Las Vegas Country Club for Sale

Norm Clark in his daily column NORM! in the Las Vegas Review Journal today reported that the Las Vegas Country Club is in talks with an unidentified buyer (possibly from overseas) who has an interest in buying the Country Club and turning the golf course into a high rise development.

I can't imagine that this will sit well with the residents who have homes or apartments around the Country Club nor those who live in the luxury Regency Towers.  The Las Vegas Country Club is one of the most fashionable addresses in town.  Kirk Kerkorian, Burton Cohen and Steve and Edie are just some of the well-known names that live in Regency Towers.  Many long-time Las Vegans live in the homes around the Country Club.  Moe Dalitz had a home there.  Frank "Lefty" Rosenthal had a home there (though when it came time to film "Casino", they used a home in Paradise Palms that is on the National Golf Course) and Tony "The Ant" Spilotro was rumored to have lived there as well.

The Clubhouse is one of the premiere lunch spots for movers and shakers in town.  At any given time you can see Robert Maheu, Claudine Williams, Matthew Callister and more dining with friends and clients.

The Clubhouse looks out over the Country Club and is a mid-century modern architecture delight both inside and out.

Joe W. Brown originally owned the land and it was part of a racetrack, Las Vegas Downs, that he bought when the racetrack failed.  Brown sold the property to Marvin KratterKratter developed the property and called it the Las Vegas International Country ClubKratter eventually sold the property to Realty Holdings.  Partners in Realty Holdings at the time included Moe Dalitz, Nate Adelson (Sheldon's father) and Irwin Molasky.

Stay tuned for more information as this story develops. 

 

 

Water, the Scotch 80s and the First Mayor of Las Vegas

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Pete Buol watches water flow like black gold out of an artesian well. 

 

 

Las Vegas mayors seem to have always been a colorful group.  Then as now, they were frequently outspoken and seemed to attract controversy. Though Las Vegas was founded in 1905 with the famed land auction it would be six years before the citizens of that small dusty community felt the need for a mayor.  The city of Las Vegas was incorporated in 1911 and with that brought the need for a mayor.

The first mayor was also one of the biggest civic boosters.  Along with "Big Jim" Cashman, Sr and Maxwell Kelch, Las Vegas city boosters tend to have larger than life personalities.  Pete Buol was no exception.  He was the optimistic sort who looked at that dusty railroad town and could see a brighter future ahead.  Not everyone has that knack and Buol appears to have possessed it in spades.   According to his campaign literature "ability doesn't count, knowledge is useless, experience has no worth without the driving force of optimism."   He had grown up in Chicago, the son of a Swiss master chef.  He had an eighth grade education but more importantly, he had ambition.

 

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Pete Buol the first mayor of Las Vegas 

He won a lottery at 19 and found himself worth over $100,000.  Unfortunately for Buol, he didn't have the acumen for finances and quickly ran through the money.  He made another small fortune with a food concession at the Chicago's Exposition.  He served over 5,000 people a day, charging $.25 cents a meal.

He came west and spent some time in Hollywood before heading to Nevada.  He had hoped to invest in a mine in Goldfield but, as he later told a reporter, his bankroll was too small in Goldfield to have much of an impact.  He decided to go to Las Vegas.  He arrived by stagecoach just ahead of the railroad and the land auction.

The town was barely a town.  There was the old Kiel Ranch, the Stewart Ranch and a couple of wildcat businessmen, Jim Ladd and John Miller, had some tent hotels.  The only physician in town, Halle Hewetson, operated out of a tent.   Buol decided that real estate might be worth investing in. 

In 1905, at the land auction, Buol had two subdivisions for sale.  Buol's Addition, which was just west of the railyard, shops and Ice Plant and Buol's Sub-division was "just far enough away to be out of the noise and smoke of the shops and engines."

Buol quickly realized that one of the most important elements of selling real estate in this climate was water.  The Railroad had secured the water rights to Big Springs, the large artesian springs,  which fed the creek that ran down to the Stewart Ranch (where the Sawyer Government Building is today).  But Buol noticed that there were other artesian springs bubbling up around the valley.  Less than six months after the land auction, Buol was the manager of the Vegas Artesian Water Syndicate and he was ready to start drilling for water.

Buol was not the only one drilling for water.  Others were drilling for irrigation and crops.  Buol was drilling to enhance housing development.  In 1910, he brought in a large well near 6th and Fremont (near where the El Cortez is today), adjacent to his Buck's Addition

The railroad had long resisted supplying water to those outside the original township.  But with Buol's water supply, the area east on Fremont and north (to where the freeway is today) was able to develop into a very residential area. 

Buol and a friend ran for mayor because no one, according to Buol, was interested in the job.  He won by 10 votes.  His salary was $15 a month.  One of his first orders of business was rules for business licenses.    He served for two years, being succeeded by the man who had run against him, his friend Bill Hawkins.  He was then elected to the assembly.

He and his wife built a home at Seventh and Ogden.  According to writer A.D. Hopkins, their house had "walls eight inches thick, adobe inside and brick without, porches on all four sides, and a peaked roof, it was said to be the coolest in summer and warmest in winter of any in town. Its eight rooms were heated with wood fireplaces. "  When Mrs. Buol entertained her lady friends, Buol would serve them gourmet dishes harking back to his gourmet days with his father.

Through his connections, Buol met a Scotsman, Sir John MurrayMurray had traveled extensively around the United States.  The two men corresponded and Buol traveled overseas to pitch an idea for a new development to the wealthy Scot.  Murray agreed to invest $100,000 in the new development ot be located on the far west side of the train tracks.  Buol returned home a hero to the townsfolk who were worried about the continued growth of the town.

