Posted on: March 1, 2024, 07:07h.
Last updated on: March 1, 2024, 07:14h.
Las Vegas wasn’t even the first Las Vegas in Las Vegas. An actual, thriving community of 2,000-3,000, also called Las Vegas, was established before the railroad that supposedly built Las Vegas even got there.
J.T. (John Thomas) McWilliams — born in Ontario, Canada in 1863 — was a freelance land and water surveyor hired in 1902 by the San Pedro, Los Angeles & Salt Lake Railroad. His task was surveying a nearly 2K-acre ranch owned by one of Las Vegas’ only residents at the time, Helen J. Stewart.
The railroad was considering purchasing the land to build a town for its new railroad station.
Viva Las Vegas 1.0
Armed with that tidbit of insider info, McWilliams decided to beat the town to town. In 1904, he bought 80 acres of Stewart’s ranch. The land sat just west of the railroad right-of-way.
Using his surveying skills, he painstakingly laid out an orderly grid, with broad dirt avenues that eventually became today’s Bonanza Road, Washington Avenue, and A and H streets.
After McWilliams built it, they came, railroad workers and their families — white, Black, Latino, and Native American. Most traveled the Mormon Road wagon route either from Los Angeles or Salt Lake City, the two major cities they were building the railroad to connect.
Because most were builders, they had no problem building their own houses — though some lived in tents while saving up for the materials. McWilliams built his own home there, too, at 222 Wilson St.
By the beginning of 1905, McWilliams’ Las Vegas had stores, a bank, and was even building Las Vegas’ first theater. (McWilliams persuaded vaudeville impresario Chauncy Pulsifer to begin construction on the 800-seat Trocadero that May.)
The first Las Vegas had all the modern amenities — except one.
Because McWilliams had never secured the water rights to his township’s land — Stewart sold them to Montana Sen. William A. Clark, owner of the railroad — residents of the first Las Vegas were forced to lug their water from a hodgepodge of wells dug throughout the community.
This was doable, since Las Vegas (Spanish for “the meadows”) teemed with underground springs before they were all sucked up by decades of development. But it was a hassle.
So, when Clark began advertising the May 15-16, 1905 land auction that would establish his own Las Vegas on the other side of the freshly built railroad tracks, one thing that really stuck out to the residents of the O.G. Las Vegas was that his lots all included running water.
“McWilliams got a jump on it, but he didn’t have the water rights, and that’s what destroyed him,” Emmett Gates, a Las Vegas documentary filmmaker, told Casino.org.
Leaving Las Vegas
Over a period of a few weeks, McWilliams’ Las Vegas emptied out, while Clark’s became today’s downtown.
“People with businesses placed the buildings on skids and moved them across the tracks to the Clark side,” Gates said.
Once Clark’s Las Vegas became the official one, the original fell into almost immediate decline. A fire in September 1905 consumed most of what was left of the town, including the half-built Trocadero.
McWilliams, who refused to relocate, insisted that the blighted area be called “the original Las Vegas Townsite,” but no one listened. They were already denigrating it as “Ragtown.” Later, its…
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