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NPB history sounds like tabloid lore (PBP) 7-17-94CHE PALM BEACH POST SuNo/vy &&.Y 17 ACCESSION # North Palmea ch history sounds like tabloid lore It seems ironic that a boorish, bellig- erent gold -seeking, hot-tempered man, bereft of manners and charm, who was murdered in his bed had anything to do with affluent, quiet, graceful North Palm Beach with its refined country club atmosphere. But the story of Sir Harry Oakes, whose murder was never solved, is a pulp fiction story that would fit right on any of today's daytime television talk shows.. Sir Harry Oakes was born in 1874 to a middle-class surveyor and his wife in Sangerville, Maine. He was educated at Maine's Bowdoin College but had no social graces. He ate with only a knife and used language that was not. heard in the circles in which he wanted to travel. Soon after graduation, Oakes left Maine to search for gold. He traveled to. the Yukon hoping to catch the last of the Klondike gold rush, but he was too late. Following any one's rumor of gold being found, Oakes traveled to the Phillipines, New Zealand, Australia, South America, West Africa and other continents, but he was always too late to find the big vein to strike it rich. The itinerant prospector would work to earn money to live and to buy equipment, and then he would search for gold. In 1903, while he was in Australia, his money ran out, and he couldn't find work to get more. The landlady at his rooming house had carried him for some time, but she finally evicted him. But according to one story, Oakes had met a young waitress who, and why anyone would be charmed by this churl- ish man is not recorded, nevertheless gave him enough money to pay his bills and to purchase a ticket back to Ameri- ca. Oakes told her he'd never forget her and promised to pay her back. Then he heard another rumor. There was gold in Ontario. Oakes hopped a train to go to the mine fields, but, when the conductor called for his ticket, Oakes was unable to bluff his way through. He was thrown off the train in the middle of nowhere and walked several miles to a town near Kirkland Lake. Finally, Oakes' persistence was matched with extraordinary good luck. Gold was found at Kirkland Lake. Oakes begged a local hardware store owner to stake him so he could search, but the owner threw him out of the store. He asked a Chinese laundry owner to help him up. He agreed. Almost overnight, Oakes became a rich man and mined about $300,000 worth of gold. It was payback time. He struck more gold at Lake Shore. His claim turned out to be the second largest gold vein in the western hemi- sphere. He promptly asked the Chinese fellow what he wanted in his wildest dreams, and the man replied,"a movie theater." So Oakes had a movie theater built and gave it to him. He then starteda hardware store a few doors down from the hardware store whose owner wouldn't give him supplies, and he sold everything below cost. It took only three months for the other hardware store owner to go broke. Oakes retired the train conductor with a pension for life, as a thank -you for booting him off the train where he found gold. Oakes, 48 years old by this time, was a very rich man. It had been 20 years since he had seen Eunice Macln- tyre, his Australian waitress. True to his promise, he went back and paid her back by marrying her. Another less - romantic tale says that Oakes met the young lady who was a 24 -year-old sec- retary on a cruise. Oakes continued his varied and in- teresting life, making friends with the Duke and Duchess of Windsor and seeking entry into Canadian Parlia- ment. In the late 1930s, through his friendship with the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Oakes donated $500,000 to St. George's Hospital in London and was knighted by King George VI. jq9qA.3o One of Oakes's corporations, Tes- dem, bought the land now known as Lake Park and North Palm Beach from Harry Kelsey when his plans failed. Included was the huge mansion and the 18 -hole golf course Kelsey built called the winter Club. He constructed it during his land boom at the behest of Paris Singer who wanted a golf course for the tourists he thought would stay at his hotels on Singer Island. Oakes was murdered in his Nassau home in June 1943. The man who was tried, but found not guilty of the crime, was his son-in-law, a charming, semi- official "count" and impoverished plav- boy, Alfred Fouquereaux de Marigny. The 4 -square -mile swamp land that is now North Palm Beach remained fallow for many years under the owner- ship of John D. MacArthur. It is one of the youngest municipalities in the northern Palm Beach County area and was incorporated August 1956. A planned municipality termed "Planned Paradise," its town manager, Albin R. Olson, and council were appointed be- fore one house had even been built. A large controversy surfaced in 1979 when a "Save the winter Club" referendum ended in' an absolute tie; 1,103 votes to 1,103 votes. The debate continued for five years, but, in 1984, the village council voted that it was in the best interest of North Palm Beach to demolish the building. Population: 11 7 782. Area: 4.85 square miles. Median household in- come: $38,464. Mayor: V.A. Marks. Council members: Jerry Atwater, Judy Pierman, Tom Valente, Gail Vastola. Of- ficials: Village Manager Dennis Kelly, Village Attorney George Baldwin, Village Clerk Kathleen Kelly, Building Official Charles O'Meilia. Meetings: Council meets at 7:30 p.m. on the second and fourth Thursday at village hall, 501 U.S. 1. Phone: 848-3475. Police: Chief Bruce Sekeres; 37 sworn officers; 10 non-sworn personnel; non-emergency number: 848-2525. Fire: Chief J.D. Arm- strong, two firefighters/emergency medi- cal technicians, eight police/firefighters, three police/firefighter/emergency medi- cal technicians, five police/firefighter/ paramedics, 20 volunteer firefighters; non-emergency number, 848-2525. Fun Facts: Incorporated in 1956, the city was awarded the "Planned Community in the U.S." designation in 1957 by the National Association of Homebuilders. ,The golf course at North Palm Beach Country Club is one of two municipally owned public courses in the north county area. The village contains John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Beach State Park, which has 1.8 miles of oceanfront. The city's motto is, "The Best Place to Live Under the Sun. W7