Frank Crowe

A civil engineer who went from public to private employment just for the chance to build Hoover Dam realized his dream and put Las Vegas and Boulder City on the map.

Sims Ely

The rigid influence of the man who controlled the lives of the workers who built Hoover Dam, and the town where they lived, is still felt in that town’s legacy of no gambling.

Mayme Stocker

To keep her railroad-working husband and sons respectable, a woman who had no background in gaming held Las Vegas’ first casino license.

Tony Cornero

After selling the trailblazing Meadows, Admiral Cornero took to the high seas, but his Stardust dreams left their mark on the Strip.

Tom Williams

A church-goer who was never a hypocrite, the man who founded North Las Vegas believed in the motto live and let live — without government interference.

Ernie Cragin

In making his dreams of Las Vegas come true, an early mayor allowed old bad habits to get in the way of equality among those who called the valley home.

Jim Cashman

A man of firsts — first automobile dealership, first community celebration, first highway to Las Vegas — found humor in almost every situation.

Thomas Hull

A visionary, whose El Rancho gave one of the more famous streets in the world its start, began a trend in hotel-casinos in Las Vegas.

Howard Eells

The man who would build the biggest magnesium plant in the world during World War II took on the big job despite considerable obstacles.

‘Magnesium Maggie’

Female workers flourished during the war years in positions initially thought of as too difficult for women.

Berkeley Bunker

A member of a pioneer Mormon family, who found himself thrust into a national office after a key official died, returned to the city he loved and made himself and his family proud.

Pat McCarran

The Silver State’s champion who served as a Nevada Supreme Court justice found himself on the losing side of many an election until he was able to win a seat in the U.S. Senate.

Eva Adams

Maxwell Kelch

A radio man with a gift for promotion, KENO’s first owner proved to the rest of Las Vegas that publicity is everything.

Benjamin Siegel

The mobster with the movie star looks and the certifiable paranoia brought Las Vegas much more attention after his death than he did during his short life.

Thomas Young

A father of six with a flair for lettering found his niche in the neon-bathed streets of a fledgling gambling town called Las Vegas.

Edmund Converse

A wealthy man who wanted to make his own way in the world brought Southern Nevada into the commuter aviation age by developing its own scheduled airline.

Florence Murphy

A female flier when soaring through the clouds was a man’s domain, she helped put Las Vegas on the aviation map and bring commercial air travel to the valley.

Steve Hannagan

Without ever living in Las Vegas, a publicist left his mark on the town.

Harvey Diederich

Publicity played a big part in Las Vegas’ formative years as a resort destination, and one publicist used every cornball stunt he could think of to get hotels’ showgirls global exposure.

Moe Dalitz

Shady dealings did little to dull the luster that this private man brought to the city of glitz

Robbins Cahill

Despite having little authority, this tax collector had enough bluff and bluster to force the likes of Bugsy Siegel to pay his gaming fees, thus paving the way for Nevada’s control over the industry.

Del E. Webb

A developer, who did much more than just build houses, will continue to have an impact on Las Vegas well into the next millennium.

C.D. Baker

With his no-nonsense approach, former Las Vegas Mayor C.D. Baker helped bring the city’s dilapidated infrastructure out of the Depression and into the modern era.

Alfred O’Donnell

Proving himself up to the task on the Nevada Proving Grounds

Ernest Becker

Taking his cue from Howard Hughes, a Southern Californian found the land on the west side of Las Vegas to be a bountiful construction spot for thousands of houses.

George ‘Bud’ Albright

Not willing to bet his town’s future on a roll of the dice, a county commissioner pushed and received backing for an unconventional idea amid all this gaming

Monsignor Thomas Collins

With a lilting Irish brogue and a head for business, a not-so-wealthy young man found his calling in a vast wasteland.

James B. McMillan

A dentist whose mother was horsewhipped by the Ku Klux Klan found the Mississippi of the West had its own share of prejudice

Oran K. Gragson

A businessman, who got into politics to stop a few crooked police officers from robbing him blind, became one of the city’s more well-regarded leaders.

February 1999
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