67°F
weather icon Clear

Dam museum offers special pass to the past

The year is 1933, and visitors and prospective workers from all over the United States are looking to enter the settlement housing the men and women who are working on what was then called the Boulder Dam.

The federally owned plot of land, however, had a number of rules limiting the number of people allowed to enter the housing settlement known today as Boulder City. Visitors were required to obtain a pass allowing them access to the city for 24 hours.

Fast-forward 83 years later and no pass is required to enter Boulder City, but take a visit to the Boulder City/Hoover Dam Museum at 1305 Arizona Street, and you will get a replica of the same passes used by visitors in the early days of Hoover Dam.

The museum started doing the replica entrance passes in 2000.

“The pass was really a way to make the museum more hands-on for the people who visit,” said the museum’s collections manager, Shirl Naegle. “The passes are a mechanism to engage visitors and make them feel as if they are entering Boulder City back when the dam was being built.”

Of course, getting a pass from the museum is a little different than getting one from the city at the height of Hoover Dam construction. For one, getting a pass back when the city was owned by the federal government required a vetting system not needed at the museum.

“Before you could get a 24-hour pass, they used to check your car and search you,” Naegle said. “I don’t know how many people who visited the city were turned away, but I do know that everyone gets a pass at the museum.”

The passes are not exact replicas of the ones visitors received back in 1933, but they try to look as authentic as possible. The artificial passes feature the same wording as the originals and a place where the Boulder City manager would stamp his name if you received permission to stay in town for more than 24 hours.

As you pass through the museum, there are places to have your pass embossed with the city manager’s signature for an extended stay, permission to enter the city itself and vote for your preference of the dam’s name.

Naegle said the museum curators who created the stamps were incredibly smart to think of such an interactive idea.

“I think it required a great amount of foresight to create this pass as well as the many other ways the museum helps people interact with history,” Naegle said. “We are still getting positive feedback about the passes, and we have had them for almost 20 years.”

One of the reasons the passes are so popular is because of the museum scavenger hunt on the back. The hunt allows museum visitors to really soak in the museum’s information in order to find the answers to Hoover Dam/Boulder City history questions like, “How much did it cost to rent a hand washing machine for two hours?” and “What did Frank Crowe think every man needed in his pocket?”

Frank Crowe was the general manager of Six Cos., which built Hoover Dam.

Naegle said the scavenger hunt is a huge hit for people who really like to look at every inch of the museum.

“I have seen people look at every picture and read every word just so they can finish the scavenger hunt,” he said. “The museum prides itself on being interactive for everyone, and the scavenger hunt is a lot of fun for people.”

Boulder City resident Amy Smiecinski said that the scavenger hunt made her experience at the museum more enticing.

“I took my brother to visit the museum, and we both loved the scavenger hunt,” she said. “I learned a lot more about the museum because I had to look closely at everything to make sure I could finish. I learned a lot more because of the scavenger hunt.” Smiecinski said the thing that most impressed her about the pass was the simplicity of it.

“I think the whole idea of the pass is really clever,” she said. “It is just a piece of paper, but it tells us so much about old Boulder City. The whole thing is just really simple, efficient and fun.”

The museum is open from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily.

Contact reporter Max Lancaster at mlancaster @bouldercityreview.com or at 702-586-9401. Follow him on Twitter @MLancasterBCR.

MOST READ
LISTEN TO THE TOP FIVE HERE
THE LATEST
Chugging Along

Photos by Ron Eland/Boulder City Review

Class In Session: Bobcats hit the ground running

The 2025-2026 school year is off to an exciting start at Garrett Junior High School. From impressive academic growth to new STEAM classes, our Bobcats are showing what it means to learn, lead, and succeed.

BCHS going strong at 85

The 2025–26 school year is off to a fantastic start at Boulder City High School.

Falls at home place seniors at significant risk

We may crack up watching slip and fall accidents on TikTok or “America’s Funniest Home Videos”, but in real life, especially for seniors, it’s no laughing matter.

Wine Walk returns with new lineup of themes

September kicks off the busiest time of the year in terms of community events in Boulder City.

Local schools welcome new staff faces

Author John Steinbeck once wrote, “I have come to believe that a great teacher is a great artist and that there are as few as there are any other great artists. Teaching might even be the greatest of the arts since the medium is the human mind and spirit.”

Who’s supposed to weed out the weeds?

“In the weeds” is a phrase used in the restaurant industry to describe when the front and/or back of the house becomes overwhelmed with orders, creating kitchen chaos.

Howdy, partner! Western Inn Motel has new owners

For nearly 90 years, the Western Inn Motel has served as a temporary place for residents as well as travelers on their way to Hoover Dam, Las Vegas and beyond.

Healthy aging at any age

Healthy aging is the process of maintaining good physical, mental, and social health and well-being as we grow older. It is not just for older adults. It starts at any age. There are key areas of health that can help you stay strong and healthy throughout your life.

When household products overpromise and actually deliver

Every now and again you come across a product that makes you stand back and say, “Wow, that worked way better than I thought it would!” These gleeful moments come as a welcome surprise when we’re often disappointed by products that overpromise and under-deliver. When I find these little gems, I store them away in my mental DIY toolbox. This past month, I was happy to add a few more “must have” products that exceeded my expectations.