Fremont Hotel officials celebrate property turning 60

Bill Hughes

Bill Boyd, executive chairman for Boyd Gaming, right, hands former Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman a limited edition gaming chip during a 60th anniversary celebration for the Fremont hotel-casino at 200 Fremont St. in Las Vegas on Wednesday, May 18, 2016.

Fremont 60th Anniversary

Former Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman, second from left, offers a toast during a 60th anniversary celebration for the Fremont hotel-casino at 200 Fremont St. in Las Vegas on Wednesday, May 18, 2016. Also on hand were Bill Boyd, executive chairman for Boyd Gaming, second from right, Jim Sullivan, general manager of the Fremont hotel-casino, and showgirls. Launch slideshow »

A mainstay of downtown Las Vegas — the place where Wayne Newton got his start — passed a milestone on today.

The Fremont Hotel and Casino, where Newton began singing in the Carnival Lounge as a junior in high school, turned 60 amid a celebration featuring Boyd Gaming Executive Chairman Bill Boyd and former Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman.

Originally a 155-room hotel and casino, the property opened May 18, 1956, and was expanded two years later. In 1963, it was again enlarged with a 14-story hotel tower and one of the city's first vertical parking garages.

The Fremont has been a Boyd Gaming property since 1985, when Sam and Bill Boyd purchased it and the Stardust for $165 million.

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