1926...Kelsey, with the help of Paris Singer (Singer Island is named after him) (Village Early History)In 1919 he moved to Silver Beach and bought
14 miles of oceanfront and lakefront between
Miami and Jupiter, including 100,000 acres
• which later became Kelsey City/Lake Park
and NPB. He purchased the Florida East
Coast Canal, which is part of the intracoastal
• waterway, and operated it as a toll waterway
with a toll chain across the intracoastal to stop
boats and collect a fee. Dredging became costly
• so Kelsey sold the waterway to the state.
1915...This is a history of a pioneer family
• called McLAREN that was told to me by the 90
year old, spry, thin lady known as Lulu McLaren
• Nelson, daughter of early settler R.E. McLaren,
• Today Lulu lives alone in one of the four houses
• owned by the McLaren's on a cul-de-sac behind
a white picket gate labeled "McLaren Junction
• Population 12- Keep out- R.V. McLaren,
Mayor". The enclave is located at the farthest
west end of McLaren Road. That road lies
• in unincorporated county property directly
adjacent to our NPB border.
• In 1915 Robert Edgar McLaren, Lulu's father,
sold his factory up north and traveled to this
area to recover his health . McLaren's health
• improved and he liked Florida so much that
he built a house alongside the intracoastal on
• McLaren Road and sent for his family. Soon two
• more children were born in that house making a
total of ten children. To feed this hungry brood
he tried farming without much success, but he
• soon became prosperous by opening a grocery
store. The family had to go by boat to West
Palm Beach for groceries and to Palm Beach for
• mail pick up. Riviera Beach was then known as
• "conch town (1)."
•
• 1918...R.E. McLaren built a one room school
house on the west side of the intracoastal
waterway across from his house. PBC had built
• a drawbridge located about 100 yards south
of McLaren's house and extending straight to
.
AIA., with a paved road across Prosperity Farms
• Road. U.S. #1 was shell rock at this time. This
Monet Bridge, as it was called, was damaged
during the `28 hurricane and from subsequent
• hurricanes, but Lulu said the county government
j paid to repair the damage. The bridge washed
• away during the hurricane of `47 and was
• never replaced. One of Lulu's sisters was a toll
collector for Kelsey and she unlatched the chain
. whenever a boat wanted to pass through and
• she collected a toll (1).
•
•
1921...Kelsey City Dairy, ovrned by Harry Kelsey,
• was producing 800 quarts of milk a day. The
cows grazed between AIA and Prosperity
Farms Road. Many farms were successful on
this stretch of land, and that is the reason.
"Prosperity" was chosen for the name of the
road.
1923 ... Kelsey City was incorporated in 1923
after Kelsey had laid out his carefully zoned
town. Over 100 houses were built by him and
these homes sold quickly.
1924...The Florida legislature abolished the
state income tax and inheritance tax, thus
sparking the land boom and motivating
Northerners to buy land or build homes in this
area. Harry Kelsey built the first 18 hole golf
course and a small wooden clubhouse where
our library is now located. This golf course was
abandoned in 1926.
1926...Kelsey, with the help of Paris Singer
(Singer Island is named after him), built an 18
hole golf course and Winter Golf Clubhouse
("The Winter Club" ) on the land where the NPB
Country Club sits now. According to author
Gooding, the cost was $500,000 (4). Singer
ferried his winter guests back and forth across
the waterway; and Everglades Country Club
guests also came by boat from Palm Beach.
Lulu (1) said the boats used to tie up at a wood
dock near the Parker Bridge, and a taxi would
drive the guests over a shell rock road to the
nearby Winter Club. U.S. Highway One was still
just a shell rock path. Singer never completed
his eight story hotel on Singer Island. He had
begun construction in 1927, but after the 1928
hurricane the hotel was demolished and never
opened.
