, and already it was changing hands. The war was nearly over, soldiers were trickling back west, and Las Vegas-still small enough that everyone knew the sheriff by name—-about to inherit … Continue reading Bugsy’s Brief Inheritance