‘Wedding Capital of the World’ lifted by Las Vegas’ historic chapels

Ricardo Torres-Cortez | (TNS) Las Vegas Review-Journal

Las Vegas’ proud title as the “Wedding Capital of the World” has been fortified by a rich history — and more than five million nuptials.

Locals, but more often tourists, tie the knot here in traditional ceremonies, while some, for example, have Elvis impersonators oversee their nuptials.

Themed affairs or not, the city’s wedding chapels have been instrumental in keeping the Las Vegas wedding destination reputation afloat.

“With more than five million ‘I do’s’ and counting, each year Las Vegas conducts more destination weddings than any other place on the planet,” according to Clark County’s marriage bureau. “For well over 70 years a ‘Vegas wedding’ has captured the public imagination as the ultimate quick, stress-free, fun, glamourous wedding destination.”

For the upcoming 70th anniversary since the London Daily Herald first declared the city the “Wedding Capital of the World” on Sept. 23, 1953, Clark County that month is planning a mass vow renewal ceremony at Caesars Palace.

The Las Vegas Review-Journal, for its part, has compiled a list of some of Las Vegas’ historic chapels.

But first, here’s a fun fact: The July 1909 wedding of Grace McGee and William C. Bright was the first recorded marriage here, just shy of two years before the city of Las Vegas was incorporated.

Chapel of the West Algiers (1966-2003)

Located at the site of the soon-to-open Fountainbleau resort on the Strip, the chapel was originally themed around the “Little Church of the West.”

Before closing, it twice rebranded, to “All Religions Chapel” and “Candlelight Wedding Chapel.” Notable brides and grooms included Bette Midler, Barry White and Michael Caine.

In 2017, officials moved the structure to the Clark County Heritage Museum.

A couple kisses in front of a Las Vegas wedding chapel.
Malgorzata Benedict and Jesse Benedict, of Pennsylvania, kiss as they have their wedding photos taken after getting married at Graceland Wedding Chapel on June 4, 2020, in downtown Las Vegas. (Ellen Schmidt/Las Vegas Review-Journal/TNS) 

Graceland Chapel (1923-present)

The building, built a century ago, was originally the house of Ollie McKee, who turned it into a wedding business in 1939.

She originally named it “Gretna Green” after a Scottish town where “marriage by declaration” was popular in the previous century, according to a Clark County report on the wedding industry.

Elvis Presley once showed up unannounced for a tour of the chapel, prompting the owner to change the name in his honor after the artist’s death a decade later, according to the chapel’s biography.

According to Graceland Chapel’s website, notable celebrities who wed there include “The King himself,” Jon Bon Jovi, Jay Leno, Salma Hayek and Leslie Mann.

Hitching Post (1923-1990s)

Also originally a private home at 514 Las Vegas Blvd. South, the building was repurposed as a wedding chapel in 1934.

The chapel’s steeple was built in the 1950s, and in the following decade, the building was painted all white.

The property was demolished after the block was sold and redeveloped.

An unrelated “Hitchin’ Post” wedding chapel still operates inside the Circus Circus.

Little White Chapel (1955-present)

Located at 1301 Las Vegas Blvd. South, the chapel strives to be innovative in its wedding offerings.

That includes the first ever wedding drive-thru — conducted in a classic pink Cadillac convertible.

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