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#414 Golden Anniversary of the Opening of Collins Bridge press release 1963From )iiami Beach News Bureau for release the week of June 9. One man's dete~naination, another's money, and a vision they shared ... 50 years ago John IS. Collins and Carl Graham Fisher opened tho gateway to what has become the world's greatest tourist resort. Wednesday, June 12, will ---k the golden anniversary of the opening of Collins Bridge. It will pass without fanfare or cor~aony. Few in Miami Beach remember tho once-leAsco span; most are unaware it ever existed. Yet before its ~o~structio~, the islo2td city was little ~ore than sand and swamp across tho bay ~rom Miami, & hustling co~rminity whose growth had been q~arrsd by the arrival of Henry Fla~ler and his railroad in 1896. Few Miami residents cared that a ferry provided the only access to a beach where mosquitos were the chief inhabitants. Among th~___, however, was Collins, whose avocado plantation along Indian Creek near what is now Arthur Oodfrey Road was a thriving venture. "Orandfather was from New Jersey; he knew that in summertime, everyone flocked to the shore to escape the heat," recalled Russell Pan. east, whose father, Thomas J. Pancoast, was Collins* son-in-law and business partner. ~ore. o.o Collins Bridge -2- South,~ a re~ort which w~uld attx&ct in winter as ~as~ern beaches did in sum~r. Be believed his oceanside holdings had great real estate potential, i£ he Just could bring the people here. The solutionwas abridge spanning Biscayne Bay. A logical route, Collins decided, would bm along the canal he h~d built in 1911 to shi~ his produce to the mm~nlmnd. He would build acroms Bull Xmland, a mangrove mwmmp Just wmmt of his acreage. Early residents scoffed at the propos&l~ even when construction finallybegan in July, 1912, it was considered an old man's foXly. Immediately there were problems. Small shipworms called reredos re&lied on the wooden pilings, casings had to heplacad around each, extending three feet below the surface and filled with concrete ~o protect the vulnermble area. This greatly increased coats, and withhimdrmmmhalf- c~Xetmd, Collins ran out of money. When C~rX Fisher errtved tn Miami, he was intrigued by the wo~enhFi~ge ex~ending from the be&c~hhmlfw&y &=roms Bimoayne Bay, huilt bya 74-year-old man the natives lookadupon am a herobr&lnmd m~hmmmr. The industrialist asked to meet Collins, listened and beliovedwh&t he heard. Collins Bridge - 3- Xn exc~mnge for 200 acres from ocean to bay betweenwhat is now 14~h Street and Dads Boulevard, and after changing the name of ~AiI Island to Belle Xsle, Fimhe= advanced $50,000 for ~ompletion of the span. On June l/, 1913, Thas J. Panooast drove the first motor vehiole aaross Collins ~r£dge. #Aami ~ayor J. W. Watson and Crate D. Bowen, Fiehar's attorney, made speeches at the opening ceremonies. The publio orosaed at a toll of $1 per car plus 25 cents per passenger, no charge for children under seven years old. "Xt stretched 2~miles, the longest woodenbridge in the world," maid Russell Panooast, who rode in that first car with him father. "The plankmwe~e laid diagonally to reduce noise." Young Pancoast soon was c~ossing ~he bridge to attend school every day, as hie fmuily built a hoeae on the beach side. Xn less than two years the ~ of #iami Beach was incorporated and began to flourish. John Collins' vision proved more lasting than his b~idge. By 1920, it already was insufficient to meet the needs of the g~owing area and was replaced by the Venetian Xslande and Causeway, which still lie along the route mapped out for "an old man's folly."