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Lakeside Casino Tahoe Restaurant

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Lakeside, 168 Highway 50, announced Tuesday through an email newsletter and a post on its website that it is permanently closing after 35 years 'of being a source of entertainment for thousands of guests.' The closure includes all areas of the business including the casino, restaurant and hotel. The Lakeside is a down home casino where the locals come and play and eat. The coffee shop severs great breakfast specials and dinner specials. It is never crowded and is connected to the Lakeside Hotel. Come here to get away from the crowds and the machines appear a bit. Restaurants at Harrah's Lake Tahoe Located on the top floor of Harrah's hotel tower, Friday's Station features include a dramatic entrance, a 1,000-bottle display wine. Lakeside Casino, Stateline: Hours, Address, Lakeside Casino Reviews: 4/5. Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Lake Tahoe (301) 12 min. Get to know the.

Lakeside Inn
Location Stateline, Nevada, U.S.
Address 168 U.S. Route 50
Opening date1946; 74 years ago
Closing dateMarch 17, 2020; 8 months ago
ThemeRustic Lodge
No. of rooms123
Total gaming space17,852 sq ft (1,658.5 m2)
Notable restaurantsLatin Soul Restaurant
The Timbers
OwnerThe Lakeside Inn and Casino
Previous namesTahoe Sky Harbor (1946–1957)
Fabulous Eddie's Stardust Club (1957–1969)
Caesars Inn (1969–1972)
Harvey's Inn (1972–1985)
Renovated in1957: Fabulous Eddie's Stardust Club
1969: Caesars Inn
1972: Harvey's Inn
1985: Lakeside Inn
Websitelakesideinn.com

Lakeside Inn (formerly Tahoe Sky Harbor, Fabulous Eddie's Stardust Club, Caesars Inn and Harvey's Inn) was a hotel and casino located in Stateline, Nevada.[1] It had 123 rooms,[2] as well as two restaurants, three bars[3] and a casino with 17,852 square feet (1,658.5 m2) of space.[4][5]

History[edit]

The Inn was originally a smaller casino called Caesars Inn, opened in 1969 with five table games and 100 slot machines and operated by Grover L. Rowland, B. A. Stunz, and Herbert Fisher.[6]

In 1972, Harvey A. Gross (owner of Harvey's Resort Hotel along the state line about a mile to the southwest) bought Caesars Inn and surrounding land, including the old Tahoe Sky Harbor airport and casino[7] site to the north (which also housed Fabulous Eddie's Stardust Club in the late 1950s),[8] and expanded the property to include about 130 rooms.[9]

Lakeside

During renovations to the Harvey's Inn in 1973, while workers were welding in the remodeled casino, a fire broke out, heavily damaging the new casino area and motel lobby and resulting in water damage to the restaurant area.[10]

Lakeside

Following the death of Harvey A. Gross, Harvey's Inn was sold in 1985.

Casino Pier acquired the Star Jet to replace the original Schwarzkopf Jet Star roller coaster in 2002. This Miler 'triple out and back' steel coaster featured a 45-foot initial drop and speeds reaching 40. Star Jet was a steel roller coaster which operated at Casino Pier in Seaside Heights, New Jersey from 2002 until it was swept into the Atlantic Ocean by Hurricane Sandy in 2012. Casino pier jet star roller coaster. This was America's first Jet Star roller coaster. It was purchased in 1970 as a brand-new roller coaster for Casino Pier, where it thrilled riders for 30 years until it closed in 2000. An attempt to sell the Jet Star failed due to the condition of the coaster, which would've been too expensive to refurbish.

