Bal
Harbour's History
Celebrating its sixtieth anniversary, Bal Harbour Village remains
a pristine community, a carefully designed haven for the very
best in residential living and upscale tourism. With elegant
homes and condominiums, elite shops and exquisitely manicured
roadways, the Village is widely recognized as the jewel in the
crown of South Florida's communities - a model for the good
life.
The "dream village" that founder Robert C. Graham
envisioned so many years ago continues to prosper and thrive
today. The vision for this subtropical paradise began in 1929
when Miami Beach Heights, a Detroit-based real estate development
corporation purchased the raw land. Headed by industrialist
Graham with associates Carl Fisher and Walter O. Briggs, Miami
Beach Heights began the task of crafting a new community. Perhaps
most significantly, they hired one of the leading urban planning
firms of the twentieth century - Harland Bartholomew & Associates
- to design the Village. Bal Harbour and Coral Gables are the
only Miami-Dade municipalities that were built with a fully
conceived master plan in place.
From
the beginning, the Village was envisioned as a modern community
that would maintain exceptionally high standards, provide superior
services and foster civic pride.
The advent of World War II brought plans to an abrupt halt
and Graham, in patriotic gesture, leased to the land to the
United States Air Corps for $1 a year. The area became a center
of year-round training complete with barracks and a rifle range
located on the site of the Sheraton Bal Harbour Beach Resort.
A prisoner-of-war camp, located on the current site of Bal Harbour
Shops, housed German prisoners. Soldiers stationed up and down
Miami Beach marched north to the area, known as "tent city,"
for maneuvers.
After the war ended and the troops departed, development plans
resumed in earnest. Graham quickly converted some of the barracks
into apartments to boost the resident population - the State
of Florida then required twenty-five males to qualify for incorporation.
In 1945, Stanley Whitman (who was later to build Bal Harbour
Shops) moved into the barracks with his young family in order
to support the Village's incorporation efforts and was one of
the original founders of Bal Harbour.
On
August 14, 1946 the Village was incorporated and the first Council
elected. The roster for the first Council: Mayor Judge Julian
Southerland and Councilmen Charles R. Graham, Glenn E. Massnick,
Ray Semmes, Jr., Willard H. Webb and George Whittaker. Willard
Webb was the first Village Manager and Mary Wetterer, the first
Village Clerk, remained at her post for more than forty years.
The Village was first called "Bay Harbour," a name
that was soon discarded as not properly defining a community
with oceanfront property. A new word was created, taking letters
from 'bay" and "Atlantic" to create "Bal."
Thus Bal Harbour, a new town encompassing bay and ocean, was
named. The fledgling government was housed in converted military
barracks until the current Village Hall was built in 1956.
Bolstered by Miami's post war prosperity, Bal Harbour's growth
escalated with the rapid sale of residential lots, the development
of community resources and the construction of hotels. In December
1946, the first hotel opened for business - Kenilworth-by-the-Sea.
Described as "ultra-modern," the 160-room ten-story
Kenilworth promoted the concept of "luxurious leisure."
Over the next decade, a total of nine resorts would line the
Village's beachfront as the Sea View, the Bal Harbour, the Balmoral,
the Ivanhoe, the Colony, the Singapore, the Beau Rivage and
the Americana all held court. At the height of South Florida's
hotel boom, these world-class resorts attracted a steady stream
of upscale clientele and helped put Bal Harbour on the map.
In the 1950's, Bal Harbour and Miami Beach were considered
America's Riviera, a magnet for the era's top musicians and
entertainers. Count Basie and Guy Lombardo could be seen having
drinks at the Ivanhoe's Pump Room Lounge. Frank Sinatra and
his "Rat Pack" frequented the Americana's Carnival
Supper Club.
In 1953, Arthur Godfrey brought considerable media attention
to the area when he was the first entertainer to televise nationally
from Miami. He broadcast to his radio and television audience,
estimated at between 40 and 60 million, from the Kenilworth
Hotel. Other television personalities would follow suit over
the years including Jackie Gleason and Ed Sullivan.
Bal Harbour's hotels quickly became the chosen destination
for countless dignitaries, celebrities, and presidents.
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