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Florida's Boom, Bust Made Harry Kelsey a Survivor (PBP) 9-2-84Boo Bust V1 Oman e d or.. da m Ha K Is 1-y a S iv, y Harry Seymour Kelsey knew how to spot a trend. First there was the fast -lunch busi- ness. He got into it -almost by acci- dent, but nevertheless developed the concept into a chain of 112 restau- rants, bakers and commissaries. Then there was the '20s Florida land boom. He began buying land in 1919, and his Kelsey City — today's:, Lake Park -- is believed to be the first zoned community in Florida. Finally, there was the bust. If Kel- sey's 1925 sale of most of his proper- ty had not fallen through, he would have been largely out from under before the collapse in land values of early 1926 — plus the hurricanes of that year and 1928 — retarded Flori- da development until World War II. I If bust and blow weren't enough, Kelsey also .had problems with the Internal Revenue Service. The gov- ernment took the $1.6 million he re- ceived from sale of today's Intra- coastal Waterway and applied it to back taxes, and Kelsey. was for six years under nder a federal indictment that included,criminal charges. Even so, he fared better than many of the boom -time. developers. Although he lost millions, he managed to rebuild his fortunes somewhat through such venture's as patent dealing and a pharmaceutical firm._ He was; looking to. get back inte Florida real estate, with a develop- ment west of Miami named Utopia,l when he died in 1957, Harry Seymour Kelsey was born March 26, 1879, in Claremont, N.H. When he was quite young the family I moved to a farm near Springfield, Mass.,. where he learned about farin work. but also received a better -than - average education at public schools, Wesleyan Academy and the Connect- icut Literary Institute. After a time as a linotype operator, he got into real estate and soon be- came one of Springfield's more prominent young brokers. Most of his deals appear to have been remunerative. It reportedly was one of the less -successful ones, how- ever, that led him into the restaurant business. .............. ........ Yesterdays Bill McGoun Specifically he was left, after 4 trade, with a large stock of unsalable restaurant equipment. Perhaps hi: experience as a busy businessmai had led him to see the need for Z quick -lunch restaurant. In any case he leased a store in Springfield and in 1904 opened his first restaurant. The concept caught on, and before long Kelsey headed a $4.5 million -a - year business with outlets in many major U.S. cities. But Kelsey soon became restless. He had the vision to conceive a busi- ness empire and the drive and charis- ma to build one, but not the patience to run one. Often he would never visit one of his restaurants again after the ribbon -cutting. Thus, when the inter- ests that would make his holdings into the Waldorf chain offered him $3 million, he sold. His interest in Florida 'develop- ment began in the opening day's of 1919, when he visited Palm Beach to rest up after a bout of pneumonia and to see the building lot a f riend had bought f or him at auction. He arrived on New Year's Day and, two days later, his friend introduced him to a broker named Harry Greene. Evidently, it didn't take much persuading; according to Kel- sey himself, "That morning I bought 44,000 acres of land about 10 miles west of (the ocean) known as the Old Barr Estate.". Overthe next two years, Kelsey invested heavily of his- restaurant proceeds in Florida land. Among his holdings were the future sites of Palm Beach Gardens, Lake Park and North Palm Beach, as well as some 14 miles of oceanfront between Mi- ami and Jupiter. The latter included what now is Golden Beach, a portion of Pompano Beach, the oceanfront section of North Palm Beach and the Seminole Golf Club pr operty., Once again Kelsey was in the fore- front. The prosperity set off by the end of World War I was manifesting itself in many ways, and one of those was the rush to Florida. A new era had dawned, and the bad experiences of those caught up in'the drainage land boom of a decade earlier had been forgotten. Many of the developments then be- ing planned — such as George Der- rick's Coral Gables, Joseph Young's Hollywood-by--the-Sea and D.P. Da- vis' islands in Tampa- Bay — were aimed at the well-to-do or retirees. Kelsey City was to be different. Kelsey, who by then was living in Boston, hired the Boston planning firm of Olmstead Brothers — design- ers of Central'Park — to lay out his town. Tourist courts and trailers were banned. Areas were allocated for homes, recreation, business and industry. It was to be a city for those who worked. The industrial zone was in the west end of town, near the Florida East Coast (FEC),Railway. Included were the Kelsey City Nursery, sand, lime and brick plants, decorative stone and tile works, a rubber tire factory, a model dairy farm and a lumber ,mill fed from more than 20 miles of track in to t1he pine woods to the west. As for government, a municipal char- ter was granted in 1923. . "Kelsey City .had everything," re- calls Bryan Poston, who was born there in 1925. "There was a ballroom, brick factory, an icehouse and ice- cream plant, automobile showrooms on Park Avenue-, a lumberyard cut- ting 200,000 feet of pine and cypress a day, . banks, theaters, restaurants, playgrounds and parks.' 