Jerry Herbst, founder and chairman of a series of local gas stations best known for their mustachioed mascot and giant American flags, died Tuesday in his home. He was 80.
Herbst helped his family grow the Terrible Herbst company into 160-plus convenience stores, car washes and lube locations throughout Southern Nevada, including in Pahrump.
The company opened the world’s largest Chevron this summer in Jean. But Herbst the man was more than a gas station magnate, with businesses in gaming and as the patriarch of the so-called “first family of desert racing.”
“He was a man’s man. He had a zest for life,” said John Moran Jr., a Nevada gaming commissioner since 2004 and an attorney who said he represented Herbst in the past. “A handshake was all you needed with Jerry Herbst.”
From gas to gaming
Herbst founded Terrible Herbst in 1959. The name repurposed an old slight toward his father, Ed, who opened Martin Oil in Chicago in 1938.
“Back in Chicago, every time my dad would open a new service station, the competition would say, ‘Here comes that terrible Herbst,’” Jerry Herbst said in 2014.
Since the brand’s arrival, the Terrible name has existed in the Las Vegas Valley atop gas stations, casinos and the family’s motorsports team, with some of those ventures controlled by Jerry Herbst and others by his sons Ed, Tim and Troy.
The family’s move into gaming started in 1996 with Terrible’s Town in Pahrump. It brought with it one of the largest collections of 20th-century artifacts ever to be mounted on a wall or hung from a ceiling in Southern Nevada, as well as four new chain restaurants, a gas station, convention center, bingo parlor and casino.
“There were so many people lined up for the slot club, all we could do was take information,” then-marketing manager Margaret Haines told the Pahrump Valley Times at the casino’s 10th anniversary party.
“For several months everybody in town became a walking billboard for Terrible’s Town. Everybody had a Terrible’s T-shirt or cap or both,” she added.
In 2011, the Nevada Gaming Commission approved of Herbst starting a slot machine business called JETT Gaming — named for Jerry Herbst and his three sons.
Herbst told gaming regulators the idea behind JETT was to reacquire the slot machine route operations at the Terrible Herbst convenience stores.
The contracts were set to expire after new ownership acquired Herbst Gaming, rebranding the company Affinity Gaming. Affinity’s properties today include Primm Valley Resort and Silver Sevens.
JETT added to its portfolio the Gold Strike in Jean in 2015. The company’s other properties include Terrible’s casinos in Fernley and Searchlight.
Virginia Valentine, president of the Nevada Resort Association, said in a statement Tuesday that the Terrible Herbst brand has become synonymous with Las Vegas.
“We are saddened to learn of the passing of Jerry Herbst, one of Southern Nevada’s most successful businessmen and philanthropists,” Valentine said. “We extend our heartfelt condolences to Mrs. Herbst and the Herbst family.”
Sean Higgins, a corporate attorney for Golden Entertainment Inc. — operators of the Stratosphere, Arizona Charlie’s and the PT’s Pub and Sierra Gold tavern groups — considered Herbst a second father.
“I worked for the family for 17 years, but I’ve known Jerry Herbst since I was probably 5 years old,” Higgins said Tuesday. “He taught me about business, about life and I learned a lot of lessons from him, both in the personal world and in the business world. I owe him more than I could ever express.”
‘Desert people’
In 2014 the Herbst family was inducted into the Southern Nevada Sports Hall of Fame for the family’s commitment to off-road truck racing.
Herbst raced for 10 years in the 1960s and 1970s. He won his class in the Mint 400 in Southern Nevada and the Baja 500 in Mexico in 1970. He finished third at the Baja 1000 in 1971.
“I went to our first race with a helmet, sunglasses and a bandana,” Jerry Herbst told the Review-Journal around the time of the Terrible’s Cup series of races he sponsored from 2005 to 2007.
He had worked with off-road sanctioning body SCORE to create races in Henderson and outside Boulder City in the early 2000s.
For his own race, SCORE workers had transformed a seldom-used dirt track at Las Vegas Motor Speedway into a venue for desert racers.
Herbst tried different gimmicks to draw crowds, including prizes for ticket buyers. A year’s worth of free gasoline, free car washes, free oil changes, an eight-day Mexican cruise for two. The grand prize: a new truck.
“It’s neat to be able to show the people of Las Vegas what desert racing is all about,” he said at the time. “We’re desert people.”
SCORE CEO Roger Norman said in a statement Tuesday that Herbst was a pioneer of desert racing.
“His impact as a philanthropist, as a businessman and as a sportsman will leave an indelible mark on Southern Nevada and all of desert racing,” Norman said. “But most of all, his lasting legacy will be the eternal mark he has left as a husband, father and grandfather as the family patriarch of the Herbst family.”
Community-minded
Herbst and his wife have been spotted at events for everything from Bishop Gorman High School to juvenile diabetes research. He had served on the board of Sierra Pacific Power, now part of NV Energy.
Herbst, known for his patriotism, had nearly 85 flags as of July 2017 on the front of Herbst gas station locations throughout the Southwest.
“He wanted those flags to be seen,” Terrible Herbst maintenance director Tom Pedro told the Review-Journal. “Not because it was his property, but because he was proud to be an American.”
In 1999, Jerry Herbst’s sons credited him as a role model.
“Our dad taught us everything we know about racing and business,” his eldest son, Ed, told the Review-Journal in 1999. “He’s been there for all of us from the start.”
The company’s flags were lowered to half-staff at all locations Wednesday, including in Pahrump. Plans for a memorial service will be announced later.
Contact Wade Tyler Millward at 702-383-4602 or wmillward@reviewjournal.com. Follow @wademillward on Twitter. Review-Journal staff writer Richard N. Velotta contributed to this report.