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All the United States Nevada Winnemucca The Martin Hotel
AO Edited Gastro Obscura Sponsored by Travel Nevada

The Martin Hotel

It may no longer take overnight guests, but the Martin still makes out-of-towners feel at home—just like it has for the past century.

Winnemucca, Nevada

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Morgan Childs
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The antique, embossed tin on the walls and ceiling of the Martin Hotel have an “Arabesque” design motif, popular at the time of establishment.   Courtesy of Travel Nevada
Be sure to come hungry: All dinners at the Martin are served with a bevy of side dishes.   Courtesy of Travel Nevada
The Martin Hotel hasn’t changed much in its over 100 years in business.   Finetooth / CC BY 3.0
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Far from the rains of Bilbao and the shores of Biarritz, an enclave of Basque culture lies tucked away in the northern Nevada desert. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, waves of Basque immigrants, many displaced by economic hardship or political unrest, sought new opportunities in the region.

Many of the descendants of those Basques remain in the state today. The history of the Basque diaspora is well-preserved in the city of Winnemucca, about two and a half hours northeast of Reno. One notable place where Winnemucca’s Basque heritage is celebrated is Nevada’s oldest restaurant: the Martin Hotel.

The story of the Martin Hotel begins in 1913, when French restaurateurs Augustine A. Martin and Elisee Henri Martin moved to Winnemucca and assumed the operations of a local tavern, first built as a brothel in the late 19th century. The hotel wasn’t their first entrepreneurial venture; according to a letter written by their son, Rene, the couple had run a French restaurant in Reno and later “went broke on a sheep deal” in the Sierras when the sheep were killed in a cloudburst. 

The Winnemucca hotel, however, proved a much more successful gambit. It was especially popular with men in the livestock business, who came for dinner and a place to sleep when passing through town. “It was not unusual for a sheepherder to come in from his long stay with the sheep; be paid off in full for his work and then turn this entire sum over to my father,” Rene Martin recalled. 

During the Prohibition era, the attic of the hotel housed a speakeasy. According to hotel lore, revenue department officials raided the attic and poured the booze onto the street, where locals came with cups to scoop up samples.

Today, the Martin no longer operates as a hotel, but its revelrous spirit remains intact. The dining room features long, family-style tables and original embossed tin ceiling and wall panels. You’ll want to come hungry: In the evenings, all meals are served “in the Basque tradition,” including wine, soup, Basque beans, mashed potatoes, homemade bread, and the house bread pudding. At the bar, mixed drinks are categorized on the menu by their date of origin, from the Noriega Picon—a twist on a classic Manhattan first served circa 1893—to the Mary Pickford, a white rum concoction gussied up with pineapple juice and grenadine named after the Prohibition-era film star.

Related Tags

Immigration Prohibition Hotels Restaurants Civil War History

Know Before You Go

The Martin provides room and board to musicians and other performing artists as the home of Great Basin Arts and Entertainment, a nonprofit dedicated to keeping culture alive in Winnemucca. Those artists frequently perform on-site. Visit the GBAE website to see if there are any upcoming shows.

Sponsored by Travel Nevada

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morganchilds

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  • traceywilson

Published

September 9, 2024

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Sources
  • https://themartinhotel.com/
  • https://travelnevada.com/basque/the-martin-hotel-in-winnemucca/
  • https://nevadamagazine.com/issue/summer-2020/14069/
  • https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/how-remote-nevada-town-became-bastion-basque-culture-180974274/
  • https://npgallery.nps.gov/GetAsset/2f7f624e-5254-4b24-89fb-c5161a71889b
  • https://gbae.org/
The Martin Hotel
94 W Railroad St
Winnemucca, Nevada, 89445
United States
40.97068, -117.731627
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