About this item
Highlights
- Travel to the past and enjoy a string quartet and an eight-course dinner in an elegant wilderness.
- About the Author: Paul Nelson is a retired San Francisco attorney.
- 224 Pages
- History, United States
- Series Name: Lost
Description
Book Synopsis
Travel to the past and enjoy a string quartet and an eight-course dinner in an elegant wilderness.
Beginning in the 1880s, the beauty of Lake Tahoe enticed entrepreneurs to build the most opulent resort hotels in America catering to the wealthiest from California and Nevada. Baldwin's Tallac House, the Tahoe Tavern and Brockway Hot Springs Hotel fought to outdo one another as they took luxury to new heights with musical entertainment, movies, horseback excursions and five-star dining. Tahoe Tavern even featured its own private railway, while Brockway spawned America's first gambling casino resort, the Cal-Neva Lodge, where celebrities mingled with mobsters. By the 1960s, the golden era had begun to fade as the tourist demographic shifted, but a splendid legacy endures.
Author Paul Nelson brings to life the intrigue and opulence of Lake Tahoe's earliest resorts.
Review Quotes
A string quartet and an eIght-course dinner in an elegant wilderness.
"The book's most intriguing chapters perhaps center on the evolution of the Cal Neva Lodge. What began as a humble real estate office for the Cala Neva subdivision would become a legendary establishment entangled with celebrities and mobsters. Nelson uncovered connections between Harry Comstock and what would become America's first gambling casino.
The 226-page book, featuring more than 100 rare historical photos and illustrations, grew from Nelson's personal quest to understand the history of his own neighborhood."
Brenda O'Boyle, Tahoe Daily Tribune
About the Author
Paul Nelson is a retired San Francisco attorney. He discovered Lake Tahoe in the late 1960s while visiting a college friend and became intrigued with the historical lore of the area. For twenty-five years, he represented California resorts around the lake, which introduced him to the stories of the old grand resorts. In 1987, Mr. Nelson made his family's Tahoe home in Brockway and spent the next thirty-six years uncovering stories of the area's forgotten history.