Party on Fremont Street, December 31, 1983. Third photo is Main St, officer under the Plaza hotel marquee, with a sign for their stage musical production βSugarβ on the right.
Las Vegas Strip, Summer 1975. Aerial photos of major Strip properties from βProposal for the Xanadu Hotel and Casino,β Martin Stern Jr. AIA Architect & Associates. Julius Shulman, photographer.
Luv-It Frozen Custard, 505 E. Oakey Blvd, since 1973
The small building opened in ‘70, one of four riverboat-themed Dixie Chicken ‘N Things locations, on property owned for generations by the V. Gray Gubler family.
Possibly the Strip’s ugliest architecture, the shop was built in the early ‘50s in front of the 8-unit Park Lane Motel (1940s), for which have no photos. With the addition of the shop and a new, 44-unit wing, the complex was renamed Carousel Motel from ‘53-‘73, and Sand Dunes Motel from ‘73 to the 90s. The original 8-unit wing was demolished in the 70s. Sand Dunes closed in the mid 90s and was demolished in the late 90s. The shop remained for a couple years into the new century. The exact location is now the Palazzo driveway.
Stardust, c. September 1968
Kim Sisters, Nalani Kele and her Polynesian Revue. Photo by Bruno Werndl.
Fremont Street, Las Vegas, 1948
Looking west at the south side of the 100-block. Left to right: Golden Nugget (“saloon”), F.O.E. Eagles Building with a drug store on the ground floor - Golden Nugget expanded into this building by Jul. ‘48, Frontier Club, Santa Anita Turf Club, White Spot Cafe, Western Union, and Fremont Arcade. Next block: Pioneer Club, Las Vegas Club, Monte Carlo Club, Hotel Sal Sagev.
(1) Unknown motel at N. 6th & Ogden, facing south on 6th St towards El Cortez.
(2) 100-block N. 9th Street. Sign for Independent Order of Odd Fellows Hall (109 N. 9th), Ninth Street Motel (117 N. 9th), and Alpine Motel-Apts (213 N. 9th). Ambassador Motel on the right.