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1674-3 C.W. (Pete) ChaseDeaths C.W. Chase, who unified Miami Beach By EARL DEHART Herald Staff Writer Charles W. (Pete) Chase; the man who brought together warring fac- tions of early Miami Beach and founded the Miami Beach Chamber of Commerce 60 years ago, has died at his Beach home. He was 95. "There was the North, up to 30th Street and the Ocean, and there was the South, everything below Eighth Street," Mr. Chase once recalled. "The Northerners looked upon the Southerners as a bunch• of bums. The Southerners called the Northerners a stack of stuffed shirts ... or words to that effect. "There were only 641 residents then, and you couldn't get coopera- tion from the two factions." "I asked my boss, [pioneer Beach developer} Carl Fisher, for time off to organize a contribution commit- tee" to put lights on the MacArthur Causeway. "Fisher said `OK, on condition you stop that silly north -south feud- ing.'" Chase stopped the feuding and the Chamber was born. Long a member of the chamber's board of commerce, Mr. Chase step- ped down as its secretary -treasurer in the early 1960s. . The Beach's Chase Avenue is named for him. Mr. Chase was born in Kansas City, Mo., of theatrical parents. The family performed through- out the United States, "one year rid- ing in their own Pullman car and the next year broke," a family member said. As a child actor, Mr. Chase star- red in roles of "Little Lord Faunt- leroy," "Oliver Twist" and "David Copperfield." After schooling in Illinois, Michi- gan, New York and New Hamp- shire, Mr. Chase settled down to be- come a salesman in New York.. Before World War I, his family went to Sugar Loaf Key near Key West to farm sponges and produce molasses for a British firm. During the war years, he was a Navy .lieutenant in command of a torpedo boat. After the war, Mr. Chase became Kev West's first Chevrolet dealer. He wanted to promote Key West, so he arranged a regatta that sailed J• Chase to Miami and there he met Carl Fisher. The celebrated Fisher offered him a job. "I asked him what kind of work he wanted me to do and he an- swered: "'If we plant grass, you'll plant grass. [f we build homes, you'll build homes. " 'If a mule connected with one of our companies dies, you'll see that it's buried.' " Mr. Chase actually did bury two mules on one occasion, after one of Fisher's railway cars struck and killed them. • Charged more broadly with put- ting Miami Beach on the map, Mr. Chase was instrumental in inaugu- rating the famous series of cheese- cake photograhs sent out to North- , ern newspapers to lure tourists. The mother of the series' first model sued over her daughter's "in- decent" photograph and won $50,000. The girl, it developed, had ,been underage. "It taught us.a lesson in advertis- ing," Mr. Chase said. " He became sales manager of the Fisher organization, staying until it folded in 1943. Later, Mr. Chase co-founded the Committee of 100 and served for many years as a vice president. He helped write the original Miami Beach zoning restrictions and had served on various city boards. He was alsoa president of the Miami Beach Board of Realtors. •Before Metro government in. Dade County, Mr. Chase was ap-; pointed to the county budget board, by four consecutive Florida gover y nors. He served as the board's chairman from 1942 to 1953 He was past chairman and mem ber of the Miami Beach Publicity Board from 1942 until 1953. • Mr. Chase is survived by a daughter, Sarah MacLeod; one granddaughter; and • one great- granddaughter. A memorial service will be at 10:30 a.m. Monday in the Miami Beach Community Church. • The family asks that, in lieu of flowers, donations be sent to the church's endowment fund. . Walsh and Wood Funeral Home is handling arrangements. • 1 • ,t.