Table of Contents
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form 1
FHR-8-300 (11-78) United States Department of the interior Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form See instructions in How to Complete National Register Forms Type all entries complete applicable sections_______________ 1. Name__________________ historic Virginia Street Bridge_______________________ and/or common Same 2. Location K rV: street & number Ar.rnss Truckee River At Virginia Street not for publication city, town Reno vicinity of____congressional district at large state Nevada code 32 county Washoe code 031 3. Classification Category Ownership Status Present Use district public ^ occupied agriculture museum building(s) private unoccupied commercial park X structure both work in progress educational private residence site Public Acquisition Accessible entertainment religious object in process X yes: restricted government scientific y being considered yes: unrestricted industrial transportation no military other: 4. Owner of Property name State of Nevada, Department of Transportation street & number 1263 S . Stewart city,town Carson City vicinity of state Nevada 5. Location of Legal Description courthouse, registry of deeds, etc. 3ame as above street & number city, town state 6. Representation in Existing Surveys title Nevada Historic Engineering Site has this property been determined elegible? yes no Inventory date 5/8/79 federal state county local depository for survey records History of Engineering Program . Texas Tech University city, town Lubbock state Texas 7. Description Condition Check one Check one _ X. excellent deteriorated x unaltered _ X- original site good ruins altered moved date fair unexposed Describe the present and original (if known) physical appearance Built in 1905, the Virginia Steet Bridge is a two span bridge across the Truckee River at Virginia Street in Reno. -
Historical Society Quarterly, No
HistoricalNevada Society Quarterly John B. Reid Hillary Velázquez Juliet S. Pierson Editor-in-Chief & Frank Ozaki Manuscript Editor Production & Design Joyce M. Cox Proofreader Volume 58 2015 Numbers 1-4 Contents Sarah Winnemucca Goes to Washington KYHL LYNDGAARD 1 Editor’s Note 6 Opening the Mountains The Civilian Conservation Corps and the U.S. Forest Service at Lamoille Canyon and Mount Charleston, Nevada “A Long Struggle and Many Disappointments” JONATHAN FOSTER Las Vegas’s Failure to Open a Resort Hotel, 1905-1940 LARRY DALE GRAGG 27 Sarah Winnemucca Goes to Washington KYHL LYNDGAARD 44 “A Long Struggle and Many Disappointments” Las Vegas’s Failure to Open a Resort Hotel, 1905-1940 LARRY DALE GRAGG Front Cover: Camp Mount Charleston, June 1940. (Gerald W. Williams Collection, Oregon State University Libraries Special Collections & Archives Research Center) 66 Notes and Documents Noble Getchell: “Mr. Republican” During Nevada’s New Deal JAMES W. HULSE Book Reviews 71 The Main Event: Boxing in Nevada from the Mining Camps to the Las Vegas Strip. By Richard O. Davies (Reno: University of Nevada Press, 2014) Reviewed by Randy Roberts 73 We Were All Like Migrant Workers Here: Work, Community, and Memory on California’s Round Valley Reservation, 1850-1941. By William J. Bauer, Jr. (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2009) Reviewed by Scott L. Stabler, Ph.D 75 How Cities Won the West. By Carl Abbott (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2008) Reviewed by Eugene P. Moehring 78 Cumulative Index – Volume 57 3 Editor’s Note If you cover up the left half of the 1820 map of the United States—the War- ner Pocket Map, for example—you will have no difficulty identifying today’s political and geographical boundaries. -
Weekly Projects Bidding 4/16/2021
Weekly Projects Bidding 4/16/2021 Reasonable care is given in gathering, compiling and furnishing the information contained herein which is obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but the Planroom is not responsible or liable for errors, omissions or inaccuracies. Plan# Name Bid Date & Time OPR# Location Estimate Project Type Monday, April 19, 2021 CHANNEL MAINTENANCE DREDGING - DEPARTMENT OF ARMY Addenda: 1 SCOL65 4/19/21 1:00 PM 21-00903 Redwood City $10,000,000 to $25,000,000 State-Federal Plan Issuer: Department of Army- Contracting Division 000-000-0000 Contract #: W912P721B0003 Maintenance dredging (using contour dredging) of the Redwood City Channel to -30-ft (MLLW) plus 2-ft of paid overdepth and transporting of the dredged material to the Government-furnished site SF-11 and to the Contractor furnished beneficial reuse upland site. Project Contact For Questions: Erica Miller Email: [email protected] Bidders: Accurate Earthworks, Inc. General Contractor Ph: 415-206-1192 Fax: 415-206-1194 DESIGN AND INSTALL A STEAM AND CONDENSATE SYSTEM Addenda: 4 4/19/21 10:30 AM 20-03518 San Luis Obispo $656,791 Public Works Prebid Conf: MAND 1/28 @ 10am- California Men’s Colony, Highway 1, San Luis Obispo Contract #: C5609913-D The Contractor shall design and install a fully functioning and operational Steam and Condensate System and will be compensated in accordance with the services rates on Exhibit B-1, Public Works Rate Sheet. The Contractor shall include all labor, design, engineering, equipment, parts, devices, materials, programming, tools, installation, supervision, inspection, training, taxes, licenses, permits, insurance, transportation, travel and per diem and any other costs necessary to perform services for the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation (CDCR), Inmate/Ward Labor Program (IWL) at the California Men's Colony located at Highway 1, San Luis Obispo, CA. -
