Bonnie Springs Ranch attracts hundreds after news of looming sale
For a married couple from Michigan, Bonnie Springs Ranch isn’t just historically significant. It’s a place with special meaning in their relationship.
“We had our first date here,” Elizabeth Baldwin, 65, said, smiling up at her husband.
The Baldwins were among hundreds of people who swarmed Bonnie Springs on Saturday afternoon.
A woman selling tickets at the Old Town entrance said Bonnie Springs was busier than she had seen the ranch in weeks — surpassing even Christmas weekend, normally its busiest time of year.
The restaurant was overflowing with people waiting to be seated about noon Saturday, and about 30 people stood in line to buy tickets to get into Old Town and the petting zoo just before 1 p.m.
A special place
Elizabeth and Robert Baldwin were in Las Vegas visiting family when they learned that the ranch is being sold to a home developer. They drove their motorcycle out to the ranch to stroll through the grounds one last time.
“Who knows what it’s going to look like when we come back next year,” Elizabeth Baldwin said.
Raised in Michigan, Elizabeth Baldwin said she met her husband when she was designing and sewing costumes for shows on the Strip. They had their first date in 2009, married in 2011 and retired to Michigan in 2013.
Robert Baldwin, 58, was born and raised in Las Vegas and has visited Bonnie Springs since he was 9. During the 45 years he worked in air conditioning in the city, he would drive his motorcycle to the ranch after work.
He said he’s noticed residential development creeping closer to Red Rock.
“It’s Vegas, and I’ve watched it change all my life, but pretty soon it ain’t gonna be Vegas,” he said. “Now you’ve got to go 100 miles out of town to do anything. This used to be one of the best getaways there was.”
Petition drive
He said the ranch should be placed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Although according to executive director of the Nevada Preservation Foundation, Heidi Swank, listing a place on the National Register does not protect the place from destruction or sale – it only promotes the location as one of historic value – Baldwin is not alone in his desire to have the ranch federally recognized.
An online petition to turn Bonnie Springs into a historical landmark had been signed by more than 32,000 people as of Wednesday afternoon.
“They are now closing down Bonnie Springs and starting demolition in March to make room for another high end luxury community,” Peter Hall, the creator of the online petition, wrote in its description. “The city tried to demolish the Huntridge theater years ago, and our community was able to preserve this historical building by signing a petition to make it a historical landmark. Let’s do the same for Bonnie Springs.”
The Bellamys, who have lived in Las Vegas for 15 years, are heartbroken that the ranch is closing, they said Saturday.
“This is where our kids saw their first snow,” Angela Bellamy said, describing that day in December 2017 as “magical.”
On Saturday, her kids, Oliver, 3, and Soraya, 4, played with the animatronic figures on the wood-planked platform outside Old Town. Oliver shouted “Snake!” at a fake reptile in a glass case, while Soraya turned the crank on a penny press machine.
Adam Bellamy said he’ll miss the ranch’s “homespun charm.”
“Places like this don’t exist anymore,” he said.
His family planned to watch all the Old West shows and ride the train before grabbing dinner and beers at the restaurant at Bonnie Springs. (“We’re going on the choo-choo train!” Oliver interjected.)
“It feels very Nevada,” Angela Bellamy said.
“I feel like people that come visit here sometimes get a misrepresentation of what our state is from the Strip. And I feel like this is our state,” she said, gesturing toward the wooden walls of the Old Town. “Kind of podunk, homespun, cobbled together, but just so interesting and beautiful and special.”
Creating a memory
Dawn Bailey, who has lived in Las Vegas for 34 years, used to visit Bonnie Springs with her grandchildren, now ages 18 and 19, nearly every weekend when they were young. Her granddaughter used to come so often that she memorized the names on the fake headstones in the western village replica.
Bailey and her 10-year-old grandson, Cash Landry, visited the ranch Saturday to revive the forgotten tradition before it closes.
“We realized that he was here when he was a baby and doesn’t remember it,” Bailey said. “We want him to have that memory, too.”
Cash and his grandmother sat on hay bales as they watched a western melodrama unfold. A man pretending to be an old-time miner, wearing red long johns and a battered black cowboy hat, shouted about aluminum in the background.
“I love it,” Cash said of the ranch. “My favorite part is probably the zoo, I really like animals.”
Now that he has experienced it, Cash said he’s sad that Bonnie Springs is closing. His grandmother agreed.
“You kind of take it for granted so you don’t come,” Bailey said. “And then when I read that newspaper article I said, ‘We have to bring him because now he’s old enough to remember it.’”
Contact Kimber Laux at klaux@reviewjournal.com. Follow @lauxkimber on Twitter.
A previous version of this story included the suggestion of placement on the National Register of Historic Places as a way to prevent the closure of Bonnie Springs Ranch and the construction of homes there. While the placement of a location on the register promotes a site as worthy of preservation, it does not protect it from sale, redevelopment or destruction.