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55 Minutes from Reno and
historic Virginia City on Alt Highway 50 East. Attractions: Sand
Mountain (off-road playground), Lake Lahontan, Churchill County
Museum, Hidden Cave, Grimes Point (rock writings), Pony Express
Stations. Events: Fallon Air Show, Bluegrass Festival,
Cantaloupe Festival, Rodeos, Top Gun Drag Racing. Depot
Casino, historic Fallon Southern Pacific Depot, converted and
expanded for your gaming pleasure. Video Poker, Keno and
Multi-Game machines, slots, blackjack and featuring the
"Midnight Flyer" Fallon's hottest night club and bar. Homestyle
cooking in our restaurant. On I-80 exit 48 at Fernley.
Follow Highway 50 to Fallon, turn right on Maine Street. Learn
the history of Lahontan Valley by viewing exhibits on early
pioneers and Native Americans. Admission is free. Open daily
April-December, closed Thursdays January-March. When Mike
Fallon built a crossroads store on his ranch property in 1896,
the sparsely settled region of the Carson Sink had a nucleus for
the first time since Kenyon's trading post at Ragtown, to the
west, served the wagon trains. In the same year the county
renovated the old Virginia City-to-Fairview telegraph line (for
which it had paid $975 in 1889) to serve as a single-line
telephone system linking the farms and ranches in the area. As a
consequence, you can have an almost unique experience here for a
dime: make a phone call. The telephone system is still owned and
operated by the County, the only one in the USA still run as a
public utility. Creation of the Truckee-Carson Irrigation
District by the U.S. Reclamation Service shortly after the turn
of the century prompted a tremendous spurt of settlement in the
region to be provided with irrigation water, and the tiny
settlement at Fallon became the seat of suddenly vigorous
Churchill County in 1902. A bank was established in 1908, and
Fallon was incorporated. By this time the intensive agricultural
development had begun to pay satisfying dividends. Fallon's
Hearts O'Gold cantaloupes graced the menus of fine hotels and
restaurants in the biggest cities of the nation, and Fallon
turkeys brought premium prices. For the Fourth of July
celebration of 1911 the town fathers imported a wrestler who
challenged all comers after lying down in the dirt and gravel of
Maine Street and permitting his trainer to drive an automobile
over his rigid body. In 1915 the Nevada State Fair was held in
Fallon, and the townspeople built an enormous "palace" of hay
bales at the intersection of Maine and Center. The roofless
structure measured sixty feet square and its walls rose eighteen
feet high. At night dances were held within it while the king
and queen of the fair presided on thrones of Fallon hay.
Construction of Lahontan Dam was also completed that year.
Prices turned down after World War I, and Fallon fell into 20
years of dull times. Even the mining excitements in the nearby
hills did not entirely lift the depression. In June, 1942,
however, the Navy began construction of a small air station
southeast of town, and Fallon's economy jumped up again. The
station was closed in 1946, but reopened during the Korean War.
In 1958 it was dedicated to Lt. Cdr. Bruce Van Voorhis, a Navy
pilot from Fallon awarded the Medal of Honor. The |