Posted on: October 28, 2024, 09:00h. 

Last updated on: October 28, 2024, 07:20h.

What makes this myth so pervasive, and difficult to challenge, is that it was started by an otherwise-reputable Las Vegas news organization.

The Green House stands where it was built in 1951. Today, that’s on the grounds of a Las Vegas TV station at 3250 Channel 8 Drive, about a mile east of the Strip by Wynn Las Vegas. Its address is about to change, however. (Image: vintagelasvegas.com, inset: Turner Classic Movies)

Recently, the Clark County Commission approved $1.5 million to relocate what is known to locals as “the Green House”  (or “the Howard Hughes House”) from its current location to the Clark County Museum, 18 miles away in Henderson, due to its historic significance.

The house has been identified over the years in dozens of news stories by KLAS-TV, Las Vegas’ CBS affiliate station, as the former home of the eccentric billionaire during the eight months he resided in Las Vegas from 1953 to 1954.

But, according to Hughes’ closest surviving aide, that claim is entirely false.

Dream House

Featuring three bedrooms, two baths, a living room, kitchen and dining room, the Green House was built in 1951 as a bungalow for the Sun Villa Motel, later that decade known as the Blair House.

The Green House is located in the parking lot of KLAS-TV. This angle looks down at the house from above the studio’s roof and parked news vans. (Image: Google Earth)

Hughes leased it from the motel’s owners, James and Beatrice Fulcher, but only used it as an office.

“He worked from there when he established the Howard Hughes Medical Institute,“ Paul Winn told Casino.org. “But he never spent a single night there.”

Winn, 93, was employed by Hughes’ company from 1957 until 1989 — first as an operations secretary and eventually rising to director of corporate records.

According to Winn, Hughes maintained a villa at the Flamingo for the entirety of his first stay in Las Vegas, to which he returned every night.

Winn said this information came directly from Kay Glenn, who ran the office in the Green House for Hughes as his operations supervisor, and who later became one of Winn’s closest friends.

Glenn — along with Bill Gay and Nadine Henley — constituted the innermost inner circle managing Hughes’ business and personal affairs.  (In 2020, Glenn was the final member of that circle to pass away.)

Howard Hughes lived in this mansion in LA’s Hancock Park from 1929 through 1942, selling it in 1946. (Image: Instagram/@weahomes)

This version of events makes more sense anyway. From an oil company he inherited from his father, as well as his own financial successes in aviation, film production and real estate, Hughes was nearly Elon-Musk wealthy by the 1940s. His primary residence then was a 10,000 square-foot palace in LA that sold last year for $23 million.

After his first Vegas sojourn, according to Winn, Hughes — known for flaunting his wealth — moved into three or four lavish bungalows at the Beverly Hills Hotel.

Hughes was not going to slum it in anything as small and plain as the Green House. However, for his businesses, like most billionaires, he was happy to cut costs wherever he could.

“Hughes was not even in the office a lot,” Winn said. “He was only there a little bit.”

How Weird, Hughes

When Hughes left Las Vegas for the first time — in 1954 at age 48 — he ordered the Green House sealed until his return. For whatever reason, he wanted everything meticulously preserved the way it was.

Gay, later president of Hughes’ Summa Corporation, secured its doors and windows with tape, then painted over the tape with a sealer.

All of Hughes’ aides were used to eccentric requests.

The Green House is shown on the upper right in 1959. A bungalow adjacent to the Blair House motel at the time, it had already been sealed up by Howard Hughes aide Bill Gay. The highlighting and modern street names were added to the original photo by the Historic Vegas Project website. (Image: LA Public Library/historicvegasproject.com)

In November 1966, Hughes indeed returned to Las Vegas, but never to the Green House. He kept leasing it — and kept it sealed — while living on the top two floors of the Desert Inn, which was only half a block away.

In March 1968, Hughes purchased KLAS for $3.6 million ($24 million today) from Hank Greenspun, publisher of the Las Vegas Sun newspaper, who had founded the TV station in 1953. By then, the Green House happened to be located on the station’s property — in its parking lot, where it remains today.

But that’s not why Hughes bought the station. (We’ll get to the reason in just a second, promise.)

Hughes continued leasing the sealed Green House even after he left Las Vegas, for the last time, in 1970. In 1972, he finally purchased it, through his Hughes Tool Company.

Why Hughes Bought KLAS

See? We told you we’d get to it.

Hughes bought the TV station just so he could dictate what movies it would play at night. Decades before VCRs were a thing, he wanted a way to control the movies he drifted off to at the Desert Inn.

This seems like a myth but, like so much associated with Hughes, is not.

In fact, sometimes, if there was any part of a movie Hughes wanted to watch again, he would have someone call the station manager to restart the movie.

“I wasn’t there, but other people have told me this really happened,” Winn said, “and I don’t doubt it for a second.”