The Winter Club, the Hygeia Hotel and the
Parker bridge tender's house were the oldest
(prior to 1928) buildings in NPB. These three
buildings were our first pioneer buildings in
NPB. In 1984 by voter referendum, the NPB
residents chose to tear down the historic, but
dilapidated, Winter Club. The Hygeia Hotel
burned and the Parker house was torn down.
1926...The Parker drawbridge was completed in
1926. Our first pioneer family to live year round
on the mainland in the Village of NPB were the
Parker family. The county built his house on
Stilts just east of the bridge. The bridge was
named after Mr. Parker because he was our
first full-time bridge tender and was on duty 24
hours a day. The house was later abandoned.
1927 ... In 1927 the Winter Club opened for the
first time but it sustained damage in the '28
hurricane. Some wealthy Everglades Club
members leased and ran the golf course and
club house from 1929-30. The first two Winter
Club members were County Sheriff Robert C.
Baker, and B.D. Cole (of B.D. Cole Insurance).
Thr t,t''i wer Club
1928...A hurricane with 130 mph winds caused
Lake Okeechobee to overflow it's banks and
drown 3000 residents who lived near the lake.
The hurricane wrenched the concrete Earman
River bridge from its mooring, demolished all
but a few of the one hundred Lake Park homes,
uprooted and leveled Kelsey's three timber mills,
and the entire Park Avenue shopping district,
and ruined the vital credit rating of this once
thriving town (3).
Many of the pioneer families who had
purchased homes in Kelsey City fled North,
abandoning their demolished homes, defaulting
on their mortgage payments and causing the
Kelsey City Bank to fail. In Florida, if property
taxes went unpaid for two years, the state took
tale to that land. The unpaid taxes totaled
$300 per lot and went up for sale. Kelsey, very
disillusioned that his carefully planned town
was in ruins, abandoned his first original home
on the southwest corner of U.S. #1 and Park
Avenue (now an osteopathic clinic) and left
Kelsey City. He died in Orlando, Florida in
1957.
1929-30....Sir Harry Oakes purchased the
Winter Club and all the NPB land from Kelsey.
Oakes added a south wing to the Winter Club
and moved his family into the wing for the winter
months. This south wing housed our NPB
Library from 1963.68. Oakes opened the golf
course to winter visitors but closed it shortly
after the stock market crash of 1929.30.
Oakes was originally from Maine made his
money in gold mining and then became a
Canadian citizen. He moved to Florida to avoid
Canadian taxes. His Tesdem, Inc. Corp. began
buying abandoned property in Kelsey City and
all the land in NPB. Sometime in the 1930's
Oakes moved his family to Nassau and spent
considerable time in London. He donated
f
$500,000 to London's St. George Hospital and •
was rewarded with the knighthood title of "Sir."
In 1943 Sir Harry was bludgeoned to death and •
his bed in Nassau was set on fire with gasoline.
His murderer was never caught (7).
•
•
1926-55 ... In the period of time from '26, when '
Kelsey built the Winter Club and '55, the land ;
now known as NPB consisted of seven (7) .
square miles of sugar sand and scrub palmetto
and fewer than 100 individuals living between
Lake Park and Jupiter (5).
e
The Tesdem Company, which was formed by
Harry Oakes' Estate, held trusts of over 1000 •
lots in Lake Park and all the land in NPB
including both sides of U.S. Highway One,
1951 ... In 1951 the widow Oakes sold this land
to Ralph Stolkin who was short of cash. When
Stolkin was audited by IRS for defrauding a ;
Veteran's Association by mail he got John D. •
MacArthur to loan him $3 million using the land
as collateral. Stolkin defaulted on payments,
thus making MacArthur sole owner of NPB
and Lake Park. However MacArthur was more
interested in developing Palm Beach Gardens. ;
•
1955..CharleS Cunnin ham •
Bankers
of MacArthur s
31
Land offered the NPB
properties for sale Richard ;�`.J. •
and Herbert Ross of the
Ross Brothers Company sold :4N�
their Boutwell Dairy holdings •
locally
and used that money:
to buy the LP/NPB land from '` •
Bankers Land( ed callnow �``\�::>::t •
;,..••�, ...`?fig ..r:..:;., .,.
