The National Genealogical Society (NGS) announced at their
Family History Conference in Cincinnati last
week that the 2013 NGS Family History Conference, Building New Bridges, will be held in Las Vegas , Nevada ,
from 8–11 May 2013. The conference hotel and venue will be the
LVH−Las Vegas Hotel & Casino (formerly known as the Las Vegas Hilton). The hotel and conference center
are under one roof offering excellent convenience for attendees. To ensure a
reservation, attendees may reserve their accommodations now and must request
the NGS conference rate when making a reservation. The LVH will accept
reservations beginning 14 May 2012
via telephone 1-800-635-7711 or online at http://www.ngsgenealogy.org/cs/accommodations.
The LVH−Las Vegas Hotel & Casino is a cultural
icon. In 1969 Barbra Streisand was the opening performer. The property was
known as the International, and it was the world’s largest hotel. Elvis Presley
quickly became the star performer. After the Hilton chain purchased the International
in 1970, the building became the Las Vegas Hilton and starred as the Whyte
House in the 1971 James Bond film, “Diamonds Are Forever.” Elvis lived in the
hotel’s penthouse while headlining until his last concert in December 1976. In
January 2012 the property became the LVH−Las Vegas Hotel & Casino. The LVH
is ten minutes from McCarran
International Airport
and convenient to I-15 and I-515. The Las Vegas Monorail begins at the LVH and
carries passengers to six major Strip resorts.
The conference theme for 2013 is Building New Bridges. The Mike O’Callaghan−Pat Tillman Memorial Bridge, dedicated
in 2010, spans the Colorado River on Native American land, connects the Las
Vegas Valley to Route 66, and embodies the West as a timeless “bridge” where
cultures, nations, and technologies connect. The bridge visually frames nearby Hoover Dam, which in 1935 opened the Southwest
to urban and agricultural growth by harnessing the water and power of the Colorado River . In celebration of the 2013 theme, the
four-day conference will offer more than 150 lectures on researching peoples
and places of the West, migration to and from the West, law, military records,
immigration, methodology, academic history, family history writing, BCG
Skillbuilding, African American and other ethnic research, technological
innovation in genealogy (GenTech), and more. In addition, Las
Vegas and Clark
County are home to
several museums and repositories that highlight the history and culture of the
area. Manuscript collections reflect the histories of immigrant, Eastern, and
Midwestern families that migrated to and through the city in the twentieth
century.
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