The History and Enduring Legal Legacy of Migratory Divorce
University of Tennessee Law Legal Scholarship Repository: A Service of the Joel A. Katz Library UTK Law Faculty Publications 4-2021 If You Grant It, They Will Come: The History and Enduring Legal Legacy of Migratory Divorce Michael J. Higdon Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.law.utk.edu/utklaw_facpubs Part of the Law Commons University of Tennessee College of Law From the SelectedWorks of Michael J Higdon 2020 If You Grant It, They iW ll Come: The iH story and Enduring Legal Legacy of Migratory Divorce Michael J Higdon Available at: https://works.bepress.com/michael_higdon/3/ Research Paper #408 April 2021 If You Grant It, They Will Come: The History and Enduring Legal Legacy of Migratory Divorce Michael J. Higdon Utah Law Review (Forthcoming) This paper may be downloaded without charge from the Social Science Research Network Electronic library at http://ssrn.com/abstract=3757669 Learn more about the University of Tennessee College of Law: law.utk.edu Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3757669 IF YOU GRANT IT, THEY WILL COME: THE HISTORY AND ENDURING LEGAL LEGACY OF MIGRATORY DIVORCE Michael J. Higdon* ABSTRACT Fifty years ago, California became the first state to enact no-fault divorce, making it easier than ever before for individuals to dissolve unsuccessful marriages. Soon every state would follow suit, and over the years much has been written about this national shift in the law of divorce. What has thus far escaped scrutiny, however, is one of the prime casualties of that switch—the phenomenon of migratory divorce. -
Myth #68: Getting “Reno-Vated”: the Ring of Truth by Guy Rocha, Former Nevada State Archivist
Myth #68: Getting “Reno-Vated”: The Ring of Truth by Guy Rocha, Former Nevada State Archivist "Traditionally, divorcees coming to Reno to take advantage of the city's easy divorce laws threw their wedding rings into the river," According to the Reno Gazette-Journal's "Nevada Living" supplement (April 2001). "The trend may have started-or been fueled by-a scene in the 1961 film 'Misfits' in which Marilyn Monroe considered tossing her ring into the Truckee." Some writers argue that ring tossing in what was once known as "The Divorce Capital of the World" is a myth. Others claim the legendary ritual began as a publicity stunt that was imitated by divorcees. People have been debating for years whether dropping wedding rings into the Truckee River is a long-standing tradition. Any trend started long before "The Misfits," the short story and screenplay written by playwright Arthur Miller following his Reno divorce in 1956 and subsequent marriage to Marilyn Monroe. An early description of ring throwing can be traced to Cornelius Vanderbilt, Jr.'s first novel, Reno (1929). A journalist, the great-great grandson of railroad baron Cornelius Vanderbilt wrote the book after a divorce from his first wife in Reno in 1927. Vanderbilt may have read the first known account of throwing wedding rings into the Truckee River in a pamphlet titled Reno! “It Won’t Be Long Now” NINETY DAYS AND FREEDOM (1927) while awaiting his divorce. On page 24 of Vanderbilt’s novel, one of the principal characters, John Gilbert Berkeley (J.B.), standing on a concrete bridge compares the Ganges and Truckee rivers. -
Truckee River Operating Agreement
Revised Draft Environmental Impact Statement/ Environmental Impact Report Truckee River Operating Agreement Cultural Resources Appendix California and Nevada August 2004 United States Department of the Interior Bureau of Reclamation Fish and Wildlife Service Bureau of Indian Affairs State of California Department of Water Resources Cultural Resources Appendix Contents Page I. Section 1: Overview........................................................................................................... 2 A. Study Area.................................................................................................................... 2 B. Prehistoric Settlement ................................................................................................... 2 1. Pre-Archaic Period.................................................................................................. 2 2. Archaic Period........................................................................................................ 2 3. Early Archaic Period............................................................................................... 2 4. Middle Archaic Period............................................................................................ 3 5. Late Archaic Period ................................................................................................ 3 C. Ethnographic Use.......................................................................................................... 5 D. Historic Settlement..................................................................................................... -
