Hammargren Open House 2015 – Oct 31 & Nov 1

 

We’re never sure if it will be the last time ever – so if you can make it – Go!

See the flyer below and entertainment schedule.

This is not hosted by the LVTGG, go on your own, bring friends and family.

Note there is a $15 per person (12+) suggested donation.

Hammargren's Nevada Day 2015

 

Entertainment – Provided by SUNDAR & LIGHTNING ENT. Las Vegas, USA.
Sundar: talent scout/producer/director/emcee (
702) 785-3005
 
Saturday, Oct. 31st 2015 – 11:00 AM to 4:00 PM

From
12:00 noon to 2:00 p.m. – The Dummkopfs

 Open Mic. for Celebrity Guest Artists with Music Director Marc Love

 MC’s: Marc Love & Little J. Gambino (Comedian, BMI Ent. & Ambassador of Peace)

   Sunday, Nov. 1st 2015 – 11:00 AM to 4:00 PM

“Tribute Artists & Impersonators Variety Show”

 * SUNDAR: MC

* Marc Love: Music Director, Tribute to Lee Greenwood, Righteous Brothers and Hall & Oates with
Mark Maynard

* Mark Maynard: (Formerly with “Legends in Concert”) Tribute to Frankie Valli, Righteous Brothers
and Hall & Oates with Marc Love

* Donnie Fox: Tribute to Roy Orbison and John Lennon

* Doug Price: Sax, “Dueling Fiddle” with Kevin Gardner Rose

* Kevin Gardner Rose: Tribute to Charlie Daniels & “Dueling Fiddle” with Doug Price

* Yohon Harbin: (Formerly lead singer with The Legendary “Drifters”) Tribute to “Isley Brothers” and
duet with Dana Lara

* Dana Lara: Tribute to Etta James and duet with Yohon Harbin

* Surprise Guest Singers!

& PAIGE POOLE AS ELVIS !! 

Tule Springs Event at the NSM Saturday July 18, 2015

NSM Tule Springs Event July 18, 2015

Please see the flier above or click here for an upcoming event this coming Saturday, July 18, 2015 from 2:00 to 4:00 pm,  organized by the Protectors of Tule Springs and the National Park Service and held at the Nevada State Museum, Las Vegas. Please feel free to join this free event and pass on the information to those who might be interested in attending. There will be several announcements related to the future of the Tule Springs Fossil Beds National Monument.

This is not a Las Vegas Tourist Guides Guild event, so please contact the Nevada State Museum with any questions.

Nevada State Museum, Las Vegas

309 S. Valley View Blvd.

Las Vegas, NV 89107

702-822-4340

__________________________

From the NPS site, http://www.nps.gov/tusk/planyourvisit/basicinfo.htm:

Tule Springs Fossil Beds National Monument was established as the 405th unit of the National Park Service Dec. 19, 2014.

It was established to “conserve, protect, interpret and enhance for the benefit of present and future generations the unique and nationally important paleontological, scientific, educational and recreational resources and values of the land.”

The monument is 22,650 acres. It is located just north of Las Vegas, Nevada, and stretches along US Highway 95 north of Aliante and Centennial Hills to Creech Air Force Base.

The paleontological period represented at Tule Springs ranges from 200,000 to 3,000 years ago. It is rich with significant paleontological resources from the ice age, including the Columbian Mammoth, extinct horses, camels and bison, and the dire wolf.

Tule Springs Fossil Beds National Monument is open during daylight hours.

Because it’s a new park, there is no visitor center, facilities or parking areas. Right now to access the park, people can park on nearby public roads in the cities of Las Vegas and North Las Vegas, and they can enter the monument on foot.

More information about Tule Springs can be found on the Protectors of Tule Springs website.

National Parks Workshop – this Sunday, July 12, 2015

Art Chesmore and Brian Davis are hosting a workshop that provides LVTGG members the opportunity to learn about National Parks and National Public Lands in Southwest United States.

Included, but not inclusive, you will receive information about Grand Canyon NP, Bryce Canyon NP, Zion NP, Death Valley NP, Lake Mead NRA, Red Rock Canyon NCA, Tule Springs Fossil Beds NM, and Mojave NP.

Public lands in Southern Nevada are managed by several agencies of the United States Government, including the Bureau of Land Management, the National Park Service, the U.S. Forest Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Bureau of Reclamation, and the United States Air Force.

Each agency has defined mandates, that may allow or restrict recreation or commercial activities.

Art and Brian will distribute material that will supplement information provided during the LVTGG Certified Professional Tourist Guide training.

If you currently lead tourists into public lands in Southern Nevada, or have interest in leading tours into public lands in Arizona, California, Nevada or Utah, plan to attend this workshop.

Date: Sunday, July 12, 2015
Time: 12 noon – 3 pm
Location: REI Store in Boca Park, meeting room

 

REI is at 710 South Rampart Blvd. Las Vegas, 89145 (Intersection of Rampart and Charleston)

RSVP TODAY to ArtChesmore@gmail.com to reserve your seat.

