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Day 61 – Basque hotels
Submitted by Carl Breckenridge
I was deep in Morpheus’ arms at 4 am on Friday morning, when my only writer’s sorrow was a little shocked. Was it an earthquake? I have not heard falling bodies, so I thought well about hell; Back to sleep I go. However, this is a striped Renault piece that continues to run through misty pasta and prevents any return to sleep.
So in five days, with the first sunlight that breaks over the eastern hills and does not sleep on the horizon anyway, I grew up directing my laptop. Here is what I wrote:
We are now paving the streets of Reno in a year I’m going to link in 1960, a year not long before the sheep industry in northern Nevada begins to wane. General When there are six small hotels in our town, you take or take, that cater to the needs of men who are caring for sheep.
Our host this morning is a friend of mine for life, many know him as our colleague at Reno Hai in the early sixties and many people as their principal in Reno Hai or later Hugh Hai, the first. His name is John Gasko, whom we knew as children like “Gas Q,” like Q Bell, and then in life as John Gas Kwai, a name change that attributes him to joining a professor at the University of Nevada as a Basque language who eventually knew how to pronounce it correctly. He answers both now.
Reno Basque Festival at Wingfield Park in 2015. Photo: Jackson was built
The people of John, Dominic and Mary, from the high mountainous Basque country of Europe, arrived in our town around 1927, and settled in the sheep trade with their fellow citizens. Dominic was active in the community, President of the American Basque Club and President of the annual Zazpiak Bat Basque Festival.
The Pyrenees was a landmark – yes, featuring the Grotto bar storey – in the southwest corner of Virginia and Fourth Street streets, Nevada’s busiest intersection at the time. “You lived there, right?” Email it. John answered “Yes, I did,” and Column was born.
If we mention a hotel from the Basque Country, many locals first think of the late Robert Lachalt and his famous number for 1993, The Basque Hotel. After that, two other places come to their minds: the Santa Fe Hotel on Lake Street and the Louis Basque Corner. However, the footnote is that Louis’ Basque Corner is not the Basque Hotel. The hotel accommodation was the Lincoln Hotel, and did not necessarily serve patrons.
But who cares? It’s Louis! Well – that’s three hotels; Now I will expel three others, and many readers will say, “Oh, yeah, I forgot about these!”
Lewis Basky’s Corner at the Lincoln Hotel
The Pyrenees, Lincoln and Santa Fe have stated, What about travelers, in the southwest corner of Sierra in Commercial Row, which houses an art shop for my old colleagues Jerry Fenwick. Or on East Second Street, North Side, East Center, Star Hotel? Next, we’ll visit Hotel Toscano with our parents for a great little soup for our youth, on the east side of the middle of Lake Street.
There is a common thread with all six mentioned above is the size – the image I took of the Lincoln Hotel for this piece underestimates the rocky star Lewis and tries to show the relatively small size of the small hotel. None of the six people mentioned were large or spacious, and all had small walk-in rooms that had long been occupied by herdsmen, who spent much time caring for the herds.
Three hotels – Lincoln, Santa Fe, and Tuscany – had food served at home. (Louis and Lauren Erijwebel did not open Louis Basque’s corner in the dining area of the Lincoln Hotel until 1967 – relatively late in the spinning schedule.) The second thread among Basque hotels was that they were largely managed by community ladies, such as the mother John is in the Pyrenees, while their husbands outside are grazing sheep in the hills for most of the year.
Hotels tend to take the decor and flavor of the Western Pyrenees on the border between France and Spain, a respite period to welcome back to their sponsors so far from home. Sponsors came to America to find a new life, and few were fluent in English. The staff – as written, mostly women – are in Basque hotels, and I’m sure this characteristic is distinct throughout our state in the mid-twentieth century, and they have acted as de facto translators and translators while learning the new tongue (which most of them did) already learning). Not just the spoken word, it is necessary to use it in forms and printed documents.
The similar service that seemed like a comfort at the Basque Hotel was a form of banking services – where hotel employees organize cash for hotel guests on their behalf, cashing checks and distributing cash based on their requests, and all of that is part of the service. I have spoken not only to John but to other Basque friends over the years, and nobody knows any violations that have ever happened.
John and I talked about some pillars of the Basque community as he remembered them, and most of them were in keeping with my memories of these people.
