Lincoln Management Lincoln Management Inc. was founded in 1984 by Philip Griffith and several other former casino executives of the
Summa Corporation, who had worked at
Harolds Club in Reno and the
Sands Casino in Las Vegas. It was formed to assume the management of the nearby
Fitzgeralds Hotel-Casino under a contract with the casino's owner, Meta Fitzgerald. The new company's management agreement took effect in April 1985. In December 1986, Lincoln Management exercised an option to buy Fitzgeralds from Meta Fitzgerald for $26 million. On the same day, the company also assumed management of the Nevada Club, a nearby casino also owned by Fitzgerald; the property was closed briefly before reopening under the company's management in February 1987. Also in December 1986, the company expanded into Southern Nevada, taking over management of the
Sundance casino in
Downtown Las Vegas for its owner,
Moe Dalitz. The following year, Lincoln's principals partnered with members of
Oppenheimer & Co. to purchase the property from Dalitz. The Sundance was rebranded under the Fitzgeralds name in March 1988. In 1988, Lincoln Management bought Harolds Club from the Summa Corporation, and also acquired the Nevada Club from Fitzgerald. In April 1993, the company was selected by the
Oneida Indian Nation to assist in developing the
Turning Stone Casino and to manage the casino. Before opening, however, the tribe opted instead to self-manage the casino. Fitzgeralds Tunica opened in June 1994, at a cost of $46 million. A hotel was added to the casino in 1996 at a cost of $34 million. The license was awarded to
Station Casinos instead, to build what is now the
Ameristar Casino Kansas City. Station was later investigated for improper contact with the president of the gaming commission, and Fitzgeralds sued and received a $38 million settlement in 2004.
Fitzgeralds Gaming In 1994, Lincoln Management was reorganized as Fitzgeralds Gaming Corp. in preparation for a potential
initial public offering. The IPO was canceled, however, in 1995, because of weak stock market demand for mid-size casino companies. In May 1995, the company opened Fitzgeralds Black Hawk in
Black Hawk, Colorado. The company had assumed management of the casino and licensed the Fitzgeralds name to what had previously been the 101 Main Street Casino. Fitzgeralds Gaming bought a 22 percent interest in the casino in February 1996 for $2.5 million, and then bought the remaining 78 percent in August 1997 for $27 million. Another casino under the company's management, the
Cliff Castle Casino in
Camp Verde, Arizona, owned by the
Yavapai-Apache Nation, opened on the same day as Fitzgeralds Black Hawk. Fitzgeralds operated the casino until 1998, when the tribe bought out the management agreement for $8 million. Meanwhile, Fitzgeralds disposed of two of its smaller properties. The company closed Harolds Club in March 1995 and sold it two months later for $8.9 million. The Nevada Club was closed in December 1997, and six months later was sold to the neighboring
Harrah's Reno for $3.8 million. In 1999, the company found itself in financial difficulty because of slower than expected growth and stiff competition. It defaulted on payments to bondholders in July 1999, and began negotiating a
debt restructuring. A deal was ultimately reached for the company to sell three of its casinos (Las Vegas, Tunica, and Black Hawk) to Indiana-based
Majestic Star Casino for $149 million, and for bondholders to forgive much of the company's remaining $205 million in public debt. The plan was filed in December 2000 as a
prepackaged bankruptcy case. The agreement with bondholders also called for Fitzgeralds Reno to be sold. No buyer was readily found, because of concerns about competition from Northern California
Indian casinos and disruption from a railroad construction project next to the property. In 2003, the casino was taken off the market, and ownership of Fitzgeralds Gaming was transferred to its creditors, a group of institutional lenders. Fitzgeralds Reno was finally sold in November 2007 to L3 Development, developer of the neighboring
Montage Reno condominiums, leaving Fitzgeralds Gaming with no remaining operations. ==List of properties==