 

Stephen Mather, Natl. Park Service

The LAST Hammargren Nevada Day Open House

For those who don’t know, the Hammargren home(s) are a Vegas treasure, full of quirky and unique collections from Las Vegas, Nevada, and the world. Once a year for almost the last 20 years, they open their home to the public, and they’ve said that this will be the last time. If you can, a visit is well worth your time!

“Hammargren Home of Nevada History”

 Sandy & Lonnie Hammargren invite YOU to

The 19th Annual and LAST Open House

This is an official function of Nevada’s 150th Birthday –

*A Sesquicentennial Celebration*

Celebrating

NEVADA DAY

SATURDAY & SUNDAY- NOVEMBER 1 & 2, 2014

Noon to 5:00 PM

DONATION ♥ $15.00 ♥ per person ♥ under 12 FREE

Non-Stop Live Las Vegas Entertainers

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT ♫ TOURS REFRESHMENTS

Proceeds to Benefit

“The Mid-East Memorial Wall” ♥

4318 Ridgecrest Drive ♠ Las Vegas, Nevada 89121

Hammargren House Map

Please PARK with Courtesy to the Neighbors

 Go towww.nevadaday.orgfor more info.

Nevada Day 150 Years of Statehood

LVTGG Tourism Event – May 21, 2014 – Tourism, Hospitality, and the Lure of the West

 

TOURISM, HOSPITALITY, AND THE LURE OF THE WEST:

HOW THE HARVEY HOUSES PAVED THE WAY FOR LAS VEGAS

 Wednesday, May 21, 2014

7:00 pm – 8:30 pm

Art Square Theater, 1025 S. First Street, Las Vegas, Nevada

6:00 pm – Reception and book signing, featuring authentic Harvey House inspired menu items

Nevada Humanities Program Gallery, 1017 S. First

(behind Art Square, adjacent to Mingo’s)

Free and Open to the Public

Sponsored by Nevada Humanities, the Las Vegas Tourist Guides Guild (LVTGG) and UNLV’s College of Hotel Administration, with support from UNLV’s History Department and the City of Las Vegas Historic Preservation Commission.

Vintage Harvey House postcard

Join us for a spirited panel discussion exploring how the Harvey House empire of restaurants and hotels, under the guidance of hospitality pioneer Fred Harvey, paved the way for the development of Las Vegas as a tourist destination. The panel includes:

  • Andy Kirk, moderator, UNLV Professor of Public History
  • Stephen Fried, author, Appetite for America: Fred Harvey and the Business of Civilizing the West – one meal at a time.
  • David Schwartz, Director, UNLV’s Center for Gaming Research
  • Jan Jones, Senior Vice President of Communications and Government Affairs, Caesars Corporation; former Mayor of Las Vegas
  • Opening remarks by Dean Stowe Shoemaker, UNLV’s William F. Harrah College of Hotel Administration

The program includes the screening of an excerpt from the recently released documentary, The Harvey Girls: Opportunity Bound, a film that chronicles the first significant female workforce in the US. Fred Harvey was a groundbreaking entrepreneur who established the first national chain of restaurants, hotels and book stores along the Santa Fe Rail Road from Chicago to California.

The Harvey House model of cultural travel, hospitality and culinary invention in the late 19th and early 20th centuries set the stage for a thriving industry that would invigorate the economy and culture of the West. Considered the father of hospitality, Fred Harvey was a pioneer in branding and mythologizing the west.

For more information about this program, call Richard Hooker, LVTGG, 702.592.2164

A WSJ review of Stephen Fried’s book can be found at this link.

You can view, print, and share the event flyer from this link.

The Las Vegas Tourist Guides Guild is a professional association of tour guides and travel industry professionals promoting the scope and integrity of tour guiding in Nevada. The Harvey House event, cosponsored by the Guild, is part of a series of educational and informational programs developed and presented by LVTGG in partnership with other organizations.

In Memory of Charlene Cruze, 1941-2014

Written by Art Chesmore

Char at the Mormon Fort Feb 22 2014
On Thursday, March 6, 2014, colleague and friend Charlene Cruze died from injuries sustained in an accident at the Valley of Fire State Park. Charlene succumbed in the place she loved, and doing what she loved; guiding visitors around Las Vegas and through the Mojave Desert.

In 2009 Char was selected by the Las Vegas Tourist Guides Guild to be honored as the Tour Guide of the Decade. The distinguished award, for 37 years of tour guiding service in and around Las Vegas, was presented in a special ceremony in City Hall by Oscar Goodman, then Mayor of the City of Las Vegas.

Char was a founding director, member, and educational committee chairperson in the Las Vegas Tourist Guides Guild. Char founded Creative Adventures Ltd in 1976, and conducted private tours throughout the Southwest.

Char and the City of Las Vegas grew up together. Her parents were living at “Vegas Camp” in 1941 when she was born. There were 8,000 people in the valley. They built their first home where the Stratosphere Tower now stands, at the beginning of the fabulous Las Vegas Strip. The year she was born, the first resort hotel was built on the strip. WWII had brought the military to the area and from that dynamic era on, there was a growing love affair between this young lady and an emerging metropolis.