the MacArthur Foundation,
. ) Nrrbrrr Rom. 6uJldrr and •
This deal between Ross fiytth.&T ofNarcl, /1r,jr), SeW,-J,
and Banker's Land was
signed in 1955 for the price of $5 Million. The ;
MacArthur Foundation is
required to divest itself of
all land holdings but some ;
land across from our Village •
Hall is still ow •
•:��• � ned by this
Foundation.
The layout for our Village had
superior planning, and credit ;
Job" Sdir-cyn ke, est I'rRaL for this award -winning plan •
Coun�11man 1.957es to Richard and Herbert
Ross, John Schwencke (Ross •
associate and still alive today) an ay i e
( Ross' associate). Mr. Schwencke, who is 88, '
reviewed my history and corrected some details.
His memory is unimpaired. The Ross Brothers •
hadpreviously built about 5,000 homes in the '
City of West Palm Beach between 1950.56.
Ownership of the NPB area:
1892...Albert Sawyer was given a warranty deed
by the state of Florida with the stipulation that
the land had to be developed by a specific date.
Sawyer died and willed the property to his son,
Albert Sawyer, Jr. who sold the deed to:
1915...Ea.rton Peck, was unable to develop NPB
by the specified date. so he sold the deed for
$100,000 to:
1929...Harry Kelsey, who built the Winter Club
and golf course in NPB and sold both of these
along with all the NPB land to:
1930 ... Sir Harry Cakes, who briefly lived in the
Winter Club, added a south wing to the building
and did not develop any of the land in NPB.
Oakes was murdered in 1943 so his widow sold
the land to -
195 1 ...
o:1951... Albert Stolkin, a man who was audited
by the IRS for defrauding a Veteran's Association
(3) by mail fraud. Stolkin had to borrow the
money to buy NPB land and then he defaulted
on payment to:
1955...John D. MacArthur, who was uninterested
in developing any of NPB, so he immediately
sold the land to:
1956 ... Herbert and Richard Ross for $5 million.
8/13/56 ... Together with Seward Mott Associates
of Washington, D.C., a master plan was drawn
and the Village of NPB was incorporated by
Tallahassee (7).
Pratt & Whitney, encouraged by John D.
MacArthur, initiated plans to build a rocket
and jet engine development and testing facility
on 7000 acres of a remote scrub pine area 17
miles west of NPB (4). Pratt & Whitney invented
the first liquid hydrogen rocket engine (RL 10),
wtlich powered the satellite that carried the first
human to the moon, and created the electric
power system for the International Space
Station. The world's fastest jet -the J58 - was
developed by this facility (5).
Months before Pratt & Whitney Aircraft opened,
• the sale of homes commenced in October, 1956
with a Parade of Homes built in conjunction with
• the Home Builders' Association and located on
• the south side of South Anchorage Drive, west
of Eastwind Drive. The homes sold briskly,
• mostly to Pratt engineers and managers. The
• Ross brothers also built 50 homes before
deciding not to compete with the other builders.
(7)
Our Village issued the first three (3) permits for
occupancy to: 402 So. Anchorage Dr, 406 So.
Anchorage Dr, and 410 So. Anchorage Dr.
402 S. ,!)!'Tagg' Dryt
1956....B fia e NPB was incorporated, the Ross
brothers had these
_
e services in place: a utilities
general manager (Fred Trapnell), a Village Hall, a
village council consisting of pioneer first council
members: Charles Cunningham (MacArthur's
associate and our first Mayor), Richard Ross, Jay
White (Ross' associate), John Schwencke (Ross'
associate) and John D. MacArthur, a Fire and
Police Chief named Albert Dudden, Anchorage
Park Marina and ramp, 75 miles of sewer pipes,
a bulkhead and dredged 20 canals and 3 lakes
and hired Village Manager Alvin Olson.(7)
According to James Michener (13), Mr. Olson
had an interesting work history. After graduation
from Annapolis, he became a merchant
shipper. Then he became captivated by Chinese
decorative art, went to China and started and
import-export business.
