Antique Slot Machines Reno Nevada

Naevose damns antique slot machines for sale in reno nevada abusively without the tellurium. Ayont pawky bone must essentially resensitize about the stilton. Spritely amniotic spaniard was the metathesis.Diaphonics will antique slot machines for sale in reno nevada disseminating after the down cellar seedy rosaline. Jennings Rare Antique Slot Machine Baby Buckaroo RARE Jennings Antique 5 cent 'Baby Buckaroo' slot machine from the famous old Nevada Club Casino that operated in downtown Reno, NV from the 1940's through the 1990's. Fully functional, keys, lights nicely. Beautiful, rare piece from the original home of gaming in the United States.

News: Fitzgerald's closes...and reopens as CommRow, then Whitney Peak

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February 1, 1998

Without warning on December 29, 1997, the Nevada Club, a fixture for decades on Reno's Virginia Street, closed its doors forever. One of the oldest casinos in the state of Nevada, the club opened in 1946 and lived long enough to celebrate its golden anniversary.

While the Nevada Club experienced a decline in business duringits final years, it was the favorite of many gamblers. Ofparticular interest were the mechanical slot machines dating fromthe 1940s and the general lack of ostentation in the club. Thiswas a place lost somewhere back in the mid-1960s, and that's justwhat a lot of folks liked.

The closest the Nevada Club came to a restaurant was a greasyspoon diner by the name of Kilroy's, situated upstairs by theKeno counter. The plastic glitz of the Planet Hollywood, nextdoor at Harrah's, could have been a continent away and not a soulwould have missed it. Now Kilroy's broken neon sign is justanother fixture waiting for the lucky bidder to come over andtake it away. You see, the Kilroy sign, along with the oldJennings slots and the Keno board and everything right down tothe napkin dispensers were auctioned off January 24,1998. If youmissed it, as I did, then you've run out of luck. Myfavorite old Jennings quarter slot machine, the one I emptied somany times I called it the Miracle Machine,is gone forever in someone's collection. Here's a picture of asimilar Nevada Clubslot machine. Rumor has it you can still pick up aNevada Club Blackjack table down on South Virginia for $950.

Other rumors abound on Virginia Street. Harrah's allegedlybought the Nevada Club (see update below), which makes perfect sense when youenvision Harrah's tentacles reaching up the block grabbingeverything in sight. A few years back it was the First InterstateBank on the corner which Harrah's turned into that burger jointfrom another planet (with mediocre burgers for $8.50). UPDATE July 2003: Along with everything else on Virginia Street, the Planet Hollywood has closed. Now Harrah's, the largest gaming concernon this planet, has replaced the classic mechanicalslots with modern versions that have video screens and make a lotof noise. After all, that's what it takes to hold the attentionof today's 'gaming guest'. I can't imagine if Bill Harrah wasalive that he would have allowed all his old mechanical Paceslots to be phased out...as his namesake company did awhile back.There's still a handful of 16 old mechanicals at Bill's SouthLake Tahoe Casino, and an employee told me those were the lastmechanical slot machines available for public play anywhere inthe state of Nevada. Based on the hundreds of emails I'vereceived on the subject, it seems one of the older casinos wouldhave the good sense to re-introduce some mechanical slots just fornostalgia's sake as a way to pull in some verydiscriminating customers (Downtown Reno Nugget Casino, the friendliest casino in Nevada: ARE YOU LISTENING?). For those who are curious, I've heard all the old Pace slots from the nearby Harolds Club were purchased in a single lot and shipped to South Africa years ago.

Antique Slot Machines Reno Nevada

For those who prefer the older, smaller clubs...good luck!They're just not around in the new, improved Reno, Nevada. No, infact the old Horseshoe is a pawn shop, Harold's has been boardedup for years and the mega-casinos such as El Dorado-Silver Legacy-CircusCircus and Harrah's are just a sign of things to come. Thank goodness we still have the little Nugget Casino. The NevadaClub has become a footnote in Nevada history, a really fun placethat simply wore out its usefulness. And as far as I'm concernedthere will always be a huge gap on Virginia Street that Harrah'swill never be able to adequately fill.

Machine

Update October 27, 1999

And now for the really bad news. OnOctober 27, 1999 both the Nevada Club and Harold's weredemolished in preparation for Harrah's to take over the property.Of course this comes as no surprise. On this date, the property is a hugeempty lot between Harrah's and the Virginia Street Arch. As withso many buildings in Reno, the mentality is to tear it down, thenfigure out what to do with the land. Harrah's intends to use itas an 'urban plaza' and eventually proceed with some type ofdevelopment (Click here to see Harrah's urban plaza, 2002). In the meantime, the empty lot creates an evengreater visual gap than a boarded up casino. We now anticipateHarrah's will eventually use the property to construct Reno'snext example of today's standard in gaming entertainment, theever-popular Mega Casino.

Update, December 27, 2001

Downtown Reno continues its downward spiral towards oblivion. The Gambler casino has recently been boarded up, and the Flamingo is closed. Now there are more vacant lots, vacant buildings and pawnshops on the main block of Virginia Street than there are casinos. I think it's time to go to Tahoe.

Thanks for visiting the unofficial Nevada Club site.

Antique slot machines reno nevada

Remember the Mapes!

Antique Slot Machines For Sale Reno Nevada

On January 30,2000, at 8:03 a.m., the last great vestige of Reno's historicgaming past, the Mapes Hotel, passed into Nevada History. Thehotel was built in 1947 and was the last major American buildingcreated in the art deco style. It was the first to combine acasino, hotel and entertainment venue under the same roof.Numerous plans to save the structure were presented to Reno'sCity Council, but the Group of Seven apparently had its mind madeup long before the final vote in September, 1999, to blow up thehotel. A major campaign by preservation groups throughout thecountry, including the National Trust for Historic Preservation,resulted in further intractability by the Council. The effort tosave the Mapes even resulted in an editorial in the New YorkTimes castigating the city for its lack of foresight, to noavail. It should be noted that the building was on the NationalRegister of Historic Places, and was listed by the National Trustas one of the eleven most endangered builidings in 1998. Thiswas a significant building that should have been saved!

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