Far from Las Vegas, founding father Thomas Paine’s legacy in a town where he did nothing 250 years ago

Thomas Paine

Thomas Paine

Our nation’s semiquincentennial year has kicked off with the 250th anniversary this week of the publication of “Common Sense” by Thomas Paine (1737-1809). He’s the English philosopher and revolutionary who came to America in late 1774 and published his famous work barely a year later. His best-selling manifesto for freedom was so persuasive and fiery the Second Continental Congress borrowed large chunks of its logic when fashioning the Declaration of Independence just a few months later on July 4, 1776.

I’ll leave it to the historians and the scholars to ponder the continuing significance of Paine and his literary output. Admittedly, there’s no Las Vegas hook for this, but I am sometimes known to ponder matters far and wide. So I’m going to take another look at New Rochelle, N.Y., a leafy New York City suburb where I have relatives and have frequently visited long before becoming New To Las Vegas. They live just a block from one of the strangest and most bogus shrines to political action in America that I know of–strange and bogus mainly because nothing political ever happened there.

Thomas Paine

Thomas Paine Cottage Museum, New Rochelle, N.Y.

I am referring to what is now called the Thomas Paine Cottage Museum. The rather nondescript structure is perhaps the last tangible vestige of Paine. Why am I so down on this tribute to a man listed among the country’s Founding Fathers? Here are some reasons.

     –Paine didn’t write “Common Sense” at his cottage-now-museum, which he did once own.  He authored the work in Philadelphia, 100 miles to the south.  Nor did he write at the cottage his other most-famous works, which included “The Age of Reason,” “Rights of Man” and “Agrarian Justice.”

     –Because he also was fomenting the later revolution in France–where he almost lost his own head–Paine lived in the cottage for only four years, a residency that didn’t even start until more than a quarter-century after he wrote “Common Sense.” So the cottage was basically a retirement pad. And a part-time one at best. In his later years Paine also maintained a home in New York City’s Greenwich Village, which is where he died in 1809.

     –The current location of the cottage has little historical accuracy. At the time Paine lived in it, the house, rebuilt after a fire, was located a quarter-mile away up a hill. It was rolled down Paine Avenue to its present location in 1908–99 years after Paine’s death–so real-estate developers could start developing the area including much of Paine’s old spread with stately homes that still exist.

     –The “museum” contents of the cottage include precious few historical items with any real connection to Paine, including two chairs he sat in and a Franklin stove given to him by its inventor, Benjamin Franklin, who was also his patron.  The holdings are largely period nick-knacks.

     –A marker installed in 1952 accurately notes the spot along North Avenue where Paine was buried a few yards from where the cottage now stands. But what the marker’s inscription doesn’t say is that 10 years after Paine’s death, a crazy London journalist in 1819 secretly dug up his bones and shipped them back to England, where they were eventually lost to history. Nearly two centuries later, in 2009, the heist made a Time Magazine list of “Top 10 Famous Stolen Body Parts,” along with Geronimo’s skull and Napoleon’s, uh, junk.

     –When I visited more than a decade ago, the two-story cottage itself was a little ratty, no doubt due to strained financial resources of its owner, the Huguenot & New Rochelle Historical Society (Huguenots were French Protestants who left France in the face of religious persecution; they founded New Rochelle in 1688.) The facility then was only open limited hours a few days a week. According to its website, it’s now only open for visitors on prior request. 

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Fresh questions about Las Vegas’s fallen-cop charity

Las Vegas fallen-cop charitySince becoming New to Las Vegas a decade ago, I’ve taken an annual look at the Injured Police Officers Fund. That’s the home-grown 44-year-old Las Vegas fallen-cop tax-exempt nonprofit that raises and provides money to families of Southern Nevada cops injured or killed in the line of the duty. Especially when there is a police fatality, the Las Vegas news media often identifies IPOF as the official conduit for designated donations from public-spirited residents to grieving families.

To me, a national journalist who has written about charities and fundraising for decades, IPOF has stood out in sharp contrast to the morass of national faux charity political action committees sporting law enforcement names with shadowy non-police managers who essentially pocketed all the donations from cold-calling clueless donors. These outfits trolled incessantly for donor cash but spent virtually no money raised on their stated missions. You can read about many of them on this blog by clicking here or typing “faux charity” into the nearby search box. I think IPOF occupies a higher ground in this swamp, and overall does decent work, partly because it is cop-run on a volunteer basis, and not very pushy in its fundraising.

