Goodbye to Old Mesquite, Nevada - It Was Good To Know You
In 2009, I stopped in Mesquite, Nevada. While heading 
north out of town, I took photos of several old buildings and signs. A 
town’s architecture and graphics  help reveal its history. A common 
theme involves a once flourishing business now  closed. For example, 
when  Interstate I-40
 bypassed Seligman, Arizona, the  attractions of Old-66 were barely 
enough to keep  Old Seligman alive. With so  little business activity 
generated after its bypass, Seligman froze in time.  Therefore, many old
 buildings and signs in that town remained in situ.
 In
 1974, after the completion of Interstate I-15 through Mesquite, most 
new  development came in the form of condominiums. The targeted 
customers were retired  people or second-home owners. Today in North 
Mesquite, large new retirement  complexes tend to focus the eye on human
 made water features, including a series of water-wasting golf courses.  With such  environmentally wasteful practices in effect, little if any summer-season water flowing in the Virgin River reaches its outlet at Lake Mead.
Prior to the construction of Mesquite's sprawling retirement 
communities, the same  area represented only a small portion of a vast 
network of arroyos.  Partially filled with wind-driven sand, the area 
was an "alluvial plain in the making".  Most people do not think about 
“upstream” in the desert. Such terms matter only  when a major flood 
hits such a dry area. When thunderstorms linger on nearby  Mount Mormon,
 resulting floods carry enormous flows down  those arroyos filled with 
sand. During, or shortly after an deluge upstream, watercourses shift, 
overwhelming  their banks and inundating previously dry areas.
In
 the case of the recent condominium development in North Mesquite, 
everything will probably  be OK. However, if we live to see the  thousand-year flood, let alone the  ten  thousand-year flood,
 all of that could change. If either of those events happens, the  
ancient erosion field and slide zone that is North Mesquite shall not 
stand. In  terms of proximate risk to property owners, safety and 
security may depend on one’s  sense of  time.
Mesquite, Nevada built its reputation on a firm foundation of gambling. Today, viewing it on Google Maps
 shows us that North Mesquite lies near the foot of a massive paleo 
flood zone. It does not take a trained geologist to see that ancient 
debris  flows swept “downstream”, temporarily interrupting the Virgin 
River as it swept  across the river and far up on the opposite bank. 
These  desert sands appear to be the terminal deposition of ancient 
North  Mesquite debris flows. It is there, on the east bank that buff 
colored desert sand intermingles with the  dark, volcanic  alluvium 
descending from Virgin Peak and Mount Bangs.
Today,
 such a flood would have to cross Interstate I-15 and West Mesquite 
Blvd.,  inundating most of Old Mesquite. In that scenario, all of 
Mesquite would  remain in peril. The good news is that the ten 
thousand-year flood only comes  every 10,000 years, or so they say. So 
what are the real odds? If enough people  ask, the Casa Blanca Resort and Casino
 in Mesquite might make book on that  question. I now remember my 
father’s sage advice, which was, “Never build anything in a  flood 
plain”.
Although it lies only ninety miles from Las Vegas,
  Mesquite has closer ties to St. George, Utah, forty miles north on 
I-15.  In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, both Las Vegas 
and Mesquite  were Mormon settlements. They were among a string of towns
 that grew up along  the Old Spanish Trail,  leading to Los Angeles.
 A common denominator among Mormon settlers and their  current day 
counterparts is industriousness. If there is a potential for land  
development, the business community in Mesquite will soon take advantage
 of it.
 The years 2008 and 2009 represented the depths of the  recent  recession in Mesquite.
  Since then, there has been a steady, if slow economic recovery. New 
condominiums and  businesses now present themselves, but current 
economic activity does not approach the  breakneck pace of the early 
2000’s. Now enthralled again by new development  potential, protection 
of Mesquite’s historical  buildings, signage and its highway heritage languish.
The years 2008 and 2009 represented the depths of the  recent  recession in Mesquite.
  Since then, there has been a steady, if slow economic recovery. New 
condominiums and  businesses now present themselves, but current 
economic activity does not approach the  breakneck pace of the early 
2000’s. Now enthralled again by new development  potential, protection 
of Mesquite’s historical  buildings, signage and its highway heritage languish.
