
|
|
Barron Gift Collier |
Born
in Memphis, Tennessee in 1873, Collier's talent and keen
eye for
opportunity led him into a successful street lighting
business and ultimately, into printing and
advertising. In just ten years, by the age of 26, he
had amassed his first million by selling advertising
card franchises to the nation's trolley, train and
subway lines. Based in New York City, Collier's
Consolidated Street Railway Advertising Company led
the market in mass transit advertising with affiliates
in over 70 American Cities, Canada, and Cuba. By the
1920s his multiple business interests included
shipping, motor freight, hotels and spas, utilities
and newspapers.
Remote Southwest Florida first drew Collier's
notice in 1911 and over the next decade he gradually
accumulated over a million acres of sprawling,
untouched wilderness - investing millions of dollars
more to transform and develop the land.
"Frankly, I was fascinated with Florida
and swept off my feet by what I saw and felt,"
Collier once explained. "It was a wonderland with
a magic climate, set in a frame of golden
sunshine." Barron Collier
Acting on Collier's personal pledge to finish the
highway between Tampa and Miami, the Florida State
Legislature created Collier County on May 8, 1923,
with Everglades (later Everglades City) as the County
seat. By 1928, the Tamiami Trail was completed, along
with countless other essential services to bring new
vitality and home seekers to the region.
A man of tremendous energy, Barron Collier was
also instrumental in the national Boy Scout movement.
He served as Special Deputy Commissioner for Public
Safety in New York, and is credited with the
introduction of white and yellow traffic divider lines
on highways. He was decorated by nine foreign
governments and was a founding member of INTERPOL, the
International World Police.

Barron Collier died in 1939, the state's largest
landowner, at the age of 66, too soon to see his
unshakable dream for Collier County fulfilled.
The tomorrow of Florida is dawning," he wrote in
1925. "In it's soft light we see the forms of men
literally hurling back the wilderness, draining large
tracts, building homes, planting great gardens and
orchards. Soon will come the blaze of the full mid-day.
Picture, if you can, the scene as it will be then!"
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
|
|
|
|

Celebrate
Florida's colorful past the first weekend in
November
|
|