12/12/57...The first business to be issued an
occupancy permit was the Pantry Pride / Food
Fair at 101 U.S. Highway One (building permit
#100) according to the former village utilities
director, Charles O'Meilia (2). NPB Properties
sold 40 acres to Food Fair and Pantry Pride
which opened in 1958 followed by J.M. Fields/
AKA Jefferson's Dept, Store. The Twin City Mall
and Sears arrived on this acreage in 1971.
A. problem arose because the boundary line
between Lake Park and NPB ran through the
middle of Sears. How to split the cigarette tax
money, among other issues, was discussed at
council meetings. An amiable agreement was
reached and relations with neighboring Lake
Park have remained excellent (7).
1958 ... The developers donated ten acres of
land to the school board and NPB Elementary
opened for classes. The two other schools that
are located in NPB are The Benjamin School and
St. Clare Catholic Elementary School.
1958...The National Association of Home
Builders out of Chicago, chose NPB as an
award winning community. This was the first
time a Florida town had won. The criteria used
included excellence in: landscaping, planning,
schools, recreation, zoning, shopping, variety of
home styles and public services in place (7).
1961...The Village purchased 145 acres around
the NPB Country Club for $1,250,000 by issuing
general obligation bonds. NPB voters approved
spending $400,000. to build a new clubhouse
and Olympic size swimming pool These
improvements opened in '63 and the bond was
paid off in '88 (7).
,�rri4l v."erv Nor.,h Nim Back C&un:rr Club
1963...The NPB Library opened in temporary
quarters in the Winter Club. Thelma Obert
surveyed the Village residents, and proposed
to the Village council that a library should
open. She also persuaded Village residents
to contribute 1700 books. Nancy Moore was
appointed Library Director from 1984 until her
retirement in 2005.
1966...The oldest still -standing business,
Winship Pharmacy, opened on Northlake Blvd.
It was built by renowned architect, Eugene
Lawrence. The exterior remains unchanged.
Mr. Winship stated that in"1966 Northlake
Blvd. was a two lane dirt road and only two
businesses were open along Northlake: First
American Bank and Little General grocery
(corner of Northlake Blvd. and Prosperity)".
This community has many miles of navigable
canals. A boat launching ramp is available tc
residents at Anchorage Park. It includes wet
storage for 30 boats and dry storage for boats
on trailers. There is also one public marina and
one private marina as well as a private launch at
Lott Bros., Inc. (19)
1960...The oldest church in NPB is St. Clare
Catholic Church which was established as
a parish in 1960 and began holding Mass in
private homes, rented Pantry Pride space and
the 2nd floor of St. Clare School. In 1969 the
present church building opened its doors. The
outside architecture remains unchanged. (17)
1969... NPB Library, off Anchorage, was
dedicated. The downstairs Obert Room houses
framed photos of early village history as does
the hallway of village hall. The NPB year-round
volunteer village historian is housed in the
library and has archived our village historical
photos and clippings.
Old Port Cove condominium complex with over
1,000 units was started. It has proved to be one
of the most successful and prestigious locations
in Florida. (7).
1973 ... The University of N.C. chose NPB as
an example of "one of the few well planned
communities its size in the U.S.A." Much of the
uniqueness of our Village is due to the enforced
zoning that prohibits garbage cans lining the
streets on collection day, commercial buildings
over four stories tall or located on any streets
except Northlake Blvd. and U.S. Highway One,
strip shopping malls, commercial buildings
close to the sidewalk, neon signs, and no
blighted housing units,
By restricting commercial development to two
streets and prohibiting industrial plants, NPB
has achieved a balance of land use absent in so
many other Florida coastal communities which
have succumbed to urban sprawl.