9 . As for the name, the founder insist- ed that it was a surprise to him. "I was in Boston after I purchased the land and I read in the papers of an account by real estate brokers who said Kelsey City was to be founded. It was the first I knew of it. They named it, too." As the boom progressed, the rela- tively stable developers such as Kel- sey, Young, Merrick and Miami Beach's Carl Fisher were joined by others who seemed to have no visible assets other than dreams and adjec- tives. Picture City, a planned com- munity near Hobe Sound that was to include a $1 million motion picture studio, never amounted to much more than a water tank and today is Aec� Rt:> PA5_1E_ 1 marked by nothing except pairs of Sales techniques were no more re- strained than were the ads. Consider Advertising was so heavy that the Miami News published an issue of aging concrete lamp posts along the west side of SR AlA, this description of Young's promotion .504 pages, which at that time was a Nearby Olympia did little more as described in History of Hollywood record. The Miami Herald's ad busi- than provide a name for the comma- byVirginia Ten Eick: ness for the year also .set a record. nity until it eventually was changed « This was open season for all those Freight piled up at Jacksonville to Hobe Sound. The central hub . of who had a nest egg and an apprecia- and other points. By the time the Olympia, which was laid out to re- tion of the good things in life. The railroads realized what was happen-. semble , Olympic arena, is now the salesmen blazoned banners from ing, it was too late to make headway Sound ballfield complex. their offices. They jumped onto the against the ever-increasing flood of .Hobe And then there. was Indrio, in north running boards of cars entering town goods. On Oct. 29 an embargo was St. Lucie County. A series of ads in bearing foreign license plates, drop- declared south of Jacksonville on ev- Time magazine showed architect's ping Hollywood pamphlets on. the erything except food or items for. rendering of "proposed" plazas, bath- which special permits had been ob- ob- tained. ing casinos and railway stations and "suggested treatments" of homes in laps of astonished passengers, ac- companying the literature with ra- The effect on construction _ soon the adapted Mediterranean style of pidlike talks and effusive greetings. was evident. A lot in West Palm Coral Gables. This version of "Amer- "They sent out `bird dogs' (incon- Beach that was supposed to be the ica's Most Beautiful Home Town" spieuous persons ... who would spot site of "one of ' the most magnificent never got, beyond the "proposed" likely prospects, interest them in apartment buildings in the South" in - stage, and it wasn't the only one in Hollywood development, and steer stead became the graveyard of hun- that category. On one occasion, -in a them to the salesmen. Bird dogs re- dreds of crated. bathtubs - the only parody of a Florida broker's spiel, ceived a 2 percent commission on the item to arrive. before the embargo. humorist Will Rogers referred to a ultimate sales)." A business spiral such as that on town -to -be as being "next to our pro- Stories of tremendous profits were the Gold Coast requires an ever -in - posed ocean." legion, and further fueled the mania. creasing inflow of money in order to Other cities filled in areas that had A Palm Beach tract that sold for maintain its momentum, even when been little more than laid out during $800,000 in 1923 supposedly was down -payments are cheap and op - previous development. worth $4 million just two years later. tions cheaper. A downturn about the Towns were being, reincorporated. A poor woman who had bought land time of the embargo led the develop - as cities. Older unincorporated set- near Miami in 1896 for $25 sold it in ment community to counter with a tlements were obtaining charters so 1925 for $150,000. Paris Singer, the massive publicity campaign extol - they either could have the services sewing machine heir, paid $1.75 mil- ling the virtues of Florida and attack - provided in the new communities. or lion in 1925 for 250 lakefront acres, ing as "malicious untruths" the warn - avert annexation by them. And other adjacent to Kelsey City that had gone Ings of those who were saying it cities .were virtu.all,y springing from for a few hundred dollars several couldn't last. the ground. years previous. By February 1926, Trust Co. of As the 1920s began the area had ; In November 1925, Kelsey Florida was offering 8 percent com- only nine incorporated municipal- I branched out in a different direction. pound interest, about 2 percent above ities, the oldest of which was West He bought the Florida East Coast the prevailing rate, on- first-mort- Palm Beach (1894). Others were Forth Canal, an inland waterway that had gage bonds in an effort to attract Pierce (1901), Delray Beach andc been dug from Jacksonville to Miami sufficient investment capital.. Palm 'Beach (1911), Lake Worthe starting in the late 1.9th Century but More ominously, large Northern (1913), Stuart (1914), Okeechobee;, never had fulfilled its promise due to banks were tightening up on credit. City (1915), Pahokee and Moore HaA dredging and silting problems. 'Before long the balance had swung ven (1917). Kelsey planned improvements to and the magnificent houses of cards Boynton Beach got its charter ini; the toll waterway that would enable began tumbling down. 1920, followed by Lantana in 1921,: it to accommodate at least 50 large As the capital stopped flowing, Riviera Beach in 1922 and Kelsey) freight barges. binder boys and buyers began de - City in 1923. Boca Raton and Jupiter Kelsey's. waterway was not to be. faulting en masse. As Allen puts it, came into corporate being in. 1925, Neither was his. causeway. Both "There were cases in which the land Greenacres City, and Gulfstream in would fall victim to the Great Bust, a not only came back to the original 1926, Sewall's Point in 1927 and Belle downward spiral helped in its early owner, but canis back burdened with Glade in 1928. ! stages by the very transportation taxes and assessments which W.J. (Fingy) Connors, who had problems that led to the canal plan. amounted to more than the cash he made