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1674-2 John Collinsr T America, islands. Miami Beach was originally called Ocean Beach. Along the small sand dunes was a skirt of cocoanut trees. The usual accepted story of the growth of these trees was that at some unknown time a schooner loaded with nuts in the hull was shipwrecked along the coast and that the nuts were washed ashore and took root. This plausible story was generally accepted as true, though now conceded to be pure fiction. The fact that the trees were growing in well-defined rows shattered the story of the wrecked schooner. Early in the eighties there lived in Monmouth County, New Jersey, two men who had heard the oft repeated story of the great fortunes made by cocoanut planters. E. T. Field and Ezra Osborn, who were ambitious to make a fortune, purchased from the Government a large part of the ocean frontage from Jupiter to Cape Florida, for which they paid from seventy- five cents to one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre. They were going to become cocoanut planters. They had been told that no clearing of the land was necessary and that all they had to do was to plant the nuts. They figured that each tree would drop one mature nut each day and as they planned to plant fQur hundred and fifty thousand trees a great fortune seemed within their grasp. They secured a schooner and sent it to Trini- dad to secure the nuts for planting. Men ,had to be brought from New Jersey to do the work. The nuts were scattered along the coast for con- venient planting. It required three winters to complete the planting of the nuts. A large proportion of them sprouted, but the beach was in- fested with rabbits and a large number of the young trees were destroyed. John S. Collins, one of the leading horticulturists of New Jersey, also lived in Monmouth County, New Jersey, and Field and Osborn consulted Mr. Collins in regard to their experience, and Mr. Collins was induced to purchase a half interest in these lands. After a thorough investigation of this tropical section and being convinced that there were other lines of horticulture and agriculture more promising than growing cocoanuts, Mr. Collins purchased the other half interest in these lands, which made him the owner of sixteen hundred and seventy acres of ocean front, ex- tending from Jupiter to the Norris Cut, lying between the ocean and Bis- cayne Bay and embracing four and one-half miles. A large portion of MIAMI BEACH HE northern part of what is now Miami Beach was but a few short years ago a dense wilderness of hammock trees, palmetto and other useless tropical growth. Today Miami Beach is a playground for the pleasure loving, with magnificent estates for the great and near -great, the polo and golfing center of with flower -bordered canals, palm boulevards and wave -washed 77 this land was covered with blue palmetto. Mr. Collins, being an expert farmer and a splendid judge of soils, was convinced that if the land could be cleared at a reasonable cost the growing of early vegetables would be a profitable investment. The clearing of the land by hand labor was found to be about one hundred dollars an acre, so he used a traction engine for the purpose and was able to clear the land at a cost of thirty dollars an acre. Two hundred acres was laid out and planted in vegetables. As there was no way to get to Miami to deliver his product to the railroad, he dug a canal from Biscayne Bay to a small grass lake which connected with Indian Creek. This, however, proved too slow and in 1912 he built the Collins bridge connecting Miami and Miami Beacri. Tlfe bridge is two and one-half miles in length and is said to be one of the longest wagon bridges in the world. The Collins properties are now i c planted as athe Miami Beach Improvement Company. The company out two hundred acres in avocado and budded mangoes. However, bulk the planted of the trees planted are the Trapp avocado, a late variety. about nine thousand budded trees. The company has the largest tract of budded avocados and mangoes in the world. The groue is a most profitable investment, the fruit selling as high as twenty-five dollars for a crate of three dozen. The building of the Collins canal and the Collins bridge started the great work of development of Miami Beach. Millions of dol- lars has since been poured into these developmentsand fort" unes are homes. being The expended by the wealthy classes in building beach has been incorporated as a city and is now a thriving mur;icipality. Some time after the awakening of Miami, Dick Smith and a number of others conceived a plan to build a casino or bathing house at the south end of Miami Beach and establish a ferry from Miami to the beach. The only conveyance to the beach at that time was row boats. Mr. Smith suc- ceeded in interesting others and a company was formed to carry out his plans. The casino was built—a wooden structure, a part of which is now the Smith casino. Docks were built on the east and west side of Bis- cayne Bay and ferry boats put on. However, the venture did not prove a success. Later a company was organized, composed of Miami residents, and a large tract of land was purchased at the beach. AmonWethosreJe in- terested in this project, called the Biscayne Bay Company, . N. Lummus, J. A. McDonald and J. C. Baile. The land purchased was largely a mangrove swamp, with a skirt of small sand dunes on the ocean side. The mangrove swamp was to be filled by pumping the sand from the bottom of the bay. The casino was leased to Avery Smith, of Connecticut. A town site was laid out by the new owners of the land, but the company did not make the success they had planned. Later, Carl G. Fisher, an Indianapolis millionaire, became interested in the improvement of the beach and purchased a tract of land from the Miami Beach Improvement Company and arranged to take over the Biscayne Bay Company's hold - 78 ti