Nevada Vacation Guide System
Nevada History
Nevada became the 36th state on October 31, 1864, after telegraphing
the Constitution of Nevada to the Congress days before the November 8
presidential election (the largest and costliest transmission ever by
telegraph). Statehood was rushed to help ensure three electoral votes
for Abraham Lincoln's reelection and add to the Republican
congressional majorities.
Nevada's harsh but rich environment
shaped its history and culture. Before 1858 small Mormon settlements
along the Utah border sustained their communities through faith, but
the secular western section stumbled along until the great silver
strikes beginning in 1858 created boom towns and fabulous fortunes.
After the beginning of the 20th century, profits declined while
Progressive reformers sought to curb rampaging capitalism and its
attendant miseries. They imagined a civilized Nevada of universities,
lofty idealism, and social reform. But an economic bust during the
1910s and disillusionment from failures at social reform and a
population decline of nearly one-fourth meant that by 1920 Nevada had
degenerated into a "beautiful desert of buried hopes." The boom
returned when big time gambling arrived in 1931, and with good
transportation (especially to California metropolitan areas), the
nation's easiest divorce laws, and a speculative get-rich-quick spirit,
Nevada had a boom-and-bust economy that was mostly boom until the
worldwide financial crisis of 2008 revealed extravagant speculation in
housing and casinos on an epic scale.
The Nevada 1864 statehood boundary (blue) changed twice:
*1866
May 5; east border (pink) moved eastward 53.3 mi (85.8 km) *1867
January 18; south boundary (yellow) fsmoved from the 37th parallel
north southward to the current boundary (14 Stat. 43)
Nevada state history was the subject of a 1944 western film and a 1986 novel.
Main articles: Outline of Nevada and Timeline of the American Old West
Early history
Geologic
events formed the state's Basin and Range topography, the "Nevada
Basin" physiographic region, and the central Nevada desert (e.g., the
recession of the Pleistocene Lake Lahontan changed the Humboldt River
course), and Great Basin. The Native American tribes had inhabited
Nevada for millennia before Euro-Americans arrived in the 18th century.
Exploration
Francisco
Garcés was the first European in the area, Jedediah Smith entered the
Las Vegas Valley in 1827, and Peter Skene Ogden traveled the Humboldt
River in 1828. As part of the Mexican Cession (1848) and the subsequent
California Gold Rush that used Emigrant Trails through the area, the
state's area evolved first as part of the Utah Territory, then the
Nevada Territory (March 2, 1861; named for the Sierra Nevada).
Territory
Nevada
became part of the United States with the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
with Mexico in 1848. Mexico had never established any control in
Nevada, but American mountain men were in Washoe (the early name for
Nevada) as early as 1827. A permanent American presence began in 1851
when the Mormons set up way stations en route to the California gold
fields. In the absence of any governmental authority, some 50 Mormons
and Gentile prospectors and cattle ranchers drew up the "Washoe code"
to deal with land claims; its coverage eventually covered other
governmental issues. There still was no federal presence in the area so
Mormon-Gentile relations worsened and petitions of complaint went to
Washington. Gentiles sought annexation to California. Utah Territory
countered this by incorporating the area as a county. When Federal
troops were sent to Utah in 1857, the Mormons left Washoe. The Gentiles
took over and launched a move for separate territorial status. The
early 1860s saw the end of an Indian war, the great Comstock mining
boom of 1859 in Virginia City and the coming of the Civil War. The
provisional territorial government led to the creation of Nevada
Territory by Congress in 1861. The pragmatic attempts to establish
workable frontier institutions had failed and the paternalistic
territorial system was welcomed.
Statehood
Statehood came in
1864 following a Carson City convention (July 4–28) and a public vote
on September 7 (the population of 6,857 in 1860 increased to 42,941 in
1870), although Nevada had far fewer than the 40,000 people usually
required.
The University of Nevada was founded in Elko in 1874 and moved to Reno in 1885 (extension classes began at Las Vegas in 1951).
Water
The
largest United States reservoir (Lake Mead) was created by the Hoover
Dam on the state's 1867 Colorado River border (construction began in
1931). From 1930 to 2000, the Clark County population grew from 8,532
to 1,375,765; while the Reno population increased from 18,529 to
180,480.
