A short history of the Village of NPB (HN) 10-5-07An aerial shot of North Palm Beach
taken on Nov. 18, 2006.
Photo courtesy of
Wrights Helicopter Service
of North Palm Beach
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Ashort.history of the Village. of l�ortl� Palm- ..Beach
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by the Village of North Palm Beach on
the occasion of its 50th anniversary in
2006."The 50th Anniversary of the Vil-
lage of North Palm Beach, an Official
History," was compiled and written by
Charlotte Chickering.
.. Some of the information was also pre-
viously gathered by staff writer Sarah
Stover for other articles written in
Hometown News.
The Village of North Palm Beach was
part of the land that was included in a
trust the late Albert Sawyer received
from Florida in 1892.
The land changed hands a few times
after Mr. Sawyer died. It was sold to
Ralph Stolkin in 1951, however, he did
not have any money and asked John D.
MacArthur for a loan using the land as
collateral.
Mr. MacArthur loaned Mr. Stolkin $3
million, but Mr. Stolkin could not make
payments on the loan. This made Mr.
MacArthur the owner of land in North
Palm Beach and Lake Park, but he did
not want it, so through Mr. MacArthur's
Bankers Land, the property was sold to
brothers Richard and Herbert Ross for
The Village of North Palm Beach was
incorporated Aug. 13, 1956.
When Pratt & Whitney, a technology
company, built a rocket and jet engine
development and testing facility 17
miles west of the village, people began
to move to North Palm Beach. A parade
of homes was held in October 1956, and
many of the municipality's first resi-
dents worked for Pratt &Whitney.
The first three homes the village
issued permits for were: 402, 406 and
410 South Anchorage Drive. Houses
ranged in price between $16,000 and
$38,000 in 1956, according to a pam-
phlet for the parade of homes that was
placed in the time capsule- created for
the village's 25th anniversary in 1981
and unearthed at its 50 anniversary in
2006.
With more people moving to the area,
the Ross brothers donated 10 acres of
land to the school board and North
Palm Beach Elementary opened in
1958.
As for recreation, a previous facility
was already in the village. Harry Kelsey
bought the deed to the land that
became North Palm Beach and Lake
18 -hole golf course and a small wooden
clubhouse on the area where the cur-
rent North Palm Beach Library sits in
1924. However, the golf course was
abandoned two years later in 1926.
Another golf course and clubhouse,
known as "The Winter Club," was built
on the land where the North Palm'
Beach Country Club is currently located
in 1926.
. The village purchased 145 acres
around the club so it could build a new
clubhouse and put in an Olympic -size
swimming pool in 1961. Both opened in
1963, and the former "Winter Club" was
torn down in 1984.
The addition of the pool helped bring
the village some indirect recognition.
Former resident Ryan Berube trained
at the country club for 10 years before
winning an Olympic gold medal for
relay swimming at the 1996 summer
Olympics in Atlanta
The club was also more than a recre-
ation spot. The "Winter Club" housed
the Village's first library in 1963.
A group of residents, including Thel-
ma Obert, who the library's Obert Room
is named for, and Nancy Moore, who
0
2005, collected books from residents
and fought to have a library in the town
given the professions of its residents.
Mrs. Moore was the only one who
would work nights when the library was
located in the "Winter Club" due to tales
that it was haunted, she said.
She worked part-time for 50 cents an
hour, she said.
The library moved to its current home
in 1969, and is currently being renovat-
ed. New furniture is being brought in
and space is being made for more
books, said children services manager
Mary Ann Caruso.
The country club and library are not
the only places residents can gather in
the village, thanks to a donation of
$600,000 from late resident George
Delacorte to build the Community Cen-
ter, which is located on Prosperity
Farms Road, in 1980.
The Village Players, a group of local
actors, perform plays there throughout
the year, and the community holds its
annual Village Garage Sale and other
events there.
Village
From page 10
The Village's biggest event every year
is the Heritage pest in April, which is
usually a one -day event. lust year, resi-
dents celebrated the village's 50th
anniversary by unearthing a time cap-
sule buried in 1981 on the occasion_ of
the village's 25th anniversary.
Some of the items in the first time
capsule were transferred to the one
buried as an end to the 50th anniver-
sary celebration.
They included: coins from 1981,
information from the 25th anniversary,
copies of building permits for the
town's first apartment and office build-
ings, a Rubic's cube key chain and
copies of 1981 newspapers.
Items included at the 50th anniver-
sary included a photograph of the
anniversary committee, a photo of Mr.
Perube with his medal,- catalogs from
J.C. Penney and Beall's department
stores, two editions of Hometown News,
the strategy plan for turning the golf
course into a Jack Nicklaus signature
course -and two 1990 cell phones.
These items should be unearthed at
the 75th anniversary in 2031.
Photo courtesy of the North Pala' Beach Historical Society
This is a photo taken of the North Palm Beach water tower when the village was getting started.