Lakeside Casino Tahoe Restaurant

On May 24, 1985, Lakeside Inn opened, under president and general manager Rick Jorgenson.[11]

Closing

Blackjack not casino rules. On April 14, 2020, It was announced that Lakeside Inn would close permanently due to the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.[12]

References[edit]

Lakeside Inn Tahoe Casino

  1. ^'Lakeside a place for Tahoe locals,' The San Francisco Examiner, March 3, 2011
  2. ^'Lakeside Inn: Another reason to visit Tahoe'. Tahoe Daily Tribune. May 10, 1991.
  3. ^Lakeside Inn: Award Winning Tahoe Restaurants and Bars
  4. ^'Listing of Financial Statements Square Footage'. Nevada Gaming Control Board. Retrieved March 16, 2015.
  5. ^Casino City: Lakeside Inn and Casino
  6. ^'Gaming Board favors Mapes casino license'. Nevada State Journal. June 19, 1969.
  7. ^'Looking back at Harvey's'. Tahoe Daily Tribune. February 27, 1976.
  8. ^'Seven game applications get approval'. Nevada State Journal. September 24, 1957.
  9. ^'Damaging Tahoe fire'. Nevada State Journal. May 16, 1973.
  10. ^'Fire damages Harvey's Inn at Stateline'. Reno Evening Gazette. May 16, 1973.
  11. ^'Tahoe's Newest Family (ad)'. Tahoe Daily Tribune. May 22, 1985.
  12. ^Staff Report (April 14, 2020). 'Lakeside Inn and Casino to stay permanently closed'. Tahoe Daily Tribune. Retrieved May 19, 2020.

External links[edit]

  • Official website

Coordinates: 38°58′09.2″N119°56′09.9″W / 38.969222°N 119.936083°W

Casino

During renovations to the Harvey's Inn in 1973, while workers were welding in the remodeled casino, a fire broke out, heavily damaging the new casino area and motel lobby and resulting in water damage to the restaurant area.[10]

Following the death of Harvey A. Gross, Harvey's Inn was sold in 1985.

Casino Pier acquired the Star Jet to replace the original Schwarzkopf Jet Star roller coaster in 2002. This Miler 'triple out and back' steel coaster featured a 45-foot initial drop and speeds reaching 40. Star Jet was a steel roller coaster which operated at Casino Pier in Seaside Heights, New Jersey from 2002 until it was swept into the Atlantic Ocean by Hurricane Sandy in 2012. Casino pier jet star roller coaster. This was America's first Jet Star roller coaster. It was purchased in 1970 as a brand-new roller coaster for Casino Pier, where it thrilled riders for 30 years until it closed in 2000. An attempt to sell the Jet Star failed due to the condition of the coaster, which would've been too expensive to refurbish.

On May 24, 1985, Lakeside Inn opened, under president and general manager Rick Jorgenson.[11]

Blackjack not casino rules. On April 14, 2020, It was announced that Lakeside Inn would close permanently due to the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.[12]

References[edit]

Lakeside Inn Tahoe Casino

  1. ^'Lakeside a place for Tahoe locals,' The San Francisco Examiner, March 3, 2011
  2. ^'Lakeside Inn: Another reason to visit Tahoe'. Tahoe Daily Tribune. May 10, 1991.
  3. ^Lakeside Inn: Award Winning Tahoe Restaurants and Bars
  4. ^'Listing of Financial Statements Square Footage'. Nevada Gaming Control Board. Retrieved March 16, 2015.
  5. ^Casino City: Lakeside Inn and Casino
  6. ^'Gaming Board favors Mapes casino license'. Nevada State Journal. June 19, 1969.
  7. ^'Looking back at Harvey's'. Tahoe Daily Tribune. February 27, 1976.
  8. ^'Seven game applications get approval'. Nevada State Journal. September 24, 1957.
  9. ^'Damaging Tahoe fire'. Nevada State Journal. May 16, 1973.
  10. ^'Fire damages Harvey's Inn at Stateline'. Reno Evening Gazette. May 16, 1973.
  11. ^'Tahoe's Newest Family (ad)'. Tahoe Daily Tribune. May 22, 1985.
  12. ^Staff Report (April 14, 2020). 'Lakeside Inn and Casino to stay permanently closed'. Tahoe Daily Tribune. Retrieved May 19, 2020.

External links[edit]

  • Official website

Coordinates: 38°58′09.2″N119°56′09.9″W / 38.969222°N 119.936083°W

Lakeside Casino Tahoe Cam

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