Guy McAfee (1888–1960) was an American law enforcement officer and businessman. Born in Kansas and orphaned in early childhood, he became a firefighter in Los Angeles, California, and later served as the head of the vice squad of the Los Angeles Police Department. He was the owner of brothels and gambling saloons, with ties to organized crime in the 1930s. He co-founded casinos in Las Vegas, Nevada, in the 1940s and 1950s. He is credited as the first person to refer to Las Vegas Boulevard as the Las Vegas Strip, after Los Angeles's Sunset Strip.[1]
Early life
Guy McAfee was born on August 19, 1888, in Winfield, Kansas.[2][3] He became an orphan in childhood.[3] He was described as a "thin, wing-earred, likable chap, who had come to Los Angeles from the wheat belt".[4]
Career
McAfee began his career as a firefighter in Los Angeles, California.[3] He subsequently served as the head of the vice squad of the Los Angeles Police Department.[2] At the same time, he was the owner of gambling "saloons and brothels and had ties to organized crime."[2] He was also the manager of the Clover Club, an upmarket club on the Sunset Strip.[3] His nicknames were "Slats," for his height and build, and "the Whistler," because when he was on what was then called the purity squad, he would warn vice dens by calling them up and whistling a certain tune while feigning for his police compatriots that there was no answer.[4] Reformers called him the "Capone of LA".[5] His associates included Charlie Crawford, slot-machine king Bob Gans, political fixer Kent Parrot, Zeke Caress, Tutor Scherer, Farmer Page, Charles Cradick, Chuck Addison, and Tony Cornero.[6] When Judge Fletcher Bowron was elected as the 38th Mayor of Los Angeles on a platform to rid Los Angeles of prostitution, gambling and narcotics in 1938,[2] McAfee moved to Las Vegas, Nevada, within a year.[7][8]
In 1939, McAfee acquired the Pair O'Dice Club on Highway 91 (the future Las Vegas Boulevard) and renamed it the 91 Club,[3] and the Frontier Club,[9][10] downtown Las Vegas. Meanwhile, with Milton B. Page, McAfee managed the El Rancho, another casino.[11] He was a co-founder of the Pioneer Club in 1942. Three years later he announced plans to build the Golden Nugget, downtown Las Vegas, which opened in 1946. McAfee was president of Golden Nugget from 1952 until his retirement in 1960.[12]
McAfee was also a real estate investor in California. For example, he was the co-proprietor of the Chapman Building in Fullerton, California, alongside N. Morty Bernstein in 1949, which he leased to the American Red Cross.[13]
McAfee was a co-founder of the unincorporated place of Paradise, Nevada, near Las Vegas.[2] It was established as a tax shelter for casinos.[2]
Personal life
McAfee resided at the Biltmore Hotel, a luxury hotel in Downtown Los Angeles.[5] He was married three times.[3] With his first wife Eva, he had a daughter, Alice.[3] He married his second wife, June Brewster, in 1936.[19][20] She filed for divorce in 1941.[19][20] His third wife, Kathleen, was the owner of a brothel in Los Angeles.[3] He adopted her daughter, Kathleen Elizabeth McAfee.[3] They resided in Beverly Hills, California.[21] In 1950, their house burned down; the fire was not deemed suspicious.[21]
^ abViehe, Fred W. (Winter 1980). "The Recall of Mayor Frank L. Shaw: A Revision". California History. 59 (4): 291. doi:10.2307/25158002. JSTOR25158002.
^Staff writer(s) (7 March 1939). "Film Star's Wife, Lured by Sunshine, Sports, Scenic Wonders Seen As Pied Piper for Nation's Top-Flight Divorce Colony". Evening Review-Journal. Las Vegas.
^Staff writer(s) (10 May 1939). "New Frontier Club To Open Tomorrow". Evening Review-Journal. Las Vegas.
^Harnisch, Larry (April 11, 2012). "Ruler of an L.A. gambling empire had a softer side". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 5, 2016. In the 1940s, apparently weary of the continual police attention, Page left for Nevada, running El Rancho Vegas, the first major casino resort on the Las Vegas Strip, with longtime Los Angeles gambling figure Guy McAfee. "He was a strange guy," Milton says of the former LAPD vice officer turned casino executive.
^"Major News Events in Nevada in 1951 Listed in Summary: August". Reno Gazette. Reno, Nevada. January 1, 1952. p. 7. Retrieved March 4, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. Guy McAfee, Jake Kozloff and Belton Katelman bought the Last Frontier hotel on the Las Vegas strip.
^"Hotel Last Frontier In Las Vegas Sold". The San Bernardino County Sun. San Bernardino, California. August 24, 1951. p. 9. Retrieved March 4, 2016 – via Newspapers.com. The state tax commission has approved transfer of the license to Guy McAfee, Jake Kozloff, both major stockholders of the Golden Nugget casino, and Beldon Katelman, owner of the hotel El Rancho Vegas.