1844 John C. Fremont and his party of explorers arrive at Pyramid Lake (30 miles from Reno). Prior to this time, the area was inhabited exclusively by Native Americans. Reno was a gathering place for celebrations and festivals of the Washoe and Paiute tribes.
1846 The Donner Party-a misdirected, ill-advised party of immigrants-is trapped in the heavy snows of the Sierra. Virtually all overland travel is halted in the area for the next two years.
1848 Gold is discovered in at Sutter’s Mill, California, and prospectors race to the Great Basin and Sierra Nevada.
1850 The Utah Territory is established, including most of what is now Utah, Idaho, and Nevada.
1859 The Comstock Lode-the greatest silver strike in American history-begins near Virginia City, 24 miles from Reno in the Utah Territory. Within a year, some 10,000 prospectors invade the territory.
1861 Under President James Buchanan, Nevada is proclaimed a US territory separate from Utah.
1863 Samuel Clemens moves to Virginia City to work on the Territorial Enterprise under the pseudonym Mark Twain.
1864 Battle-Born Nevada becomes a state under Abraham Lincoln.
1867 The railroad comes to the Truckee Meadows
1868 Lake’s Crossing is renamed Reno after Civil War General Jesse Lee Reno.
1869 The Nevada legislature formally legalizes gambling in the state.
1885 The University of Nevada moves from Elko to Reno
1903 Reno is incorporated as a city. A year later, Sparks is incorporated as a city.
1910 Populists in the state legislature ban gambling. That same year, Jack Johnson fights Jim Jeffries in the “battle of the century, in Reno before 22,000 fans-more than double the city’s population.
1927 Nevada drops its residency requirements for divorce to three months. The three-day waiting period in California for a marriage license begins Reno’s marriage boom (some 18,000 couples to wed in the city in 1945 alone).
1929 Thanks to the winner of a slogan contest, the Reno arch (installed in 1926) advertises Reno as the Biggest Little City in the World.
1931 Gambling is declared legal again by the Nevada Legislature to boost the local economy’s recovery during the Great Depression. That same year, residency requirements for a legal divorce are dropped to six weeks, and the divorce rate in Nevada increases 200 percent.
1936 Harolds Club casino opens. During World War II, the phrase, Harolds Club or Bust is advertised internationally.
1947 The Mapes Hotel/Casino opens as Nevada’s first casino resort.
1950 Reno and Las Vegas account for almost 62 percent of the state’s population (jumping to 82 percent by 1970).
1952 Reno’s weddings outnumber its divorces.
1955 John Ascuaga opens the Nugget, Sparks’ first casino.
1959 Reno Municipal Airport opens.
1960 The Misfits, Arthur Miller’s first screenplay, is filmed in Reno; the film stars Clark Gable and Marilyn Monroe.
1965 The Reno-Sparks Convention Center opens (originally as the Centennial Coliseum).
1967 The Pioneer Center for the Performing Arts opens (originally intended as the convention center).
1968 Interstate 80 is constructed, employing Reno as the link between the eastern and western United States.
1973 The Fleischmann Planetarium opens on the University of Nevada, Reno campus.
1987 The new Reno arch is erected in Virginia Street (to replace the 1935 neon version). That same year, the Reno Livestock events center opens as one the most modern and versatile event facilities in the western United States.
1989 The National Automobile Museum opens with more than 200 cars on display.
1991 The Raymond I. Smith Truckee River Walk opens, making the river a part of the local tourist experience.
1995 Reno’s National Bowling Stadium-the Taj Mahal of the Ten Pins-opens. That same year, The Silver Legacy opens boasting the tallest hotel tower in the state and changing Reno’s skyline forever.
1996 Artown is born as a month long arts festival, bringing the city national recognition.
2000 Hotel-casino revenues reach $200 billion in Washoe County. Also, Nevada starts the Millennium Scholarship program, whereby Nevada high school seniors (who have been residents for two years, have passed all areas of the proficiency exams, and have earned an overall B average) are awarded $40 per enrolled credit hour at a University and Community College System of Nevada (UCCSN) community college or $80 per enrolled credit hour at UCCSN university.
[insert_php]
$market = “RNO” ;
global $market ;
[/insert_php]
[insert_php]
$market = “RNO” ;
[/insert_php]