Grow up in a certain era or watch enough Mad Men, you may think women have “their place”. The secretary, the homemaker, the mom. Well, this isn’t your grandpa’s world. This isn’t a television show. Women in Las Vegas are powerful and successful. Their place? In the boardrooms and at the head of some of the most powerful desks in Las Vegas and beyond.
Powerful Women Have Long Been A Part Of The Fabric Of Las Vegas
The valley has always had powerful women. Anne Henrietta Martin led the women’s suffrage movement in Nevada. Her hard work led to Nevada giving women the right to vote six years before the nation passed the 19th amendment. She was also the first woman to ever run for the United States Senate.
Maude Frazier moved to Las Vegas in 1906 to serve as a teacher. She then became a principal and then the Superintendent of the now Clark County School District. She went on to help establish UNLV, then become a state assemblywoman and served as the 22nd ever Lieutenant Governor of Nevada, the first woman to hold the position.
Even women like Patsy Cline, who was the first female country artist to ever headline in Las Vegas or Anna Bailey who was the first black showgirl in the history of the city.
Heck the city itself was birthed thanks in part to Helen Stewart. She ran the Old Mormon Fort which is really the spark that led to the founding of Las Vegas. Her work inevitably led to Las Vegas becoming a population hub that we see today, which is why she is known as “the first lady of Las Vegas.”
The number of powerful women that have left their mark on Las Vegas is far too long to list, but we have done our best to boil it down to five of the most powerful women of the moment in our city.