Truckee River Appendix Cover
Final Environmental Impact Statement/Environmental Impact Report Truckee River Operating Agreement Cultural Resources Appendix January 2008 United States Department of the Interior Bureau of Reclamation Fish and Wildlife Service Bureau of Indian Affairs State of California Department of Water Resources Final Environmental Impact Statement/Environmental Impact Report Truckee River Operating Agreement Cultural Resources Appendix January 2008 United States Department of the Interior Bureau of Reclamation Fish and Wildlife Service Bureau of Indian Affairs State of California Department of Water Resources Cultural Resources Appendix Table of Contents Page CULTURAL RESOURCES APPENDIX .................................................................... 1 I. Section 1: Overview........................................................................................ 2 A. Study Area...............................................................................................................2 B. Prehistoric Settlement ..............................................................................................2 1. Pre-Archaic Period..........................................................................................2 2. Archaic Period................................................................................................2 3. Early Archaic Period.......................................................................................2 4. Middle Archaic Period....................................................................................3 -
Footprints Dedicated to Preserving and Promoting Historic Resources in the Truckee Meadows Through Education, Advocacy and Leadership
May/Ju ne Walking Tours! See Pages 6-7 FootPrints Dedicated to Preserving and Promoting Historic Resources in the Truckee Meadows through Education, Advocacy and Leadership. vol. 15 no. 2 Spring 2012 From Missouri to Reno, and Back Again, 102 Years Later by Barrie Schuster n November 2011, I found myself flipping through a box of the wicker furniture were all perfectly captured and frozen in old photographs in a booth in the Virginia Street Antique time. The photos of the outside of the house showed the detail IMall. I gazed at the faces of people, long gone, whose stories of the carved porch rails and decorative architectural elements. had been lost and whose identities would remain a mystery to One photograph showed a Ford Model T parked beside the house. everyone who saw them. A studio portrait of a peculiar looking I wondered if the house was still standing, and I thought about woman wearing a big hat and a fox stole caught my eye. I turned how fun it would be to return the photos to the home’s current the photo over and found the name Gertrude Crowell written owner, 102 years later. on the back. As I sorted through the rest of the box, I continued to see this same woman in other snapshots taken inside a very I went home and looked beautiful home. up the address on Google Maps and found that there I turned over one of these photos and found “Gertrude Crowell was still a home at that Allen, 6 S. High Street Butler, Missouri, 1909” written on the back. -
Supplemental Land Use and Economic Development Information and Supporting Documentation Templates for Small Starts Projects September 2017
Virginia Street Bus RAPID Transitubmitted Extension by: Regional Transportation Commission of Washoe County Supplemental Land Use and Economic Development Information and Supporting Documentation Templates for Small Starts Projects September 2017 Submitted by: Regional Transportation Commission of Washoe County With support from: VIRGINIA STREET BUS RAPID TRANSIT EXTENSION PROJECT Page intentionally left blank Page | i VIRGINIA STREET BUS RAPID TRANSIT EXTENSION PROJECT Table of Contents Overview __________________________________________________________________________________________________ 1 Existing Land Use ________________________________________________________________________________________ 2 Existing Corridor and Station Area Development _________________________________________________________________ 2 The Districts _______________________________________________________________________________________________________ 3 UNR DISTRICT ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ 4 DOWNTOWN DISTRICT __________________________________________________________________________________________ 7 MIDTOWN DISTRICT ____________________________________________________________________________________________ 12 Existing Corridor and Station Area Development Character ____________________________________________________ 15 UNR DISTRICT ___________________________________________________________________________________________________ 15 DOWNTOWN DISTRICT _________________________________________________________________________________________ -
