Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Cambria Casino

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Built
  
1927

Opened
  
1927

Nearest city
  
Newcastle

NRHP Reference #
  
80004058

Added to NRHP
  
18 November 1980

Cambria Casino

Architectural style
  
Tudor Revival architecture

Similar
  
United States Post Office, Newcastle Commercial District, Wyoming Army National, Oregon Trail Ruts, Cascade Canyon Barn

Cambria casino top 8 facts


The Cambria Casino, also known as the Flying V Guest Ranch and the Cambria Casino Park-Memorial, is a resort on the western edge of the Black Hills in Weston County, Wyoming. The resort was named for Cambria, a nearby coal-mining community. The two story sandstone lodge, designed by New York architect Bruce Rabenold, employs English Tudor and other medieval details to create a Tudor manor-like setting in the Wyoming hills. The lodge fronts on a court, entered through a gatehouse and originally flanked by wings housing guest rooms. The property is significant as an example of a unique eclectically-style resort in eastern Wyoming. A portion of the casino was intended to serve as a memorial to Cambria-area miners.

The dance hall opened on January 12, 1929. Seventy-five guests could be accommodated in the main building and in six cottages. The cottages have since been removed. The resort featured a freshwater pool fed by Salt Creek and a saltwater pool fed from salt springs about 2 miles (3.2 km) away.

The interior features a second floor ballroom with a timber-framed roof resembling a medieval hammer-beam truss. The timbers may have come from area mines. Beneath the ballroom were a dining room, auxiliary dining room, kitchen sitting room and six guest rooms.

The Cambria Casino was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.

References

Cambria Casino Wikipedia


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