Jean, Nevada

Jean
Unincorporated community

Aerial view of Jean (June 2010)
Jean

Location within the state of Nevada

Coordinates: 35°46′48″N 115°19′48″W / 35.78000°N 115.33000°W / 35.78000; -115.33000Coordinates: 35°46′48″N 115°19′48″W / 35.78000°N 115.33000°W / 35.78000; -115.33000
Country United States
State Nevada
County Clark
Elevation 2,841 ft (866 m)
Population (2010)
  Total 0
Time zone Pacific (PST) (UTC-8)
  Summer (DST) PDT (UTC-7)
ZIP codes 89019
Area code(s) 702
The Gold Strike Casino in Jean
The sign marking the location of the former Nevada Landing Casino

Jean is a small commercial town in Clark County, Nevada, located approximately 12 mi (19 km) north of the Nevada-California state line along Interstate 15. Las Vegas is located about 30 mi (48 km) to the north. There are no residents of Jean, Nevada, but many people in nearby communities like Primm and Sandy Valley have "Jean" listed as the city in their mailing address because Jean is the location of the main post office in the 89019 ZIP code. Las Vegas Boulevard South ends about 2 mi (3.2 km) south of Jean, and contiguously runs northbound past Las Vegas, ending near the I-15-US 93 Junction.

The area is mostly commercial with the exception of the post office and the courthouse, with commercial outlets such as the Gold Strike Hotel and Gambling Hall, the Jean Sport Aviation Center (used for activities like skydiving), Jean Conservation Camp (a minimum-security, all female Nevada Department of Corrections facility established in 1987) and a Nevada Highway Patrol (NHP) substation. The Nevada Landing Hotel and Casino was also located here but it was demolished in April 2008 and the sign was removed in 2011. The Jean Post Office is located on Las Vegas Boulevard in Jean.[1] The Goodsprings Township Courthouse is also located in Jean.

History

The town was originally named Goodsprings Junction. On June 28, 1905 postmaster George Arthur Fayle renamed it Jean in honor of his wife.[2] He also built the Pioneer Saloon in Goodsprings.

Pop's Oasis Casino was the first casino in Jean. The Oasis closed in 1988. Chips and tokens from Pop's Oasis were poured into the foundation of the Nevada Landing. When the Nevada Landing was leveled in May 2008 these chips and tokens, some embedded in concrete, were found by collectors.

The welcome center was moved to Primm in early 2000. The welcome center was converted to an NHP substation in 2004.

The median between the Nevada Landing Hotel and Casino and the Gold Strike Hotel and Gambling Hall was the scene of the worst single-vehicle accident in southern Nevada history at that time, when a van with 13 people flipped over and eight people were killed. The accident occurred in March 2000.[3]

The Nevada Landing Casino closed in March 2007. The Gold Strike remains active.[4]

In the early 1970s The Southern Nevada Timing Association, a Las Vegas car club, operated a 1/4 mile National Hot Rod Association sanctioned dragstrip on the old L.A. highway just south of town. This strip was opened due to the fact that the Stardust raceway had closed and there was no place to race legally. The local Lions Club and the Clark County Sheriff's Department also sanctioned drag racing here. The lengths of guard rail required by NHRA were installed on each side and a small observation tower was built. There were no timing or starting lights, all starts were by a flagger. The finish line was viewed by a club member who would go up on the track after the cars went by and stand in the winner's lane to show who won. His decision was final. Races were run every weekend unless the weather was bad or dangerous due to wind. There were never any accidents here which is amazing for it wasn't all that wide and the roadbed was elevated about 4' above the desert! Races were even run at night with the rental of a huge arc type spotlight that was projected down the track from the starting line. The track was closed when the Las Vegas Speedrome opened across from Nellis Air Force base. That track is now named The Strip at Las Vegas.[5]

Installation Venue

The area around Jean has been the site of several installation art installations including Study for An End of the World, No. 2 in 1962 when Jean Tinguely and Niki de Saint Phalle blew up sculptures. In 1968 Michael Heizer created a zig zag trench installation. In 2016 Ugo Rondinone built "Seven Magic Mountains."[6]

Geography

Jean is located on a mountain pass, Jean Pass (south), west of the Jean Dry Lake basin. Sheep Mountain borders Jean to the east, southeast of Jean Dry Lake. Northwest of the pass lies the southeast foothills of the Bird Spring Range.

See also

References

  1. "JEAN Post Office™ Location". Usps.whitepages.com. 2011-03-28. Retrieved 2012-01-05.
  2. "Timeline of Clark County History". Retrieved 2009-03-22.
  3. Las Vegas Sun= "Eight killed in van accident south of Las Vegas".
  4. Las Vegas Tribune April 4, 2007
  5. Milt Heger - SNTA member and track staging lane staff
  6. http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/15/arts/design/building-an-artists-magic-mountains-to-draw-visitors-to-the-desert.html
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