The Moulin Rouge: a fight for the West Side
 
The Moulin Rouge: a fight for the West Side

All Deverynn Bryant wants is to bring the Moulin Rouge back to life.
The resort on Bonanza Road was the first racially integrated hotel and casino in Nevada. Black performers on the Strip, who were barred from eating or staying at the resorts where they played, made the Moulin Rouge an all-night party spot for the six short months it was open in 1955 before closing in bankruptcy.
Bryant visits the abandoned property often, sitting, listening to music, collecting mementos.
West Las Vegas was headed toward becoming an area to celebrate black culture and black-owned businesses when the Moulin Rouge opened. Its closure stifled that momentum, he says.
“The story of the Moulin Rouge is the story of me, the story of my people.”
Bryant believes restoring the property can start a positive new chapter for black history in Las Vegas.

1975 flash flood caused millions in damages
 
1975 flash flood caused millions in damages

On July 3, 1975, the Thursday before the Fourth of July holiday weekend, a summer monsoon triggered a flash flood in the Las Vegas Valley.

Riviera implosion
 
Riviera implosion

After a fireworks display, the Monaco tower at the Riviera hotel casino comes crashing down in a controlled implosion on Tuesday, June 14, 2016.

Death in Las Vegas: Dan Wheldon
 
Death in Las Vegas: Dan Wheldon

Only 11 laps into the IZOD IndyCar World Championships at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway, reigning Indianapolis 500 winner Dan Wheldon dies from un­survivable injuries as the result of a fiery 15-car crash.

Death in Las Vegas: Tupac Skakur
 
Death in Las Vegas: Tupac Skakur

On Sept. 7, 1996, a cream-colored Cadillac pulled up alongside a newer model black BMW at the intersection of Flamingo Road and Koval Lane and fired about a dozen shots into the vehicle. Legendary rapper, Tupac Shakur was critically wounded and would die several days later of his injuries at University Medical Center.

Death in Las Vegas: Ted Binion
 
Death in Las Vegas: Ted Binion

When Ted Binion died under suspicious circumstances on Sept. 17, 1998, his passing marked the end of an era in the Las Vegas gaming industry and the beginning of criminal proceedings that would come to be known as the community’s “trial of the century.”

The Beatles in Las Vegas
 
The Beatles in Las Vegas

Las Vegas Beatles fans: A day in the life

Nevadans in WWI
 
Nevadans in WWI

The U.S. Army’s 91st “Wild West” Division was a ragtag legion of shopkeepers, cowboys, farmers, miners, Native Americans and immigrant railroad workers who helped change the course of history.

Las Vegas Pearl Harbor Survivors
 
Las Vegas Pearl Harbor Survivors

Seven Las Vegas Pearl Harbor survivors share their stories about December 7, 1941.

Allegiant Stadium flyover
 
Allegiant Stadium flyover

Aerial View of Allegiant Stadium home of the Las Vegas Raiders.