Unfortunately, World War I interfered with Buol's plans.  Once Britian entered the Great War there was a ban on all exported assets.  Buol had to abandon his idea of an agricultural oasis just outside of the little town he loved.  However, the name stayed attached to the development and later become one of the most sought-out addresses for those who could afford it, the Scotch 80s.

Buol continued speculating.  Some of his efforts are now long-forgotten such as the little town of Johnnie or Plantina (near where Sandy Valley is today).  However, he invested in a lime deposit that helped establish the town of Sloan.   He had a borax claim that was said to have netted him $250,000 when he sold it to Francis "Borax" Smith.

In 1925, Buol and his family left the little town that he had done so much to develop and moved to the California Coast.  He continued to pursue his mining claims and was badly injured in a mine cave-in in 1929.  He died ten years later following a stroke.

Though he made a great deal of money during his lifetime, he died relatively poor.  But Pete Buol's legacy lives on in the town that he believed in so fervently, the Scotch 80s are still one of the most sought off addresses in VeryVintageVegas

 

Special thanks to the Las Vegas Review Journal for letting us use these images.

If you are interested in a home in the Scotch 80s, we encourage you to contact the crew at VeryVintageVegas.com 

 

 

Paradise Palms- Mid Century Modern Living In Las Vegas


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One of our favorite Classic Las Vegas neighborhoods is Paradise Palms.  The homes off of East Desert Inn around what is now the National Golf Course are some of the best examples of mid-century architecture in Las Vegas.

The neighborhood was developed by Irwin Molasky and his Molasky Group back in the early 1960s.  Molasky and his partners had built Sunrise Hospital and were developing the Boulevard Mall.  The Boulevard Mall would have a profound effect on Las Vegas.  Stores such as Sears, JC Penney's, Ronzone's and Woolworth's had been anchored on Fremont Street since the 1930s.  Everyone shopped downtown.  But with the building of the Boulevard Mall, enclosed and air-conditioned with plenty of free parking, these businesses and more moved in to the Mall and slowly shuttered their Fremont Street locales.

No longer did we have to shop on Fremont Street.

To go along with his dream of the Mall, Molasky wanted a housing development nearby that would provide foot traffic for the Mall.  He hired the architectural firm of Palmer and Krisel to build the homes in what Molasky called Paradise Palms.

Palmer and Krisel had just completed building custom homes in Palm Springs and brought their mid-century modern sensibilities to Las Vegas.  The homes in Paradise Palms were standard post and beam construction on a slab.  The standard lot size was 40 x 40.  To give the homes a more custom look, the various models were rotated on the lots and/or flipped to give a slightly different look to each home. 

Different roof lines were available:  folded plate, butterfly, ranch and dramatic overhangs.  The homes had stone privacy screens and ornate block work as well.  

Architecturally, they were very different from the homes found in the older Las Vegas neighborhoods.  Those homes, dating back to the years leading up and including World War II were small, many were bungalow and Craftsman style.  Sproul Homes, who was developing housing tracts on West Charleston, was building functional homes that had some unique design features but nothing on the scale of what Molasky wanted for Paradise Palms.

Our pal Alan Hess says of Palmer and Krisel: "They brought excellent and elegant modern design to mass-produced housing. That's significant because every big name in modern architecture at mid-century tried to crack into the mass-produced housing market. And they all failed. Palmer and Krisel, who weren't at all well-known, solved the problem."

The homes would be part of the Stardust Golf Course.  Though the Stardust had plenty of land behind its hotel, they decided to put their Golf Course on East Desert Inn. The Course was designed by Bert StampsStamps was renown Golf Course designer.  Arnold Palmer originally set the original course record of 63 in 1967.  The PGA and the LPGA were there yearly.

The Stardust sold the golf course to Del Webb in 1969 and it was renamed the Sahara Golf Course.  In the 1980s, the course was sold again and the new owners briefly partnered with the Las Vegas Hilton.  In the late 1990s, it became the Las Vegas National Golf Course.

 
Paradise Palms quickly became a must-have address for those who wanted to live in thoroughly modern home.  Stars that regularly performed on the Las Vegas Strip bought homes in Paradise Palms because of its convenience to the famed Strip.  Many had Palmer and Krisel homes in Palm Springs and loved the look and amenities that came with the homes.  Stars such as Ginger Rogers, Sammy Davis Jr, Diana Ross and Shirley MacLaine all had homes on the Golf Course.

When Marty Scorcese was filming "Casino" in Las Vegas he needed a Classic Las Vegas home for the character of Sam "Ace" Rothstein (Robert DeNiro).  The film was based on the exploits of Frank "Lefty" Rosenthal and Tony SpilitroRosenthal had lived on the Las Vegas Country Club but the exclusive Country Club would not permit filming there.  Scorcese found a house on Cochise in Paradise Palms that would work just fine. 

Today the homes on the Golf Course are endangered as a developer with an eye for high-rise condos has purchased the property.  The homes in the surrounding neighborhood are being restored by home-owners interested not only in mid-century modern architecture but historical neighborhoods as well.  Our pals at veryvintagevegas.com love this neighborhood and if you are interested in living in Paradise Palms, we encourage you to contact the crew at veryvintagevegas

Dan Palmer died last year but his partner, William Krisel, is still alive and enjoying the renaissance of interest in his work. 

Here are some items from RoadsidePictures to give you an idea of some of the homes in Paradise Palms:


 

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