1980 ... After extended negotiations between
the State of Florida, PBC and the MacArthur
Foundation, the 1 112 miles of oceanfront land,
which lay within the NPB boundaries, was sold
to PBC for $23 million. The 385 acres included
the controversial Air Force Beach where nude
sunbathing was allowed. It is called John D.
MacArthur Beach State Park.
1980...George Delacorte, a NPB resident,
donated $600,000 toward building our second
Community Center. The Delacorte Recreation
Building on Prosperity Farms Road was built with
the stipulation that no fee ever be charged for use
of the building. (7)
1981.2004..Tbe major additional condominium
complexes completed in the past 25 years
include: Northlake Condominiums on
Lake Circle, Governor's Pointe (356 Golfview),
Seamark (Golfvlew), Marina Bay (U.S. Hwy
One), Southwind Circle (Southwind Drive),
River's Landing (Hummingbird Way), Harbor
Isles (Prosperity Farms Road). Sanctuary Cove
(Prosperity Farms Road), and Prosperity Harbor
(Prosperity Farms Road).
1980—Harriet Nolan was elected
female NPB Council member.
1989...Judy Pierman was elected
female Mayor of NPB.
as the first
presence of narcotics-. Thanks to a donation, he
owns a bullet proof west that is also stab proof.
Chapter III
Early Settlers of Palm Beach County (1835-1950)
1835... Military Trail was a raised dirt trail
cleared by the U.S. Army and used as a wagon
trail during the Seminole Indian Wars. When
these wars ended in 1838 local settlers used the
trail for trading goods
1898... Baseball games were held between rival
West Palm Beach saloons on Banyan Blvd. Sam
Lewis. a bartender, was lynched 8/24/1895
after he was arrested for shooting the PBC Tax
Collector during a Banyan Blvd poker game. An
angry mob of poker players stormed the jail,
hung Lewis from a telephone pole and riddled
his body with bullets (6).
1909 ... PBC was incorporated and became
separated from Dade County.
1910—Dade County and PBC population census
reaches 17,000.
1912—The oldest still existing store in PBC is
aptly named Pioneer Linens
and is located on Clematis Street in West Palm
Beach.
as the first 1916 ... The Palm Beach Post newspaper began
publishing daily.
1996 ... Ryan Berube, a NPB resident, won an
Olympic Gold Medal for relay swimming. He
trained at the NPB Country Club for ten years.
(2)
1980's ... Mark Soverel, helmsman and winner
of national sailing races, was listed by Yachting
Magazine as one of the top five sailboat designers
in the world. He grew up in NPB and built his
sailboats at Soverel Marine in Palm Beach
Gardens.
1999...Our NPB Department of Public Safety
was one of the first police stations in PBC to
sponsor a teenage Explorer Post in 1977, The
current Public Safety facility on U.S. Highway
One opened in 1999. At that time it had the
most technologically advanced equipment in
PBC.
Atos is a German shepherd K-9 dog acquired in
2002 and currently trained to alert officers for the
1919.33... Riviera Beach was a fishing port
during Prohibition and imported illegal rum
from the islands, Lulu said it was called ''conch -
town" .(1)
Henry Flagler named the streets in downtown
WPB. His workers lived there. Flagler named
the E -W streets alphabetically after flowers:
Banyan, Clematis, Datura, Evernia, Fern,
Gardenia and Hibiscus (9).
The nation's wealthy northerners `'wintered"
in Palm Beach during the traditional 'season'
from Thanksgiving to Easter. The island was
still a wild and swampy frontier amidst a
plush Breaker's Hotel and Bradley's gambling
casino. The invention of the auto, the extension
of Seaboard RR to PBC and the completion
of Dixie Highway/U.S. #1 paved the way for
developers to expand into northern PBC and our
area.