The Pioneer Saloon in Goodsprings, Nevada represents one of the oldest continuously operating bars in the Las Vegas region, having been established in 1913 during the early decades of Nevada's development as a territorial and then state entity. The building was constructed as a commercial saloon establishment designed to serve the mining and ranching community of the Goodsprings area, which had developed around the mining industry and provided services to the surrounding rural population. The structure reflects the architectural styles and construction practices of early twentieth-century Nevada, with the distinctive pressed tin walls that still remain as primary interior finishing elements. The saloon served as a social gathering place for miners, ranchers, and other community members, functioning as a center of commercial and social life in the community.
The Pioneer Saloon entered into local and regional folklore through its association with a dramatic and violent incident that occurred within its walls during the early twentieth century. In the year 1915, a man named Paul Coski was shot and killed within the saloon by another patron identified as Joe Armstrong, a poker dealer working at the establishment. The exact circumstances of the shooting remain somewhat obscure in the historical record, though various accounts and recollections document the incident. The shooting occurred in the context of gambling activities and social interaction that were central to saloon culture of that era. The violence resulted in Coski's death, creating a victim whose life was terminated suddenly and traumatically within the walls of the establishment.
Paul Coski, the victim of the 1915 shooting, has apparently remained present at the Pioneer Saloon as a paranormal manifestation, with his distinctive spectral presence documented consistently by staff, patrons, and paranormal investigators. Coski appears as a full or partial apparition visible to witnesses, with descriptions suggesting the figure of a man bearing evidence of the fatal gunshot wound that ended his life. The apparition appears to range throughout the main floor of the saloon, with particular concentration in the areas where gaming activities occur. The presence of Coski seems to manifest with sufficient clarity and consistency to constitute one of the most well-documented ghost sightings in the Nevada paranormal literature.
The Pioneer Saloon appears to host multiple paranormal entities, with staff and investigators documenting the presence of other ghostly figures distinct from Paul Coski. A female spirit has been reported with particular concentration in the ladies' room area, with witnesses describing encounters with an apparition of a woman whose identity and circumstances of death remain subjects of speculation. The identities of other spirits inhabiting the location remain less clear, though the consistent documentation of multiple paranormal entities suggests that the Pioneer Saloon has accumulated multiple layers of spiritual presence over its more than century-long operational period.
The Pioneer Saloon has become integrated into Nevada's paranormal tourism landscape and the broader narrative of haunted locations associated with the Old West mining era and Wild West history. The establishment continues to operate as a functioning bar and social gathering place, welcoming both local patrons and tourists interested in experiencing the historical atmosphere and documented paranormal manifestations of the location. The legend of Paul Coski, shot in the saloon in 1915, has become established in the folklore of the region, with the circumstances of his death and his subsequent paranormal manifestations retold and elaborated through multiple retellings.
Apparitions
Disembodied Voices
Full-Body Apparitions
Unexplained Sounds