Biography
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Quick Facts
Intro | Helped establish Riverboat Gambling in Iowa. | |
Gender |
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Birth | 5 February 1929 | |
Death | 5 July 2009 (aged 80 years) |
Biography
Bernard Goldstein (February 5, 1929 – July 5, 2009) was the founder and chairman of Isle of Capri Casinos and is sometimes called the "father of modern riverboat gambling" because he was the first person to run riverboat casinos in the Midwest and South after they became legal in the 1990s.
Early life
He received his undergraduate and law degrees from the University of Illinois. He was admitted to the Iowa bar in 1951
Alter Companies
He joined the Davenport, Iowa scrap metal firm, Alter Companies, owned by his father-in-law, Frank R. Alter, in 1950 and served as secretary/treasurer until 1964, when he was elected executive vice president. He became president in 1973 and chairman in 1980.
In 1960 he launched a barge and tugboat service on the Mississippi River, Alter Barge Line, to transport the scrap
Its first boat was the MV Frank R. Alter. Its boats are marked by districtive yellow trim. The boats initially transported coal upriver and scrap metal down and then expanded into carrying grain.
In 1998 he wrote a book about the company Navigating the century: A personal account of Alter Company's first hundred years - The History Factory (1998) ISBN 1-882771-02-8
Riverboat gambling
In 1989 as he approached retirement he began lobbying Iowa to pass riverboat gambling. His boat the M/V Diamond Lady was the first legal riverboat casino in modern times when it sailed from Bettendorf on April 1, 1991. The President, a gambling boat owned by John E. Connelly, opened 30 minutes later in Davenport.
He opened the first casino in the South in Biloxi, Mississippi on August 1, 1992.
In 1992 the company was listed on NASDAQ under the ticker symbol ISLE.
It now operates in six states across the U.S., approx. 2 million visitors each year.