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Nevada History: The Real Story As Told By State
Archivist
Should Las Vegas Be Capital?
by Guy Rocha, State Archivist
So why all the talk about changing the state constitution and moving the
capital to Las Vegas? Going back to 1861, Nevada's territorial and state
capital has always been Carson City. Surprisingly, few states besides the
Silver State can claim having just one capital.
Las Vegas and Clark County's population have grown so fast and so large
in the last 20 years, over 1.45 million residents in the metro area, that
some people expect Las Vegas legislators to move the capital to southern
Nevada. In January 2001, a Las Vegas newspaper columnist made a statement
proposing the move to provoke a reaction. The assumption is when any city
gets big enough it may take the state capital by political force similar to
a county seat battle. But is that really how the scenario has played out in
American history?
It has been over 110 years since state capitals were last moved in
Louisiana and West Virginia, to Baton Rouge (from New Orleans) and
Charleston (from Wheeling) respectively. The effort to remove Juneau as
Alaska's capital shortly after statehood in 1959 proved abortive. When
capitals have been moved, it occurred not long after statehood, and almost
always to a city considered more centrally located in the state.
For example, Alabama, admitted to the Union in 1819, had three capitals
before finally settling on Montgomery in 1847 near the center of the state.
Columbus in the heart of Ohio became the third capital 13 years after
statehood in 1803. Other examples of moving the state capital to a more
central location include Pennsylvania (Philadelphia to Harrisburg), South
Carolina (Charleston to Columbia), Michigan (Detroit to Lansing), Illinois
(Vandalia to Springfield), Iowa (Iowa City to Des Moines), and California
(Benicia to Sacramento). Most importantly, all these moves were made so
early in the states' histories there was practically no capital
infrastructure--principally buildings--to abandon.
Nevada's Constitution prohibited an appropriation for a state capitol
until 1869 in case the capital was moved to a more central location after
statehood was conferred in 1864. The capitol building was completed in 1871.
However, some legislators still held out for moving the capital. With the
completion of the Virginia & Truckee Railroad to Reno in 1873, The Daily
Nevada Tribune of January 2, 1875 editorialized, "It is now a foregone
conclusion that Carson City will for all time to come be the seat of
government of the State of Nevada. The location is by far the best in the
state," the Tribune continued, "and as easy of access as any place, now that
the railroad runs direct to it." The 1875 legislature approved monies for a
fence and landscaping around the capitol after the Tribune complained that
it was "a disgrace to the state to let the grounds remain longer in their
present condition.".
When the last significant efforts were made to move the capital to
Winnemucca or Goldfield in the first two decades of the 20th century, the
capitol complex in Carson City included only the capitol, printing building,
orphan's home, and prison. Today the capital infrastructure in Carson City
is composed of dozens of buildings, including separate edifices for the
supreme court (1937 and 1992) and the legislature (1971 and 1996-7) which
were once housed in the capitol. Moreover, thousands of state employees live
in and around Carson City.
State capitals just are not moved anymore, whether or not new metro areas
emerge, or the existing capital is not central to the state's citizens.
Florida's capital located in the state's panhandle, for example, has not
moved from Tallahassee, the territorial and state capital since 1823, either
to Miami (although much of the state's population is in south Florida over
400 miles away), or, more recently, to booming Orlando in the middle of the
state. Texas has not relocated its capital from Austin, the state capital
since 1845 and the Republic's capital before statehood, to Dallas or
Houston. And our neighbor to the west, California, has kept the capital in
Sacramento since 1854 despite the tremendous growth in southern California
over the last 100 years.
In major cities like New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles, and Miami that
do not serve as capitals, and are not centrally-located like long-standing
capitals Denver, Phoenix, and Indianapolis, there are sizeable satellite
office complexes. Las Vegas has the Grant Sawyer and Lewis Bradley
buildings, and many other structures to meet the state governmental needs of
southern Nevadans. Surely, more buildings will be constructed in the 21st
century in and around Las Vegas without having to move the capital for the
first time in Nevada's history.
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