Stateline Hotel and Casino was located in West Wendover straddling the Nevada/Utah border.[1]
Stateline Casino | |
---|---|
Address | West Wendover, Nevada |
Opening date | 1931 |
Closing date | 2002 |
Casino type | Land |
Owner | Wendover Nugget Casino |
History
editThe owner of Stateline Casino was William "Bill" Smith, who started his business in 1926 as a service station. In 1931 when gambling was legalized in Nevada, Smith expanded his service station adding a hotel[2] and casino.[3] The hotel and casino straddled the official border between Nevada and Utah. For a long time there was a white line across the floor. A patron could eat on the Utah side then step over the line and gamble in Nevada.[1] It began business in 1931 when gambling became legal again in Nevada after being outlawed on October 1, 1910 at midnight.[4]
It closed in 1982 and reopened in 1985. In 2002 it was sold and renamed the Stateline Nugget. In 2004 it was sold again and renamed Wendover Nugget Hotel and Casino. The Wendover Nugget Hotel and Casino then donated Wendover Will, the 63 foot neon cowboy sign that had stood in front of the hotel since 1952 to the city of West Wendover. The city restored it and erected it in the city center.[1][5][6]
References
edit- ^ a b c "Wendover History". gbcnv.edu. Retrieved 2008-11-20.
- ^ Copelan, Corinne (3 July 2013). "Smith Family Casino Scion, Michael Devine Dies At 54". Retrieved 10 April 2024.
- ^ Mueller, Megg. "Casinos rock the value of a wild west namesake". Nevada Nuggets. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
- ^ Eugene P. Moehring; Michael S. Green (2005). Las Vegas: A Centennial History. University of Nevada Press. pp. 47–. ISBN 978-0-87417-615-5. Retrieved 11 September 2013.
- ^ "The Socio-Economic Impact & Recent History of United States Gaming". Retrieved 2013-05-13.
- ^ "Wendover Nugget". Retrieved 2008-11-20.