Memorable moments in Sin City history
Every visitor to Vegas comes home with at least one
good story — whether or not they ever tell it is another thing. Here are a few
only-in- Vegas moments you may not have heard about.
APRIL 15, 1979: LIBERACE OPENS HIS OWN MUSEUM Because it turns out that you can have too many candelabras, Liberace
opened his own museum just outside the Vegas city limits in Paradise — a home
for his outlandish costumes, jewelry, cars and one-of-a-kind pianos. The museum
shut down in 2010, but not before super fans tried to rip the many tiny mirrors
off his Rolls Royce as souvenirs of closing day.
APRIL 20, 2010: THE STRATOSPHERE DEBUTS SKYJUMP For all the people who look at a tall building and think, “I wish I
could bungee off that,” Stratosphere opened the thrilling SkyJump ride 855 feet
above the Las Vegas Strip. Billed as a “controlled free fall” over 100 stories
high, SkyJump offered (and still does) thrill-seekers unforgettable views of
Vegas — assuming they could keep their eyes open.
MAY 15, 1998: THE STRIP DIMS ITS LIGHTS FOR SINATRA In tribute to the man who lit up Vegas’ showrooms for decades,
businesses took a moment of visual rest the day after Frank Sinatra’s death.
First, Caesars Palace and the Mirage dimmed their lights, and then the Imperial
Palace, Flamingo Hilton and Bally’s followed suit. The lights went down at 8:30
p.m. and came back on at 8:33 p.m. It was like night and day.
MAY 7, 1920: RANDALL HENDERSON LANDS IN LAS VEGAS Long before screaming bachelorette parties started arriving at McCarran
airport by the plane-load, WWI pilot and newspaperman Randall Henderson was
Vegas’ first visitor from the sky, landing a two-seat airplane in what is now
downtown. Henderson and his buddy, businessman Jake Beckley, flew in to visit
Beckley’s brother, who was one of Vegas’ 2,300 residents.