16th Annual Miracle on 3rd St

From December 1st until today, December 12th, we’ve been collecting toys and cash donations for our 16th annual “Miracle on 3rd Street”. This year’s toy drive required lots of hard work and patience to pull off. Let’s give a shout to a friends of the saloon for making it happen:

Malibu Rum, Jameson, Tito’s Copper 54, Red Rock Harley-Davidson, Livin’ Dirty, and Evil Empire all chipped in prizes for this year’s raffle. Winning numbers will be posted in the Hogs retail store tonight (12-12-20) at 8pm! Special thumbs up to Red Rock Harley-Davidson, our original venue location to host this year’s party – unfortunately COVID-19 and the city had other ideas for our party potentially being held at Red Rock… we’ll partner up with them again down the road!

Thank you Russ Brown Motorcycle Attorneys, and Biker Down for supporting this event from day one! Although numerous times we had to change up the way we were holding this fundraiser, we were still able to come together and make it work!!!

Thank you to our friends at Eat Restaurant in Downtown Las Vegas. They’ve partnered with us for our toy drives ever since they opened their doors… Love this place and owner/Chef Natalie Young!

Also BIG thanks to BIG RICH! He, along with Dwight Algaard from Pacifica Assisted Living collected toys and cash donations!

BIG Shoutout to Founders Brewing! From Dec 1st – Dec 12th, $2 from every Founders Brewing All Day IPA will be donated to the NCCF! They also chipped in gift cards for us to buy extra toys 😉

All toys collected during this event are donated to Nevada Childhood Cancer Foundation

SEE YOU NEXT YEAR!

CLICK ME TO SEE PHOTO HIGHLIGHTS FROM PREVIOUS YEARS OF OUR TOYS CHARITY RIDE

The History of Hogs & Heifers Saloon

The idea for opening a bar and calling it Hogs & Heifers was conceived in, of all places, a bar. Allan Dell was a self-proclaimed functioning alcoholic and figured he spent enough time sitting at a bar and that he might as well make some money while he sat there. Allan’s two friends and drinking buddies were a Master Carpenter and a Graphic Design Artist and he talked them into helping him build a bar. They would all drink for free and get laid regularly and for three broke guys in their early to mid twenties, who could ask for anything more. Allan’s father agreed to finance his project if he could find an experienced bar owner to “father” him in the business. Enter Tom McNeil, legend in the Dive Bar business. McNeil owned the Village Idiot in Manhattan’s East Side, which was the Boys’ favorite watering hole, where they could sit for hours drinking ice cold Pabst Blue Ribbon for a $1.75 a can. Allan knew that he wanted to open a bar that had to do with motorcycles and women and the original logo did, in fact, include an illustration of a chopper. The Boys were trying to come up with a name, while sitting in the Village Idiot one afternoon…”Hogs & something”. On the wall above the bar was a sign for a Heifer Auction, and a heifer being a cow that has not yet been bred, is essentially a virgin cow. The name Hogs & Heifers was born. The fact that the bar ended up being in a real meat market was simply due to the affordable rent at the time, but it was a perfect match and had a great deal to do with the success of the business.

Hogs & Heifers Saloon was to be an all American classic country and southern rock-n-roll dive bar. Allan knew he wanted it to have the look and feel of a gin mill and that he wanted to hang “stuff” all over the walls. Other than that, there was little else that he had thought about. He had a lot of friends who liked to drink and planned on throwing a party for them every night. Allan may never have imagined that it would turn into the famous bar it is today, but it was absolutely his pride and joy and he considered it his greatest achievement and reveled in its quick success.

Having entered the picture prior to its opening, Michelle Dell was the first bartender to be hired. The routine performed and style of dress worn by the bartenders behind the bar, which has made Hogs & Heifers famous, was born from Michelle’s heart. Hogs & Heifers opened in November of 1992 during an unseasonably cold winter. There was literally no heat source of any kind in the bar and it was so cold you could often see your own breath. Both Allan and Michelle believed in the notion of less is more when it came to dressing behind the bar and it was always freezing; did we mention the bar had no heat? Finally, Allan bought these little space heaters that did next to nothing to provide heat and with Necessity being the Mother of all Invention, Michelle began dancing on the bar–in the empty bar–as a means to keep warm. She would throw a few dollars in the jukebox and just get up on the bar and dance. Little did she know it would become the trademark theme of Hogs & Heifers and lead to countless celebrities dancing on the bar and donating their bras. The Julia Roberts photo was seen around the world and her bra still hangs there today, albeit hidden beneath some 18,000 bras! Michelle’s famous routine has inspired a Major Motion Picture and a league of copy cat Bars.

Essentially, Allan and Michelle, and their friends, were just a bunch of kids with nothing to lose and they threw a party that they enjoyed. They were fortunate and blessed that so many others would love to come to their party and would do so repeatedly.  The  two were married in Reno, Nevada, on November 16th, 1993. Allan Dell passed away on June 7, 1997. Hogs & Heifers continues to be run by Michelle Dell who was the sole proprietor of the New York City location.  She now lives in Las Vegas, close to her favorite saloon!

CLICK HERE FOR A VIRTUAL TOUR OF THE ORIGINAL NEW YORK CITY LOCATION

0 replies

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.