Truckee River Flood Project Working Group FINAL MINUTES WEDNESDAY ~ FEBRUARY 25, 2009 ~ 3:00 P.M
Truckee River Flood Project Working Group FINAL MINUTES WEDNESDAY ~ FEBRUARY 25, 2009 ~ 3:00 P.M. Washoe County Department of Water Resources Conference Room 4930 Energy Way, Reno, Nevada 1. INTRODUCTIONS Naomi Duerr – Flood Project Director, opened the meeting at approximately 3:00 p.m. and reordered the agenda. 5. TRACTION PROJECTS – A) Virginia Street Bridge - Phase II Design; and B) Lower Mustang Restoration [Taken out of agenda order] Naomi Duerr – Flood Project Director, commented that Jay Aldean, Paul Urban and she had just returned from a Reno City Council meeting at which the Virginia Street Bridge was discussed. The discussion focused on the level of protection, bridge design and the like. It appears that the design supported by the Working Group - no piers in the channel – might be appropriate as did the City of Reno staff with an above supported bridge. Ms. Duerr noted that she had been asked to comment on the presentation and expressed her support of the Reno staff’s recommendation. The Reno City Council expressed their support for the under supported design that she was unaware of. Ms. Duerr stated that the City Council had supported the 100-year level of protection with two feet of freeboard. Reno staff will move forward with design options including a draw bridge, which apparently is nearly twice the cost. The concerns include view and other historic aspects of the river corridor. The cost estimates provided for the draw bridge design may have been for a more robust and larger structure(s) that accommodates large ocean going type vessels. -
Opened for Business in April 1909, Livery Stables, a Tombstone Factory, a Blacksmith’S Shop, Couple of Exceptions
NONPROFIT ORG. U.S. POSTAGE PAID RENO NV PERMIT NO. 20 P.O. Box 14003 FootPrints Reno, NV 89507 Dedicated to Preserving and Promoting Historic Resources in the Truckee Meadows through Education, Advocacy, and Leadership. vol. 10 no. 2 Spring 2007 Virginia Street Bridge, The Bridge of Sighs by Cindy Ainsworth Author’s Note: In September 1997, Pat Ferraro Klos and William Fuller, hoped he had found “his silver” in the guise Charlotte Jones McConnell were assigned the task of selecting the of a primitive road, waystation and bridge. Coming to the new HRPS organization’s logo. They chose Loren Jahn’s rendering Truckee Meadows from Honey Lake, California, in 1859, he Bulk Rate Mail of the Virginia Street Bridge. As HRPS’ first president, Pat felt that claimed land along the Truckee upstream from the established FootPrints is mailed using a Bulk Rate this “historic symbol beautifully emigrant river crossings and Mail permit. If your address changes, please links both sides of our city, waystations near Glendale. Fuller send a note to HRPS, PO Box 14003, Reno culturally and emotionally.” cleared a road approximately NV 89507, with your address change. from Panther Valley south to Note that Bulk Rate mail is not forwarded. Ten years have passed since Huffaker, a route similar to the HRPS adopted the bridge as its present Virginia Street. symbol. In celebration, we at FootPrints felt it was time to By 1860, he had built a hotel not only share the stories and and crude bridge and founded myths surrounding the Virginia Fuller’s Crossing. According to SPRING PROGRAMS, 2007 HRPS Officers Street Bridge but to update our one description, the low bridge President: Joan Dyer 329-8744 readers on its current status. -
On-Screen Portrayals of Reno, Nevada, in Television and Film
University of Nevada, Reno “Make the Biggest Little Mistake of Your Life” — On-Screen Portrayals of Reno, Nevada, in Television and Film Thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Geography By Scott Speer Dr Paul F. Starrs/Thesis Advisor August 2013 i Abstract Reno, Nevada, is a subject seen and mentioned many times in film and television over the past century. On-screen depictions use ways to create a sense of place that often focus on specific aspects of a place and omit others. Due to the wide audience that Hollywood productions receive, how places are viewed in film and on television affects the overall public perception of that place. Reno, Nevada, has been portrayed as a center for divorce, gambling, and prostitution, as well as being the place to go if you’re washed-up, on the run, or are uneducated trailer trash. The pub- lic’s perception of Reno changes over time, and can easily be followed by examining the films and television that feature this self-described “big- gest little city in the world.” ii Table of Contents Abstract ............................................................................................................ i Table of Contents ............................................................................................. ii List of Figures .................................................................................................. v Introduction ....................................................................................................