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1674-26 John CollinsFORT LAUDERDALE*Ng.WS E THE GORE PUBLISHING COMPANY ' .1. W. DICKEY, Chairman of the Board. W. W. STARR, Vice -Pres. Advertising T. T. GORE, President J. MILLARD CAIN, Vice -Pres. Circulation J. W. GORE, Editor and Publisher FRED PETTIJOHN, Executive Editor MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1962 =" • Editorial, Page Eight Classified Departments — Dial—J-4-37,542S, All Other Departments —. Dial JA 2.3711. 320 B.E. First Ave., Ff. Lauderdale MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS -` The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use for publication of all the local news printed In this newspaper as well as all AP news dispatches. All rights of publlation of special dispatches are also reserved. NEWS Hollywood Bureau, 505 S 21st Ave., Dial Hollywood WA 2-1548.• NEWS West Hollywood Bureau, 1439 S State Rd. 7, Dial Hollywood YU 3-7050. NEWS Pompano Beach Bureau, 2501 N Federal Hwy., Dial Pompano Beach WH 1-7800. NEWS Delray Beach Bureau, 82 S.E. Fourth Ave., Dial CR 8-2676. t NEWS -SENTINEL Palm Beach Bureau, 301 N Dixie Hwy. TE 3.9933. s ersktrtm The BEACHCOMBER (`Z) By WESLEY STOUT Part II: John Collins meanwhile had come • down from New Jersey to see what had become . of his money. The cost of clearing land by hand ran from $70 to $300 an acre. Collins brought down 16 -ton steam tractors which cut clearing costs to $30. Coconuts having failed them, Collins ,pro- • posed to plant avocados, an unproven crop, on a mile -long and 700 -feet wide tract, now the heart .of Miami Beach. Nate Field wanted to plant - grapefruit, • a proven crop. Neither had a high opinion of his fellow nurseryman's professional competence. . One was daring. the other cautious, incom- patible partners. The avocados getting off to a bad start, hurt by salt and blowing sand, first Osborn, then Field sold their interests in the 4.5 -mile Miami Beach strip to Collins, who later found the answer to salt and sand in Australian Pine windbreaks. Some of these trees still line Pinetree Dr. * * * Nate Field and Ezra and Frank Osborn seem to have been first to plat Miami Beach. a plat which vanished and was not found in Dade Coun- ty's records again until 1923. Abstract of title shows that Field deeded a lot, 100 -feet on the ocean and 300 deep, at Twentieth St., to his only living daughter, "Frank," mother of Mrs. Totten- hoff, in return for secretarial work he valued at $150. In the earliest letter Mrs. Tottenhoff has of her grandfather's, written Dec. 27, 1905, from E. A. Forssell's Southern Hotel, Miami, he says he was running free boat excursions to the beach and getting prospective lot buyers: and told ' Carl-" . (cc4-a -price-on- her lot , aud` he would find a buyer. ' • But after Collins became sole owner of the 4.5 -mile strip, he replatted, mislocating the daughter's lot and running Twentieth St. diagon- ally through it. Every sale of adjacent land in later years included a specific exception of Lot 6. Block C, in dispute. But with the title clouded, the lot stood vacant amidst the Roney Plaza area. In 1925, $100,000 had been offered for it. The title continued clouded until 1930, when -Mrs. Tot- tenhoff accepted $25,000 for a quitclaim deed, $6,700 of which was hers after legal costs were paid. * * * A Dec. 19, 1912, Field letter says: "Green told me he was almost certain to sell from Delray to Boynton. and 1 fixed a price south of Delray ' to Boca Ratone at $125 an acre." A letter of a week later says: "Collins made nue sell the last half interest in Miami Beach to him." A letter of the following February on the sta- tiouery of Collins' and Pancoast's Miami Beach Improvement. Co., refers to "a Fisher (Carl) who will be here in a few days," and continues: "Got an inquiry for land above Ilillsbero Inlet. Priced it at 1200 an acre." • Two weeks later he was writing: "Collins has sold 1,800 -feet off his south line to some Fisher, whom I have not yet seen, who has taken much . off his hands. 71us sale gives Fisher control of the mouth of the canal and the east end of the Bay bridge: and Collins did not see the situation ; until I called his - attention to it." The letter . concludes: "Marshall has just come to see me about some land about New River." } Soon Field was fearful that the bold- Collinswould go broke, "I hope not." he wrote; "as he Y owes me $7,000 yet on the Miami Beach land. I have a mortgage on all the rest I sold hon, and shall ask him for security on the $7,000. (more tomorrow) , A -• 1