For historic locations of New Deal projects, see Category:New Deal in Nevada.
Industry
In 1998, the largest industries were services (40.7% of earnings), construction (11.6%), and state/local government (10.0%).
Mining
The
1858 Comstock Lode discovery opened the era of silver mining in Nevada,
and attracted thousands of miners—most from California. It was
discovered by James Finney in Carson County. Disputes over the legal
limits of a claim soon went to court, as the Law of the Apex, used to
determine those limits, was unworkable for the deep ore bodies in the
Comstock. The legal and judicial system of Carson County was unprepared
for the tremendous demands placed on it. Judges were underpaid and
underqualified, bribery of witnesses and jurors was commonplace, vague
record-keeping created nearly insurmountable difficulties with property
titles, and evidence was often destroyed. Though workable mining laws
still were needed, the resignation of the entire territorial supreme
court in 1864 did cause litigation to stop and allowed mining work to
resume.
The 1867 expansion of the state's southern boundary was
prompted by the discovery of gold in the area since officials thought
Nevada would be better able to oversee the expected gold rush. By 1872,
Nevada mining was an industry of speculation and immense wealth. After
1870, however, the mining industry went into eclipse, as the state's
Silverite politicians worked to secure laws to require the federal
government to purchase silver.
The discovery of silver and gold in 1900 near Tonopah set off a boom that ended Nevada's economic depression.
The
operators used the best available technology to recover gold and silver
from ore, but by modern standards there was much inefficiency and
chemical pollution. Methods included the use of the arrastra, the patio
process, the Freiberg process, and the Washoe pan process. Estimates of
value lost through recovery processes ran as high as 25%. Mine
operators sought improved technology, but were unwilling to wait years
or decades for it to arrive. No one at the time understood the health
problems such metals as mercury could cause.
Transportation
Although
the transcontinental railroad crossed the state in 1869, most town and
mines were remote from it and required a network of wagon freight and
stagecoaches. Numerous small companies supplied the horses, mules, and
wagons for hauling borax and silver ore. Stagecoaches were notoriously
uncomfortable across the roadless land, but were better than the
alternatives and flourished until a railroad finally arrived. Hold-ups
were rare, and usually involved petty theft since armed guards were an
effective deterrent. Mail contracts kept stage lines afloat and allowed
the emergence of a class of entrepreneurs who won contracts and
subcontracted the actual work.
The Eureka and Palisade Railroad
was a narrow-gauge railroad ninety long built in 1875 to carry
silver-lead ore from Eureka, Nevada, to the Southern Pacific Railroad
trunk line that ran through Palisade. Nevertheless, despite the
determined and colorful management style of John Sexton, the line
succumbed to the effects of flood, fire, competing road traffic, and
dwindling amounts of ore extracted in Eureka. The rails and rolling
stock of the last surviving narrow-gauge railroad in Nevada were
removed in 1938.
Historic highways include the 1937 US 6 and
1919 US 50 (Lincoln Highway). The 1926 destination of the first air
mail flight was Elko. Interstate 15 in Nevada was completed in 1974,
while the Lovelock bypass was the last completed section of Interstate
80 in Nevada.
Mining towns
Golconda was a mining town in
northern Nevada built when discovery of copper, silver, gold, and lead
brought entrepreneurs who opened mines and mills in the district. A
diverse society of native-born Americans, French, Portuguese, Paiutes,
Chinese, and other people came to Golconda to live and work. During
1898-1910, the town had a train depot, several hotels, a school,
businesses, newspapers, and two brothels. Its population peaked at
about six hundred in 1907-08. Although boosters predicted growth for
Golconda, after 1910 the mines played out, leaving the region as an
area of ranches and farms. Most of the town's buildings from its mining
heyday are gone, and Golconda today is a minor stop on Interstate 80.
Tuscarora
was founded in Elko County after an expedition by trader William Heath
discovered gold. As miners flocked to the town in 1867-70, a fort was
built to offer protection from Indian raids and a water ditch was
created to supply the town with water. Many Chinese men who had been
employed by the Central Pacific Railroad (CPRR) relocated to the town
and began placer mining. A second boom began following the discovery of
silver in 1876-77.