To be fair, most destruction or neglect of historical buildings and 
signage in  Mesquite happens on private property. Even so, it appears 
that neither the city  nor its business community sees value in saving 
the town’s historical qualities.  For posterity, I shall document three 
examples of Old Mesquite at its finest.
In 2013, the long defunct  Oasis Hotel Casino and Resort disappeared
 from West  Mesquite Boulevard. Around that time, the historical Oasis 
pole sign disappeared from its prior location near Interstate I-15. New 
visitors to Mesquite will never know  that there once stood the biggest,
 fanciest and most successful casino resort in  town. Other than an 
aging RV Park  now operated by the Casa Blanca Resort Casino and an 
annex of hotel rooms now converted to  timeshares, the Oasis is no more.
Farther east on West Mesquite Blvd. is what remains of Harley’s Garage. 
In 2009,  a sign on the locked front door thanked customers for Harley’s
 sixty-two years  in business. From Harley's graphical pole sign, which 
almost overhangs the highway; we  know that Harley’s Garage once sold 
radiators and specialized in Ford  automobiles. The aging Ford sign, 
which resides just above an image of a Ford  Model-T style radiator, now
 turns to rust and eventually to dust. The  classic “Ford” script, once 
painted brilliant red on blue, now appears as rust-red on pale blue.  At
 its present rate of decay, full deterioration is only a few years away.
I picture travelers on  old U.S. Highway 91
  in 1945, experiencing a breakdown near Mesquite, Nevada. No matter how
 the  motorist arrived in Mesquite, Harley’s Garage was ready to replace
 or repair  over-stressed radiators, batteries or brakes. Now-outdated 
internet business listings  indicate that Harley's once had a AAA towing
 franchise. With Las Vegas and St. George scores of miles away across a 
desert wasteland, we  can imagine what a godsend Harley’s Garage and 
radiator repair shop must have  been.
Historically, Mesquite was a ranching and farming community. Despite two
  historic floods that destroyed the economic vitality of Old Mesquite, 
several generations of  Mesquiters continued to grow crops in the 
floodplain of the Virgin River. For  their part, ranchers in nearby 
Bunkerville grazed their cattle on a once  verdant, open  range. Since 
Old Mesquite’s settlers banded together for sustenance  and protection, 
they required a place to buy, sell and trade their produce and  cattle.
On West Mesquite Blvd. stands a  contemporary Ranch Market
 building. Despite  looking relatively new and prosperous, by 2009 the 
Ranch Market stood closed  for good. Looking inside, I could see  display cases
 and shopping carts gathering  dust behind the glass. Out back, on the 
same over-sized lot was an old pole barn,  weathering and deteriorating 
in the sun. Later, I learned that the pole barn had  once been the 
original Mesquite Ranch Market.
With a few rough sawn boards still clinging to the its roof, I tried to 
 determine the age of the barn. “The better part of a century”, I 
thought. A long abandoned  electrical service clung to one  of its 
corners. There were broken remnants of an  overhead trolley, which once 
moved hay bales in and out of a now missing hayloft.  With no remaining 
siding, doors, roof shingles or hayloft, only the cross-bracing of  its 
beams keeps the  pole barn from its inevitable destruction. In the past 
five years, an adjacent and a once mighty  cottonwood tree has crumbled 
closer to the ground. With such rapid deterioration, how much longer the
  original Mesquite  Ranch Market will stand is anyone's guess.
The
 desert environment, with its heat, sun and wind can destroy almost any 
human  made object. Repainting and replacement are constant activities 
for  thriving  businesses
 in a desert economy. Keep it neat, keep it clean and tourists will 
stop.  Let it go and the desert will soon remove the gloss of 
civilization. There  stands North Mesquite, gleaming in the reflected 
light of its mini-lakes and golf  courses. On the other side of town, 
more often than not, the desert is winning  its inevitable, entropic 
race. 
It is here that I say, so long to Old Mesquite. It was good to know you.
           
By James McGillis at 04:29 PM | Travel | Comments (0) | Link

 
 