Unseal Team

A 1972 billboard welcomes Hughes back to Las Vegas. The eccentric billionaire had left two years earlier, and would never return. But it was wishful thinking on behalf of a town grateful to Hughes for liberating some of the casinos he owned from mafia control. The sign appears in front of the Landmark, which Hughes purchased from its financially embattled founder and opened in 1969. (Image: UNLV Special Collections)

After Hughes died in April 1976, Winn said, he and another Hughes employee, Randy Hunter, unsealed the Green House and found a 22-year-old time capsule.

They were there to search it for Hughes’ will. Winn even jackhammered the concrete floor in the living room to bits, because a metal detector they brought with them indicated something they thought might be a safe.

“It turned out to be a pipe,” he said. “I personally thought it was a stupid thing to do, but the others wanted it done, so I did it. But if there was a safe buried in the floor, Kay or someone else would have known about it, because they would have been the ones who buried it.”

They never found Hughes’ will. But what they did find was cataloged in the 1979 book “Empire: The Life, Legend and Madness of Howard Hughes” by Donald Bartlett and James Steele. It included:

Two newspapers dated Oct. 13, 1953 and April 4, 1954
Keys to Room 186 at the Flamingo Hotel (possibly Hughes room) and to Room 401 at the Hotel Miramar (which was torn down to build the Castaways)
Several Sahara casino chips
A letter dated Dec. 5, 1952 from someone named Jane (possibly actress Jane Russell, who starred in the Hughes-produced 1952 film “The Las Vegas Story” and was romantically linked to Hughes)
A script for “Son of Sinbad,” a Hughes-produced movie that was released in 1955
A 1953 appointment book believed to belong to actress Jean Peters, star of the the Hughes-produced 1943 film “The Outlaw” (along with Jane Russell)
Eight rotary telephones.

“That sounds about right,” Winn said of the list, noting that he also found a silk robe in a box, two pairs of shoes and two white shirts in Hughes’ size in a closet — in addition to a 22-year-old loaf of bread in the still-running refrigerator.

Winn said he and Hunter took all the items — except the phones, the newspapers and the petrified bread — back to the Hughes Company’s corporate headquarters and filed them in the records room.

None of the items was ever returned to the Green House.

Myth Understood

In 1978, Landmark Communications, a nationwide media corporation, purchased KLAS from a trust left by Hughes. The $5.5 million it paid also got Landmark the Green House.

Landmark restored the emptied and jackhammered structure, making it a rental property for executives and managers visiting Las Vegas from other markets. KLAS also used it for board and editorial meetings and station parties, and ad reps showed it off to advertising executives during sales pitches.

Hughes was known for getting romantically involved with the stars of the pictures he produced. Here he is with Bette Davis, who starred in his 1942 movie, “In This Our Life.” (Image: UNLV Special Collections)

According to Winn, KLAS benefited from decades of embellishing the property’s historicity — both financially and in cultural stature.

“It was a big selling point for them and they used it in their marketing,” Winn said.

The myth that Hughes had lived there conferred major Vegas cred on KLAS, so it was repeated often, according to Winn. And it grew, not unlike Pinocchio’s nose, to eventually include trysts with movie starlets that the billionaire used the Green House bedrooms for.

“It was all BS,” Winn said. “I just think it’s so damn ridiculous that a news organization spent so much time making things up.”

When asked to cite a specific example, Winn cited former KLAS news director Bob Stoldal’s claim, shown here, that the house was full of suits when it was unsealed, which proves that Hughes had lived there.

“No, it was not, it simply was not,” Winn insisted, “unless somebody put them in there after I left. We went through every inch of that house!”

Landmark’s restoration did add period pieces to the Green House that weren’t original to it — much the way a museum would after acquiring a dead president’s boyhood home. These included framed photos of Hughes, posters of the movies he produced, and simulated Hughes personal effects including, according to Winn, a Voicewriter Dictaphone and a reel-to-reel tape recorder.

“I don’t remember seeing either of those,” Winn said, “and I have an excellent memory. And Hughes would never allow any of us to have a tape recorder.”

In 2022, these and other items were auctioned off, raising the $1.5 million that will now go toward relocating the Green House, which includes dismantling and reassembling it. And that’s a good thing.

The bad thing is that the people who purchased anything but a telephone in that auction were under the mistaken impression that they had come into possession of some extremely rare pieces of Las Vegas history.

A House Divided

To KLAS‘s credit, new management has allowed a new crop of reporters to re-examine Hughes’ mythical residency in their parking lot, and new conclusions are being drawn.

Gen-Z’er Brian Will’s reporting on Clark County’s approval of the relocation funds was the station’s first story on the Green House ever to directly contradict the myth.

“We don’t believe that Howard Hughes actually slept in the house,” Geoff Schumacher, an historian for the Mob Museum and author of the 2008 book “Howard Hughes: The Power, Paranoia and Palace Intrigue,” is quoted as saying in the story. And, Schumacher added, “we don’t believe he had people over — whether that be women or others.”

Look for “Vegas Myths Busted” every Monday on Casino.org. Click here to read previously busted Vegas myths. Got a suggestion for a Vegas myth that needs busting? Email corey@casino.org.



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