A strike at Tonopah (1900, silver) was
followed by strikes in Goldfield (1902–1919, gold) and Rhyolite
(1904–1911, gold). Remnants of mining resulted in the 1989 designation
of the Carson River Mercury (Superfund) Site
Rio Tinto was
developed after the discovery of copper in Northern Elko County's Cope
Mining District. The town moved from mine to mine and it went from boom
to bust in regular cycles. In 1919 Frank Hunt discovered copper in the
area and later named his claim Rio Tinto. Once investors and big mining
companies became interested in Hunt's copper, the town soon developed
and filled with homes to house the miners. After all the copper was
removed, Rio Tinto suffered the same fate as most boom towns and
vanished.
Homesteading
Over 80% of the Nevada area is owned
by the federal government, as homesteads of maximum 640 acres (2.6 km2)
in the arid state were generally too little land for a viable farm.
Instead, early settlers would homestead land surrounding a water
source, and then graze cattle on the adjacent public land, which is
useless without access to water. The Enlarged Homestead Act of 1909,
the establishment of a state dry-farming experiment station, and
private promotional efforts stimulated dry farming within a fifty-mile
radius of Wells, Nevada, but a combination of low precipitation, short
summers, abundant jackrabbits, mediocre soil, and the faulty judgment
of the settlers themselves virtually ended the ill-favored experiment
after 1916.
Twentieth century
For a list of governors and a list
of museums regarding Nevada history, see List of Governors of Nevada
and List of museums in Nevada.
The state was by far the smallest
in terms of population. The 1930 census reported 91,000 people, with
Reno the largest city at 19,000 and Las Vegas at 5,000. 62% of the
people lived in towns with fewer than 2500 people or in rural areas
alongside the 340,000 cattle and 830,000 sheep.
Politics
The
gold discovery in Tonopah in 1900 brought together a group of men who
dominated Nevada politics for a half century. They included George
Wingfield (mine owner, banker and behind-the-scenes player); George
Nixon (banker, editor and cofounder of the Silver party); Key Pittman
(U.S. Senator), Vail Pittman (Key Pittman's brother; governor); Pat
McCarran (U.S. Senator) and George Thatcher (a leader of the state
Democratic party)
John Edward Jones and Reinhold Sadler, Silver
Party governors of Nevada, during 1895-1903, shared like backgrounds
and rose to political power by the same route. Each was a European
immigrant who came to the state in its mining boom of the 1870s,
prospered financially, and engaged in politics until the boom collapsed
late in the 1870s. Then Jones and Sadler embraced bimetallism and a
companion cure-all for Nevada's economic ills - reclamation of desert
land in order to provide an economy based partly on agriculture.
Religion and ethnicity
Because
most of Nevada was sparsely populated and was subject to economic
booms-and-busts accompanied by population fluctuations, Catholic
churches faced difficulties in serving spiritually their scattered and
mobile communicants. Nevada Catholic parish life until 1900 reflected
the Irish heritage of its parish clergy and the bulk of their flocks.
Slavic, Italian, and Basque Catholics moved to the state after 1900 and
sometimes allied with native-born Americans so that the traditional
dominance of Irish Catholics diminished markedly by the 1930s.
Italian
Americans Nevada as miners, but, unlike many other immigrants, enough
Italians stayed after the mining booms collapsed; they became the
largest European ethnic groups by 1910. Many operated farms and
ranches. Besides exercising significant economic clout, they have
fundamentally influenced the Nevada social order in other ways, in part
because of their persistent anticlericalism
Gambling
The 1931
gambling law enabled the explosive growth of the Las Vegas area, where
the population grew from 5 thousand in 1930 to 1.9 million in 2008.
Because
of hostility from miners and their sympathizers, Nevada's territorial
and state antigambling laws were mostly unenforced from 1859 until the
Comstock Lode mining booms collapsed in the 1870s. After 1881, the
state attempted to restrict gambling through licensing and other
statutory controls. Opponents of gambling and prostitution became
organized and in the Progressive Era at last persuaded state
legislators to prohibit gambling statewide in 1910 as part of a
nationwide anti-gaming crusade.
During the Great Depression in
the United States, Nevada legalized gambling—terming it "gaming"--in
1931; (the Northern Club received the first license). At the time, the
leading proponents of gambling expected that it would be a short term
fix until the state's economic base widened to include less cyclical
industries. However, re-outlawing gambling has never been seriously
considered since, and the industry has become Nevada's primary source
of revenue today. Gambling taxes account for 34% of state revenue.
