Many Atlantic City gamblers were day-trippers who arrived on buses, enticed by discounted fares and other incentives. The casinos also created nearly 43,000 jobs at the industry’s peak in 2006, which also saw a record $5.2 billion in revenue.ĭespite such gains, more than thirty years of casinos achieved little for Atlantic City. As gamblers flocked to Atlantic City, tourism increased from about 7 million visitors annually to more than 30 million.
The Resorts Casino Hotel in Atlantic City opened in 1978, the first of twelve neon-lit, high-rise casino hotels. The Claridge Hotel in Atlantic City opened in 1930 and was converted to a casino in 1981 after gambling was legalized in the city. Until then, the only other state to allow such gambling was Nevada, which legalized casinos in 1931. But the gains often came with significant social and economic costs in Atlantic City, Philadelphia, and other communities in the region.Ĭasinos began to open in the region in the late 1970s when, after much debate, New Jersey lawmakers legalized casinos in Atlantic City as a way to revitalize the once-thriving resort known as America’s Playground.
In the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, casino gambling became an accepted public policy in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and other states desperate to generate tax revenue and create jobs. Philadelphia, the Place that Loves You Back.