I told him if I wanted to get her into really fast ropes, I could name a few and delete others in this column and live to regret it. But in danger of that, I will mention four that we both agreed: Pete Hefferia, Martin Eisen, Marsh Landa, and surprising to me, Ed Reid, a federal judge later, all of them were great envoys to the Basque community and governance – for the men the hotel guards first contacted on behalf of From their tenants.
In any case, we are introducing this thousand-word slide from Renault’s past life, with so much left to write and I’m sure we’ll introduce it in the coming months. My sincere gratitude to John Gasco for photographing the bull with me for a few hours, and I will warn everything, we have not finished yet – there is still much to write.
Now, as Brian Williams used to say, we’ll see you or Judy Rice here on the weekend, no earthquakes are expected, and you know: keep yourself safe, right?
The opinions provided do not represent ThisisReno Opinions. Do you have something to say? Submit an opinion article here.
Carl Breckenridge is walking slowly. So he decided to help this is Renault by writing a daily column out of his mind throughout the lockdown period of the mitral virus. Carl grew up in the valley and has stories from the region dating back to 1945. He has been writing for 32 years locally and loves to wake up with friends … Now he sits six feet away.
Day 61 – Basque hotels
Karl wanders again in 1960, the time when many Basque hotels offer minestrone soup, English lessons, banking, and accommodations.
Read on
Day 60 – Al-Saluki Station
Carl’s clips are starting today after hearing a reference to the Renault Gray Hound bus station on Stevenson Street, which has now been destroyed.
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Day 59 – Don’t tell my mom
Karl returns to Mother’s Day to share an archive story about Grandpas with no idea and another rooftop adventure, as requested by the reader.
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Day 58 – School stuff
Karl considers the value of the school’s name as WCSD moves to rename one of the remaining old schools in the area and open a new school.
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Day 57 – two alternatives around Fine Street
Carl rides his bike throughout history, and remembers some of the places and people who helped build Renault in the city as it is today.
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Day 56 – Sunday, sweet Sunday
Carl feels his contract days are over, but he enjoys this new column so much that it can’t be left completely.
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Day 55 – Flight PAL 773
Carl tells the tale of the bouncer the “private gambler” that put Renault in the news, for no real good reason.
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Day 54 – downtown with Abi
Carl takes a 6-year-old car trip by himself along with my dad to some of the most exclusive places in downtown Reno (for a child).
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Day 53 – Chilean organs
Carl admits his mistake. Shelly’s devices are actually open, in the same place they’ve been since the 1940s on Greenbrae Dr. in Sparks.
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Day 52 – the genie in the sky
Judy, Carl’s girlfriend, thinks about the mysterious power of genetics and its impact on many small South Renault companies whose effects remain.
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Day 51 – Cinco de Mayo
Karl contemplates when life is separated from the routine of staying at home, and being surprised about a respectable distance will no longer be booed.
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Day 50 – Sharon Palace
Carl answers the reader’s question about a tennis court and ends up sharing the history of the Sharon Palace.
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Day 49 – the child gets help
Little Carl, a 6-year-old, gets help from a child’s psychiatrist for the love of writing.
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Day 48 – Hubbard field
Six-year-old Carl rides his bike with Hank and Don friends, arriving at Hubbard Square to check plans and learn how the tower works.
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Day 47 – Kony Island
Judy, Karl’s girlfriend, shares the history of Coney Island, the resort and not the bar, and the dream that wasn’t fully realized.
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Day 46 – SF earthquake and fire follow-up
Carl returns to San Francisco to explain how the city’s firefighting infrastructure has evolved since the 1906 earthquake and fire.
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Day 45 – Early hardware stores
7-year-old Carl takes a bike ride around Renault and Sparks to re-visit his favorite hardware stores.
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Day 44 – West Pacific
A friend of friend Carl Donne balances the railroad traditions, sharing strong railway tales in the western Pacific while traveling through Reno and Sparks.
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Day 42 – A party in the garden
Carl continues the story of his journey to Stern Grove with Arthur Fidler to experience the Age Party.
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Day 41 – Meet Arthur Fidler!
Carl takes another “journey” through Sierra to San Francisco to share the first part of his experience with Arthur Fedler.
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Day 40 – Introducing a six-year-old child
6-year-old Carl reads a letter to aunt if not to tell him about his weekend adventures to the Zodiac.
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Day 39 – Restore the faded menu
Carl reads the readers about the act to share the comments and memories that were presented in response to his participation in the 36th day of “Faded Lists”.
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