But although a million-dollar annual enterprise operating in the public interest, IPOF simply has not lived up to the promise of its relatively new president, Alexander Cuevas, a North Las Vegas police officer, to continue expanding transparency on how it functions. A recent IPOF move to shield its financial disclosures to the Nevada public, its hard-to-find most recent federal tax return, for 2024, and the organization’s own website raise some uncomfortable questions that the charity so far has declined to address in the seven weeks since I first started propounded them, despite gentle follow-up requests.

So I’ll detail my issues here. Continue reading

Las Vegas predictions for 2026

A record four of my 13 Las Vegas predictions for 2025 made last December came true during the year (sort of, anyway). This is truly astonishing given my list was mainly intended as satirical social commentary.

I’ll detail the four at the end this post. But, dear reader, before you sue, please remember that clearly labeled satire like this, particularly about future events, is protected free speech under the First Amendment. This is thanks to a unanimous 1988 U.S. Supreme Court decision involving the unlikely duo of Larry Flynt and Jerry Falwell, as well as the long-standing common-law notion that predictions are nothing more than non-actionable opinion.

So straight from the New to Las Vegas world headquarters, here I go again for 2026 with another baker’s dozen. Continue reading

In Las Vegas, Halloween is Nevada Day, when Lincoln did trick AND treat

Abraham Lincoln

Today is Halloween. Theologically a day devoted to warding off evil spirits, kids (along with adults) dress up in often-spooky costumes and solicit goodies in an annual ritual that mainly benefits candy-makers and dentists.

In Las Vegas and Nevada, though, October 31 holds a special significance. It was on this day 161 years ago, in 1864, that the Territory of Nevada became the State of Nevada. Officially, October 31 is Nevada Day, a state holiday observed on the last Friday of the month to create a three-day weekend. For the first time since 2014, the final Friday–today–actually is October 31, and thus the real Nevada Day.

And despite the lack of any historical connection with Halloween, which became popular in the U.S. only later in the 19th century amid immigration waves of Scots and Irish, there is a holiday element to the origins of Nevada Day. The biggest participant hereabouts was none other than the incumbent president, Abraham Lincoln. His treat was the creation of a new Republican-leaning state solely to help rig his re-election in 1864. The trick was the somewhat shady stuff pulled off to make it happen. Continue reading

Las Vegas Review-Journal lauds journalism awards but deep-sixes word of circulation drop

On Sunday, September 21, the Las Vegas Review-Journal published on the front page of its local news section a story with this headline: “RJ wins 28 first-place awards in annual journalism contest.” Spread across all five columns, the prominently displayed, 1,185-word-long article about the Nevada Press Foundation honors jumped to most of another page and included 12 photos of beaming staffers working for the state’s most prominent news organization.

A week later, on Sunday, September 28, the RJ published another item about itself. But this one was much harder to find and contained no pictures. It was buried amid classified ads offering furnished rooms for rent (“own bathroom, kitchen use”) in the middle of the seventh section.

In the tiny type of a legal notice, the RJ published data showing another significant yearly paid circulation decline.

Paying RJ readers have now dropped 77% since the current ownership assumed control a decade ago in 2015. This appears to be far worse than the admittedly dismal national trends in the newspaper industry for the same period–even though the local population in Las Vegas has risen by double the national rate. Indeed, the paid circulation is the paper’s lowest in nearly six decades. One has to go way back to 1968 to find a similar number. What was once a market penetration of 60% of all households in its market of Clark County is down to about 7%.

As a newspaperman long before becoming New To Las Vegas, I find this incredibly sad. It’s especially so because the RJ‘s news product recently has shown some signs of life.

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Drop in Las Vegas Forbes 400 members

Las Vegas Forbes 400They don’t make super-billionaires like they used to, at least in Las Vegas. That’s one lesson to draw from the newest edition of the Forbes 400 list, which came out earlier this month. The number of local big billies dropped from six to five. In 2016, the year I became New To Law Vegas, the count was nine. In recent years it’s been as low as two.

But the four Vegans who managed to stay on the list this year and last wildly outperformed the 396 other swells gracing the celebrated list of the country’s heaviest hitters. Collectively, the net worth of of these locals totaled $68.9 billion, a rise of 39%. The Forbes 400 as as whole: up a mere 22.%. Continue reading