Vintage photos of Las Vegas
Yesteryear in Sin City

The bright lights of Las Vegas are a sight indeed and the neon-drenched Nevada city has always loved the camera – as these nostalgic snaps prove. Here we go back in time to reveal charming vintage photographs of one of the USA's most iconic cities.
Click or scroll through the gallery to see what Las Vegas looked like in decades gone by...
c.1905: the city of Las Vegas is founded

c.1905: Vegas is in its infancy

Amidst the bright lights, hotels and casinos, it's sometimes hard to remember that Vegas began as a classic old Western railroad town. This photograph from the city's earliest beginnings, showing a wagon train kicking up dust in the desert, is a reminder of where Sin City started.
c.1910: businesses begin to emerge

1910s: Fremont Street was Vegas's original 'Strip'

Long before the (now-infamous) Strip was a twinkle in Vegas's eye, all the action happened on Fremont Street. This old-school shot shows Fremont Street in the early 1900s. You can spot the classic Western false front architecture, as well as more essential businesses including a grocery store, bakery and furniture shop.
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c.1928: a car drives down a busy Vegas street

1930s: Hotel Nevada is a Vegas staple

1930s: Vegas is a playground for the elite

1940: punters play bingo in Las Vegas

c.1949: guests relax at Hotel Flamingo

1950s: Las Vegas becomes the wedding capital of America

1950s: Fremont Street continues to thrive

The landscape of Las Vegas was ever-changing. By the 1950s, Fremont Street exploded with hotels and casinos, which mushroomed in an eye-catching swirl of pastels (the common colour palette for mid-century architecture). Featured prominently in this photograph is The Mint hotel: it opened in the late 1950s and recreations of it have been featured in movies including James Bond flick Diamonds Are Forever, and Walk the Line, about the life of country singer Johnny Cash.
1950s: Vegas is drenched in neon lights

An obsession with neon had taken hold of the city too. The first neon signs began to pop up through the 1920s and 1930s – and by the 1950s, when this photograph was taken, Vegas's main streets were thick with winking lights. Here signs hawk everything from hotel vacancies to casinos and bingo halls.
c.1959: the Golden Gate Hotel and Casino

1960s: Las Vegas booms as a gambling hub

1962: The Strip is becoming Las Vegas's new hub

1964: Elvis's Viva Las Vegas is filmed in the city

By the mid-century, Vegas was attracting the attention of the biggest celebrities in the world. They included, of course, Elvis Presley, whose intimate connection with Las Vegas is well documented. He's photographed here with his Viva Las Vegas co-star Ann-Margret Olsson – the 1964 movie follows a race-car driver who winds up in Vegas and begins a love affair with a local woman.
1964: hotels thrive along Fremont Hotel

c.1964: Vegas Vic watches over the city

1967: Elvis and Priscilla Presley celebrate their wedding in Vegas

Fast-forward through the Sixties and Vegas weddings were still booming – and even megastars such as Elvis Presley were in on the trend. The King of Rock ’n’ Roll married Priscilla Beaulieu in 1967 at Vegas's Aladdin Hotel – and there was a lavish Champagne breakfast and a five-foot-high (1.5m) cake fit for a king. It's now pretty common for modern lovers to be wed in Vegas by a crooning Elvis impersonator.
1968: the Las Vegas Strip begins to build up

1969: Elvis begins his residency in Las Vegas

1960s: the Rat Pack dominates Vegas

1975: Elvis continues his residency in Las Vegas

Elvis's Vegas legacy was immortalised in the recent Baz Luhrmann film Elvis, released in 2022. The film details the musician's struggles during this extended Sin City residency and the heavy influence of Colonel Tom Parker throughout. Presley is pictured here during a concert in 1975. He died in 1977.
1980: Muhammad Ali speaks at a major fight in Vegas

1975: slot machines at Circus Circus

Early in the 20th century, table games dominated – but by the 1970s, it was all about the slot machine. These addictive gambling machines were heavily regulated in many states at this time, but – in common Vegas style – laws were relaxed here. These glittering rows of machines were snapped in Circus Circus, a casino hotel that opened on The Strip in 1968 (casino only) and is still going strong.
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