History
Richard Graves opened the casino, known then as the Carson City Nugget, on March 1, 1954. The Carson City Nugget was one of Nevada's largest and most prosperous casinos when Graves sold it to Richard E. Pogue and Chester H. Armstrong in September 1956. Summary: The Carson City Nugget was sold to Richard E. Pogue and Chester H. Armstrong, both from Minnesota. Graves opened the Carson City Nugget on March 1, 1954, after coming to Nevada from Idaho. Graves still owns the Nugget casino in Sparks Nevada. After Pogue died, the Carson City Nugget was sold to a group of six purchasers for $525,000 in December 1958. The group included three Adams brothers who would manage the casino. Summary: The Nugget was sold for $525,000 to a group of 6 purchasers, all licensed in Nevada. Purchasers are L. A. Adams, W. H. Adams, A. C. Adams, Barney Sullivent, Lincoln Rosen and Jerome Zurkow. The Adams brother will manage the Nugget. As of 2008, the Carson Nugget had become the oldest continually operating casino in Carson City. The casino was sold in 2015 to Dean DiLullo, the CEO of M1 Gaming inAwful Awful Burger
Graves opened multiple "Nugget" casinos, including the Little Nugget in Reno, and the Nugget Casino Resort in Sparks. At each of these locations, he introduced the "Awful Awful Burger", a double-patty sandwich that he had first created and sold in Idaho. The Awful Awful Burger, named so because it is considered "awful big and awful good", has come to be something of a local delicacy. , the Carson Nugget is the only remaining purveyor of the burger.References
External links
* 1954 establishments in Nevada Casinos completed in 1954 Casinos in Carson City, Nevada Hotels in Carson City, Nevada Resorts in Nevada Casino hotels in Carson City {{Nevada-stub