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Nevada Fun Facts and Trivia
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In
Death Valley, the Kangaroo Rat can live its entire life without drinking a
drop of liquid.
It is illegal to drive a camel on the
highway.
The Imperial Palace on the
Las Vegas
strip was the nation's first off-airport airline baggage check-in service.
To drive from
Los Angeles,
California
to Reno,
Nevada
the direction traveled is to the west.
Construction worker Hard Hat's
were first invented specifically for workers on the Hoover Dam in 1933.
Las Vegas
has more hotel rooms than any other place on earth.
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Kangaroo Rat
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In
Nevada
sex without a condom is considered illegal.
Bertha was a performing elephant that entertained for 37 years at
John Ascuaga's Nugget casino located in Sparks. She was 48 years old
when she died.
There were 16,067 slots in
Nevada
in 1960. In 1999
Nevada
had 205,726 slot machines, one for every 10 residents.
In
Reno, sex toys are illegal.
While Samuel Clemens took the penname "Mark Twain" as a reporter
working for the "Territorial Enterprise," he began his writing career
as a reporter in the Midwest some years before moving to Virginia City
in 1862.
In 1931 the Pair-O-Dice Club was the first casino to open on
Highway 91, the future
Las Vegas
Strip.
In Tonopah the young Jack Dempsey was once the bartender and the
bouncer at the still popular Mispah Hotel and Casino. Famous lawman
and folk hero Wyatt Earp once kept the peace in the town.
In Reno
it is illegal to lie down on the sidewalk.
In Elko,
Nevada
everyone walking the streets is required to wear a mask.
85% of
Nevada
is federally owned including the secret Area 51 near the little town
of Rachel.
You see the name Hughes on
numerous locations and developments in
Las Vegas.
Howard Hughes bought up considerable
Nevada
property before he died in 1976, including the following hotels and
casinos: Castaways, Desert Inn, Frontier, Landmark, Sands, Silver
Slipper, and Harold's Club.
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St Augustine Catholic Church in Austin,
Nevada
was built in 1866 |
Austin's oldest church, St. Augustine,
requires the establishment's bells in the tower to be rung by pulling a
rope located in the men's restroom.
It is illegal for any member of the
legislature to conduct official business wearing a penis costume while the
legislature is in session.
Nevada
takes its name from a Spanish
word meaning snow-capped.
Most of the state is desert but the Sierra
Nevada mountain range near Reno and the Ruby
Mountains near Elko have snow for half the year.
Nevada has
more mountain ranges than any other state, with its highest point at the
13,145 foot top of Boundary Peak near the west-central border.
The longest running show in
Las Vegas
is the Follies Bergere at the Tropicana Hotel and Casino. It opened in
1959.
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Misfits Flats off Highway 50 near Stagecoach takes its name from the John
Huston film. Huston used the privately owned area to film a complicated
wild horse round up with Clark Gable, Marilyn Monroe, Montgomery Clift and
Eli Wallach.
Nevada is
the largest gold-producing state in the nation. It is second in the world
behind South Africa.
Hoover Dam, the largest single public works project in the history of
the United States, contains 3.25 million cubic yards of concrete, which is
enough to pave a two-lane highway from San Francisco to New York.
The state's Highway 50, known as the Loneliest Highway in America,
received its name from "Life" magazine in 1986. There are few road stops
in the 287 mile stretch between Ely and Fernley.
Nevada
tribes include the Shoshone, Washo and Paiute. Tribal lands have been used
in such film projects as "Misery," and "The Greatest Story Ever Told."
The only
Nevada lake
with an outlet to the sea is man made Lake Mead.
Updated October, 2007 |
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Great American Bars and Saloons
By
Kathy Weiser
Owner/Editor of Legends of America
Kathy Weiser's first venture into the publishing world takes you into the
many watering holes of America's past, particularly the numerous
saloons
that sprouted up during our nation's
Wild West
days. This great
photographic review displays hundreds of
vintage photographs from
California
to
Arizona, the mining camps of
Colorado, all the way to New
York and its turbulent days of
Prohibition.
Hardcover, 2006, 224 Pages.
Signed by the author!!
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