Saturday, November 23, 2013

I Miss Harold's Club in Reno

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If you grew up within the western America after about 1950, there's a good chance you saw some strange billboards along the highway as a child. Road signs were big business for a protracted time, and places like Harold's Club put numerous stock in using them for his or her advertising. I WILL BE ABLE TO recall seeing those signs even within the 1970's and early '80's promoting something in Reno that was fun. What, wasn't exactly spelled out, because our government wouldn't let the casinos say "gambling," however the signs were fun. And so they had a cartoon character riding a horse or driving a stagecoach and saying "Harold's Club or Bust." After all I also saw signs in Southern California that said "Barstow or Bust," in order that was confusing.

Anyway, I miss Harold's Club in Reno, which was around for approximately 60-years from the 1930's to the 1990's. The casino was fun, it had character (oh, boy, so did Harold Smith, Sr. the owner), it had things on display like guns, gaming items, pictures with stories, activities besides gamble. And, they still had meals for only $5 (I know, that was 1995). In addition they had the primary Red Dog game I ever say, although I much preferred the house version of In-between. In lots of ways, Harold's Club was the bridge in Reno from casino ownership by a small Mob of criminals, over the Mafia-controlled casinos, to family/corporate owned casinos.

As told within the book, Mob City: Reno Connection, Harold and his father, Raymond "Pappy" Smith came to town when clubs were controlled or dictated to by George Wingfield and Bill Graham, but Harold's Club went its own way (as Harrah's did), and did great business, becoming the most well liked casino on this planet within the 1950's. Although there can have been some questionable accounting occurring as Harold Smith took bags of coins from his own club to gamble in other casinos, there have been never any scandals over "skim" at Harold's Club, and in 1970 it was purchased by Howard Hughes, who's credited for bringing corporate ownership to casinos. I'm still iffy on that being a fair thing, but no less than the rumors were small on the club. Pity it has been closed for two decades. Such a lot of people have no idea what they missed!


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Read More... [Source: About.com Casino Gambling]

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