Her family history in the region goes back four generations. In 1855, her great-grandfather helped with the first settlement in Las Vegas. Her great-grandmother became the first school teacher in Clark County. Her grandparents helped build the first railroad station in 1905 (the year Las Vegas became a city). Her parents began trucking and road building operations in 1927 as the Boulder Canyon Project began (Hoover Dam). They built many of the first roads in Nevada, Utah, Arizona and California, including Hwy. 91. Char retains her father’s I.C.C. permit, the first ever issued in the State of Nevada.

With a father in the construction business and a beautiful mother (usually dressed in satin and lace), she was introduced to a world of ballet, piano, road construction, and mining. A stream of blue construction language was as natural to her ear as the language of classical music. She grew up through a childhood of dreams and dirt. Practicing her dancing on the flat bed of a diesel truck, tripping her fingers over the keyboard of an old upright piano from the Red Rooster Bar, driving her Dad’s heavy equipment through the desert, and listening to the songs of the wind through the cottonwood trees. Being born the same year as the arrival of the mafia and the military has provided some very interesting history.

She was fortunate to have experienced the freedom and harmony of a clean desert environment while riding horseback through the mesquite and creosote. She grew to appreciate the untouched beauty of areas like Redrock, Valley of Fire and Mt. Charleston. She swam in pools of natural artisan water at the old ranch and twin lakes and the concrete pools of the first hotels on the Strip.

She attended the opening of Bugsy’s famous Flamingo Hotel in 1946 with her mother and father; saw Elvis’ first appearance in 1956; caught the Beatles on their world tour, and grew up listening to old-timers tell of the history and beauty of the west through stories and songs.

A variety of events rounded out her week including workshops, commissioned art and calligraphy work, business meetings and touring visitors around Las Vegas, through the Mojave Desert, and into canyonlands, ghost towns and Indian sites around the area. Proud of her heritage, Char enjoyed providing professional tour services for the many delegates and visitors that arrive here. Her love of the land was apparent as she shared her special perspective of southern Nevada, Indian cultures and legends. She was a storyteller and recorded many of these stories in written form as her legacy to Las Vegas. As part of the Nevada Women’s History Project, she profiled some of her ancestors through oral storytelling and cowboy-style poetry. Many of these original poems she then put to music.

Her achievements number many including Nevada State Literary Award, Past President of American Mothers Association of Nevada, member in the National Music Teachers Association (music teacher for 25 years), founding member of The American School of Japanese Arts, Women of Achievement Finalist in Arts, Golden Gleaner Award, Co-Chair of the Nevada Women’s History Project, and active member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, Daughters of the Utah Pioneers, member of the Old Spanish Trail Association and member of 631 teamsters. Her art has been exhibited in galleries and museums in many western states and she was elected into the National League of Penwomen of America in the category of art.

As a teacher, her classes ranged from keyboard and calligraphic arts, to history of southern Nevada and the Mojave Desert. She was a docent with Friends of Red Rock. Pioneering calligraphy classes in Las Vegas, she began teaching in 1980 at UNLV. While her classes were sprinkled with humor and constant encouragement, they revealed a no-nonsense attitude toward her craft she refers to as the “zen of learning.” She created a movingly personal art form which bounces with the spontaneous freedom of oriental brush and watercolor and the discipline of traditional calligraphic hands. Her provocative poetry, written in a simple and powerful style reminiscent of Japanese Haiku, brings additional depth to the work.

Her life’s work was called “Earth Mark” in reverence to her Indian name. She produced her own line of greeting cards and published stories and poetry. Her fine art has a freshness and directness which is truly expressive of the beauty and clarity of the dramatic desert environment she loved so much.

Her Indian heritage (Cherokee\Algonquin) gave her a deep respect of the earth and love of storytelling. These attributes brought an enjoyable dimension to her tours and art. She was a registered member of the northern Tsalage Nation in Virginia, held membership and was presiding Elder in Nevada for the Kaweah Nation, representing all Native Americans in the western states. She was a minister with the Native American Church.

Char was an indefatigable worker with a strong penchant for perfection and personal integrity which expressed itself in both her art and personal life. She was a licensed minister and performed weddings and other ceremonies. Her beautiful family included two sons, two daughters, four grandchildren, and with the birth of her first great-granddaughter, the circle of seven had been created in the Las Vegas Valley. They will always be at the center of her heart.

Char brought to her audience a profound knowledge of regional history and human nature; acting in all things with an overview of wide experience and keen vision. She was a perceptive participant in the process of living and giving of herself.

Visitation and service will commence on Saturday March 15 at 11:00 am at the La Paloma Funeral Home, 5450 Stephanie Street, Las Vegas, NV 89122. In lieu of flowers, Charlene’s family respectfully requests that donations be given to assist with final financial obligations, or any animal, cancer, or Indian charity in her name. Donations may be presented to David Kerr (son), or mailed to David Kerr c/o Post Office Box 94043, Las Vegas, NV 89193-4043.