Trapshooters Forum banner

Harold's Club photographs

4.4K views 22 replies 11 participants last post by  Pat McKean  
#1 ·
My 11 year old son and I were out at the old Harold's Club grounds tonight (we live just a few miles from it) and I was trying to explain the layout to him. Maybe some of you guys might have some old photos of the Club and property you can post to show him? I didn't have much luck with a search. Thank you in advance!
 
#5 · (Edited)




Image


Plenty of info about the casino and the Smiths on the inter web. Not so much about the trap club.
 
#8 · (Edited)
Wow, $3,000.00 added money in 1958 would be equivalent to $31,580.28 today. It has been so long, I have forgotten about Harold’s, only Harrah’s came to mind.
 
#19 ·
I get out to the county gun range north of there every so often. A few years back, I got into a conversation with the range manager. He lived close by Harold’s Trapshooting Club as a kid and hung out there. The morning the clubhouse was to be torn down he noticed all the pictures were still on the walls inside. As the machines warmed up, the demolition crew allowed him to go inside and save the photos and pictures. He said he still has them.

I mentioned that the Nevada Hall of Fame would love to have them and volunteered to scan them so the HOF could access that history, but he was not interested. I think Mr. Bullard asked him as well and got the same reply.
 
#20 ·
Hi All : Once upon a time Susan Nattrass had a very interesting leather bag, I thought It might of come from this Reno shoot. Some one took it at a Grand American. It was a very noticeable bag , I wonder were it went. Not sure she won it with the 99 at the Golden West. Hopeful some one knows more than I do. I always felt badly that her bag was stolen. It would stand out no matter what event you attended.

Joe Woods/Ontario
 
#23 ·
The shooting bag could have been awarded for “High Lady.” By winning the handicap outright, she probably won a very nice sterling silver belt buckle with a large gold coin in the center.
Harold Smith got the idea of the trophy belt buckle from the rodeos.

When I first attended the GWG in 1998 at Sage Hill and saw those buckles in the trophy case, I couldn’t believe my eyes. I never imagined anything like that existed.