a fortune bossing stevedores on. { As boom -time construction acceler-- had received for it; and furthermore the Buffalo docks, bought everything f ated, the stands of native lumber he found his land blighted with a half - available between Canal Point and were exhausted. There was plenty of completed development." Okeechobee City -- roughly 12,000 1, sand and gravel for concrete, but no Small developers were ruined, and acres in all --- and linked his holdings cement. Besides, the process for larger ones were set back. Some per - to the coast with a toll road from 20- mass-producing concrete blocks had sons felt the collapse would be a long - Mile Bend to Okeechobee City on the not yet been perfected and hand fab- range blessing, as it had weeded out right-of-way of today's U.S. 98. It rication . was too slow. fly-by-nights and would allow firms would have been the first road from The only gays to obtain building such as Kelsey's to resume growth at the lake to the coast had not the road supplies were over the single-track a saner level. that today is SR 80 to Belle Glade FEC, or by sea. And the two com- They reckoned without the Big been completed just months. earlier, bined were inadequate. Wind. "The whole strip of coastline from During the summer of 1925, ex- Just as Kelsey was building a laun- Palm Beach southward was being... pecting the usual seasonal slump, the dry for his city, the great hurricane rapidly staked out into- 50 -foot lots," railroads cut back on operations to 0 Sept. 17-18, 1926, roared north - said Frederick Lewis Allen in his devote more manpower to laying westward through Miami, splintering book OnlyYesterday, still one of the new track. But the binder -boy eupho- the. lower Gold Coast and killing 300 best accounts of 1920s' mania. "The ria. was upon the land, and business to 400 people when Lake Okeechobee fever had spread to Tampa, Sarasota, continued unabated through the sum- breached its dike at Moore Haven. St. Petersburg and other cities and � finer months. Damage was not that heavy on the towns on the West Coast. People were coast north of Pompano Beach, but scrambling for lots along Lake Okee-11 the black headlines in Northern chobee, about Sanford, all througr newspapers scared off potential resi- the state ... " ,j dents. And Kelsey had additional prob- lems all his own. According to Charles Branch, who was general manager of Kelsey's East Coast Fi- nancial Corp., they stemmed from Kelsey's dislike for day-to-day busi- ness operation. He turned most of the detail work of Kelsey City develop- ment over to others. Branch says that when he took the East Coast job. in 1925, an associate asked him, "When are you going to start stealing from the old man (Kel- sey)?'Everyone else is." More seriously, according to Branch, Kelsey signed his tax returns without ever , reading or checking them. And, according to the Internal Revenue Service, those returns seri'_ ously understated his income. When Kelsey sold the canal to the state in 1927, his proceeds were seized and applied to back taxes. And when the government found out that his cost of acquiring an oceanfront tract had been overstated by a factor of 10, more drastic action was taken. Not only were liens of $800,000 against East Coast and $200,000 Against Kelsey filed, but Kelsey was indicted on criminal charges. Kelsey managed to stay in busi- ness, and eventually won dismissal of the indictment on the basis that the error was an inadvertent misplacing of a decimal point, but the effect of the entire affair OD land sales was catastrophic. The worst single blow-, however, came Sept. 16, 1928. Almost two years to the day after the 1926 storm, another hurricane roared ashore, this one headed straight west thro u*gh West Palm Beach. The damage to Kelsey City was estimated at $1 mil- lion in material terms, but the dam- age to the city's image was incalcula- ble. NOR7)f p" BEO Mum' WPW WWJJv Born in New Hampshire in 1879, Harry Seymour Kelsey knew -how to spot a trend and built his fortune on them. His career began with a fast -lunch business that expanded to a chain of 112 restaurants, bakeries and commissaries and gave him the capital to invest- in 1919 in the Florida land business. His Kelsey City — today's Lake Park — is believed tto be the first zoned community in Florida. Kelsey tried to rebuild, but there was no more money "and I had to let the whole thing go." The "whole thing" included most of the original holdings. Exceptions included the Seminole Golf Club, which he had sold in 1926, and the canal. The buyer was Sir* Harry Oakes, who like Kelsey was 'a New England- er. But Kelsey was quiet and Oakes flamboyant. Sir Harry had become enormously wealthy — 'his worth once placed at $200 million — through a gold mine in Ontario, and had become a baronet courtesy. of King George VI in 1939, (he had be- come a British subject in 1915). Oakes was brutally murdered the crime remains unsolved — at his Nassau home in 1943, but his corpo rations carried on. Over the years some $12 million was poured into, Kelsey City, which in 1939 was re- named Lake Park, with not too much to show for it. As for Harry Kelsey, he returned to New England and busied himself with his patent trading and pharma- ceuticals. 'Except for a visit at the city's request in 1950' he saw little of the community thatonce bore his name except as he passed through by train on his way to winters in Miami. . During the boom, he had begun a development near Sanford that quickly collapsed due to water prob- lems, and he maintained an interest in the Orlando. area in addition to his Utopia project. He died in Orlando Nov. 27, 19579 and was buried in Springfield where he had built the fortune that, fell vic- tim to slump and storm. VILLAGE OF NORTH PALM BEACH HISTORIAN