Also in 1931 the residence requirement for divorce was reduced to six weeks, making Reno a famous mecca for the quickie divorce.
Prostitution
Main article: Prostitution in Nevada
Brothels
have been tolerated in Nevada since the middle of the 19th century; one
in Elko has been in business since 1902. In 1937, a law was enacted to
require weekly health checks of all prostitutes. Reno and Las Vegas had
red light districts, when the federal government prohibited all
prostitution near military bases in 1942 (lifted in 1948). In 1951,
both Reno and Las Vegas had closed their red light districts as public
nuisances.
Military activities
For a list of topics regarding this subject, see Category:Military in Nevada.
Military
and other government exploration of the territory included efforts by
John C. Frémont (1843), Lieutenant E. G. Beckwith (1854), and the
Fortieth Parallel Survey (1867). During the American Civil War, the
territory mustered infantry and cavalry, and skirmishes of the American
Indian Wars occurred in Nevada during the Snake War (1864–1868).
American Old West forts in Nevada included Fort Churchill, Fort
Halleck, Fort McDermit, and Fort Schellbourne. The current Hawthorne
Army Depot was established for munitions production in 1930.
World War II
Senator
Pat McCarran and other Nevada officials campaigned successfully in
Washington to open military installations in Nevada. It had vast lands,
sunny weather and good rail connections. The Las Vegas Army Gunnery
School, the Basic Magnesium plant, Nellis Air Force Base, and other
facilities brought thousands of people to the area for training as well
as workers to construct housing, air strips, and other military
installations.
Las Vegas Army Air Field and Tonopah AAF were
created from existing airfields, and the United States Army Air Forces
built four additional Nevada airfields in 1942, including Indian
Springs AAF, Reno Army Air Base, and a facility near Fallon. Ranges and
emergency strips included the Battle Mountain Flight Strip, the Black
Rock Desert gunnery range (part of the Lovelock Aerial Gunnery Range
during the Cold War), Churchill Flight Strip, and Owyhee Flight Strip.
Both Tonopah AAF and Indian Springs AAF each had 5 auxiliary airstrips
including Indian Springs' at Forty-Mile Canyon Field and Groom Lake
Field. Camp Williston (1940–1944) at Boulder City provided security for
Henderson's Basic Magnesium Plant (14,000 employees) and Hoover Dam (a
concrete observation station still exists).
Nuclear tests
Nuclear
testing began at the Nevada Proving Ground in 1951 with a 1 kiloton
bomb dropped on Frenchman Flat. Over 1000 nuclear detonations were
conducted until the site's last atmospheric detonation in 1962 and last
underground detonation in 1992. In 2002, Congress approved the Yucca
Mountain nuclear waste repository at the site.
Notable military
aircraft accidents in Nevada include the 1948 B-29 Lake Mead crash, the
1949 Stead AFB F-51 crash, and several USAF Thunderbird demonstration
team crashes, including the 1982 Indian Springs AFAF formation that
killed 4 pilots. Spy plane testing in Area 51 began in April 1955, and
stealth fighter testing began in 1982 at the Tonopah Test Range, where
in 2008 the last F-117 Nighthawk was retired in secure storage. The
USAF Red Flag combat exercise was first held in 1975 at the Nellis Air
Force Range, and the United States Navy's TOPGUN school was moved to
Naval Air Station Fallon in 1996.
Recent history
Nevada
favors a highly individualistic political culture, giving it a
libertarian conservative political philosophy in an open society.
Wealth from mining and gambling reinforced the individualistic ethic
that early settlers brought with them. The libertarian ethic appears in
the opposition of most Nevadans to big government, big labor, and big
business. Labor unions, especially the SEIU which organizes hotel and
casino workers, thrive among the minority workers in Las Vegas. Belief
in limited government leads to an electorate that backs a pro-choice
position on abortion while opposing the Equal Rights Amendment for
women. The state's ongoing battles with the federal government involve
the longstanding water rights dispute between Native Americans, backed
by the federal government, and Nevada's ranchers; and the decade-long
fight against the establishment of the nation's first permanent nuclear
waste depository at Yucca Mountain.


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