HISTORY
in the
Making

Stories in the news that will change things as we know them in Nevada

 

Mushroom cloud to be featured on license plates

By Geoff Dornan

License plates featuring a mushroom cloud may soon be available in the state of Nevada.

According to Senate Minority Leader Dina Titus, D-Las Vegas, it's not in support of a nuclear dump or anything like that. It's to recognize the history of the Nevada Test Site.

Titus introduced Senate Bill 264 to create the plate, dedicating revenue generated to support the Nevada Test Site Historical Foundation. That group is trying to put together a museum to preserve the history of the test site and its role in the cold war and national defense. Otherwise, she said, the papers and other materials from the site will simply be taken back to the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.

"All that stuff should be in Nevada, not stuffed in some archives," she said.

The bill will be reviewed by the Transportation Committee.

UPDATE: 24 April 02 - The Senate Bill was passed and the license plate was approved on the State Congressional level according to Professor Dina Titus.  It now has to be approved by the Nevada Highway Commission.   Check back for future updates and a image of the plate as soon as the design is released. 

View the Tag here


Las Vegas Springs Preserve

Another Commemorative license plate will help the Las Vegas Springs Preserve project.  When one purchases a commemorative Las Vegas Springs Preserve license plate, funds are contributed to the project. The initial fee of $61 includes a tax-deductible contribution of $35 to the preserve. Annual plate renewals cost $30, of which $20 benefits the Las Vegas Springs Preserve.


This plate was issued to mark Nevada's 125th Anniversary
as a member of the Union.  It is no longer manufactured.


Other historical plate from 1916 to today

1916 1918 1926 1935
1941 1944 1954 1961
1964 1969 1982
Still available
by special order
Click Here
1983

This plate is being replaced by the "Sunset" plate

 


Nevada's new "Sunset" plate

 


Other Specialized plates marking their place in Nevada History
(click on a tag for a larger version)

Agriculture Children in the Arts Firefighter Lake Tahoe
Las Vegas Springs Free Masons Missing & Exploited Children Organ Doner
UNLV UNR Airborne Vet Veterans

To inquire about the above tags contact your local Department of Motor vehicles.
Check here for qualifications, prices and ordering forms


Paving over Old Vegas
(Not the "Old Vegas" Tourist town)
The historic springs where Las Vegas began may get paved over for a new freeway expansion. 

By Cathy Scott as reported on ABCNEWS.com - originally appeared 03 March 1999

Freeway Could Cover Ancient Artesian Site

L A S   V E G A S,   March 3Before the neon, the insta-weddings, and Siegfried and Roy, people came to Las Vegas for . . . the water. 
     Artesian springs in the heart of the Mojave Desert attracted everyone from Mormon missionaries to native Americans. It is, historians say, the spot where the city of Las Vegas began. 
     But now the birthplace of the casino capital is being threatened by 
expansion. A proposed freeway would pave over part of the archaeological site. 
     Historians find irony in the fact that this artificial city, famous for concrete creations including replicas of Venice and the New York skyline, can’t protect one of its few bits of natural history.  
'The Last Best Place'
    "This is the last best place in Las Vegas'" says Elizabeth Warren, president of the Friends of Big Springs committee. Her husband, Claude, an archaeologist, excavated the area in 1972.      "If we can't save this land and we can't make this important to anyone else," she adds, "we'll lose the only place to learn why anybody came here in the first place."
     That Las Vegas' history is mostly 20th century makes the area even more significant, says Frank Wright, a historian at the Nevada State Museum and Historical Society.
     But in this rapidly expanding city — where resorts and roller coasters spring up overnight — the 180-acre Big Springs site is sought-after undeveloped land. Fourteen acres, scattered with century-old cottonwood trees and artifacts from AD 500 to the 19th century, may be used by the Nevada Department of Transportation to expand the US 95 Freeway. 
Historic Place, But Is It Enough?
    In 1978, Big Springs was placed on the National Register of Historic Places after the discovery of pottery, arrowheads, and milling stones dating back 8,000 years on part of the site. But the historic designation alone won't save the land, Mr. Wright says.
     Ms. Warren, who has battled for 30 years to preserve the site, agrees. An important factor weighing in the balance, she says, is the story the land has to tell.
     This isn't the first piece of Las Vegas history in danger of vanishing into the desert. Sites that have been lost in the past include the Wee Kirk O’ The Heather wedding chapel, housed in a 1920s adobe house that burned down.
     One of the few remaining pre-20th century historical sites is the old Las Vegas fort, once owned by the Elks club. In the 1970s, using federal bicentennial funds, the group did an external restoration, which, some say, make it look like a "taco stand." The fort is now owned by the state.
     Scott Magruder, a spokesman for the state, says officials are leaning toward razing 62 houses instead of taking the Big Springs land. 
Most Don’t Mind Losing Homes
    “Ninety percent of the property owners have no problem with the state taking their homes,” says city councilman Michael McDonald, who represents the affected homeowners. 
     A final decision on the freeway expansion, however, won’t be made until this spring.
     Raymond Lucchesi, whose architectural firm has been hired to study the site, says the ideal situation would be to preserve the area “so it’s a place of the desert and not just in the desert.” 
     “The mission is to meld preservation with interpretation,” says Mr. Lucchesi. “The result will be we’ll learn from the past and take it into the future.” 
     That attitude worries Warren. “This is not a town built upon respect for the past,” she notes. “This is a town built on excitement about the future and what that might mean for more income.” 
     The possibility that Big Springs could be paved over has prompted a reexamination of the site. 
     The Mojave Desert Preserve is convening to decide what the best use of the land should be. Wright says the concern is not just the freeway proposal but also for future developers who may try to claim the land. 
     “I certainly hope they don’t put roller coasters and theme parks in 
there,” he says.

Copyright 1999 The Christian Science Monitor. 

New State Song - "Nevada's Lullaby"

Written by George Dare
Commissioned by Nevada's 125th (Birthday) Celebration Committee, 1991
And just who is Geroge Dare anyway?
  Click here to find out.
Click Here for the lyrics to Nevada's Lullaby


New U. S. Postage Stamps to Commemorate all fifty states

Here is Nevada's stamp:


 

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