"He was a very prominent man who, in 1925 founded both the Tropical State Bank and the Stuart Arcade Hotel. He was also president of Tropical Investment Company which owned 3000 acres in the Lake Stearns area. He, along with other land companies, made available 3000 acres of land to Dr. Melvil Dewey to start the Lake Placid Club south. This resulted in the town's name being changed from Lake Stearns to Lake Placid. Stuart Park on Interlake Blvd was named in his honor."
Tropical Bank Robbery.
"The mural depicts the first bank robbery in Lake Placid. It happened in September, 1931. Ten-year-old Grady Parrish was waiting for a haircut in R.T. Morgan's Barber Shop. Mrs. T. W. Loftin, Sr., getting her hair cut, pointed out two men passing by the shop wearing wigs, one red, one black. Young Grady waited as long as he could before curiosity got the best of him, and he went outside to follow what he thought were men from the circus. By that time, the men had entered the Tropical State Bank, next door, and were holding up the bank manager, B.F. Williams, and tellers Myra McCauley and Helen Thomas. Young Parrish ran to tell his Daddy, O.C. Parrish, Sr., who told him to 'Go get Tom.' Tom was Town Marshall, Tom Bozeman. As Grady raced to the Bozeman home, Tom responded to his shouts and came out the door strapping on his weapon. Stopping by the town office, he picked up a shotgun and proceeded to the bank, accompanied by the senior Parish. Arriving at the bank with guns cocked as the hold-up men were trying to make their get-a-way, Bozeman was forced to shoot one of the robbers before both were captured. Later Bozeman was given $100.00 by the bank owners for capturing the bandits, and Grady was rewarded $10.00 for his part in foiling the crime. The mural is painted on the spot where the Tropical State Bank was located. The original building was destroyed in a 1991 fire, which ravaged most of the buildings in the block of Main Avenue from Interlake Boulevard to Park Street."
"Lake Placid was once one of the best bear-hunting grounds in southern Florida. The territory around Lake Istokpoga and along the edge of sandhills was often too thickly grown to allow penetration by both man and dog. This presented a perfect haven for bears to raise their young. The area was rich with palmetto berries and acorns, filled with yellow jacket and bumblebee nests along the bay galls, and had acres of huckleberries and blueberries, which meant bears had plenty to eat and grow fat. When settlers moved into the area, they brought cattle and razorback hogs. Unfortunately, the bears liked fresh pork and beef. Out of necessity, these pioneers became bear hunters. During the first hunt, 34 bears were killed; and some old timers boasted killing over 200 bears during their lifetimes. The meat proved excellent whether eaten fresh, salted, jerked or dried; bear grease far surpassed hog lard for cooking. It took a great deal of nerve to stand directly in front of a large black bear running through the dense woods directly at you and take a shot. Occasionally, a mother bear was killed and left several unattended cubs. These cubs were sometimes taken and kept for pets and became very friendly."
Standing near this mural, you can actually hear the bears growling and the bees buzzing. Really neat! And, as you can see, this trash can is dedicated to these bears...and, is situated very near the above mural.
A mural of Dr. Melvil Dewey. The booklet says the following about him and this wonderful little town:
" Educator, librarian, developer, visionary, and Dewey Decimal System inventor, Dr. Melvil Dewey's legacy lives on. In 1895, Dewey built a summer resort for his wealthy friends at a place called Lake Placid, N.Y. About 35 years later, he discovered a place he thought well-suited for a winter resort for these wealthy friends. In 1927, he convinced the Florida state legislator to change the name of the town of Lake Stearns to Lake Placid, and this town has never been the same. ...He built a sprawling lodge of Lake Childs and the lake's name changed to Lake Placid. He had the name of Lake Stearns changed to Lake-June-In-Winter. He convinced the railroad to build a new depot. He added another hotel in town, built the town's water tower, and maintained his own beautification project. ...Dewey died the day after Christmas, 1931. The funeral service was held in the Lake Placid First Presbyterian Church. His ashes were returned for burial in Essex County, N.Y."
Tea at Southwinds. This was the Lake Placid Mural Society's first mural and was dedicated on May 15, 1993. This was the resort of Dr. Dewey which he originally called "Litl Loj" and was later renamed Southwinds. These were the glory days of Lake Placid where the rich and famous came to play. Talk of the Town.
"This mural depicts a documented phone call between Dr. Dewey's wife, Emily, and Dr. Alfred Eide on December 26, 1931. Dr. Dewey rose earlier than usual Mrs. Dewey stated, and called her. They were discussing club matters when his talk suddenly became unintelligible. This was followed by a loss of consciousness. Dr. Alfred Eide was called. Dr. Dewey never fully regained consciousness. Florence Nowling Booker was Lake Placid's chief telephone operator from 1930 to 1935."
Caladium Fields.
"Lake Placid is the Caladium Capitol of the World where 95% of the world's caladiums grow. The annual Caladium Festival draws thousands of people to see the acres of color in the fields. Caladiums were brought here from the Amazon River Valley of South America. They are now a thriving and important local industry and are cultivated on more than 1500 acres here and are shipped nationwide, especially to southern states and overseas to South Africa, Turkey, Spain, Pakistan, and all over Europe. A large area of caladium farming spreads across the rich dark soil south of Lake Istokpoga. You can see these fields by traveling east on Country Road 621. In late summer and early fall when the crop is mature, the wide-ranging landscape is a tapestry of bright red, pink, and white and all the shades in between. "
Here are 2 internet sites that I found for buying caladium bulbs, if you're interested:
http://www.caladiumsonline.com/ and http://www.happinessfarms.com/
"Captain" T.W. Webb."Theodore Webb discovered caladium bulbs while visiting Tampa in the 1930s. He brought some home, threw them in the ground and about 60 years later, caladiums are a multi-million dollar industry in the Lake Placid area. He did more, however, than cultivate his 10 acres of commercial caladiums in the 1930s. He opened the town's first service station in 1924, the only one between Sebring and West Palm Beach. His Studebaker was one of the first cars in town. He sponsored Golden Gloves boxing and built a boxing ring adjacent to the service station to give folks something fun to do or watch. It was call 'The Thursday Night Fights'. As popular as he was around town for his boxing ring and his quality tires, Webb's heart was in horticulture. The town hired him to replant and recondition the public golf course where Tomoka Heights is today. He served on the town council the year the town changed its name from Lake Stearn to Lake Placid. Webb worked with new procedures transplanting and propagating native trees, shrubs, and ornamental plants. He built a rock garden where the DeVane Park gazebo now stands. He had the first certified Red Cross station in our area and instructed Red Cross first aid and water safety lifesaving to residents of Highlands County and the Brighton Indian Reservation. And, he was the town's first Boy Scout Scoutmaster."
And here's the wonderful trash can, obviously dedicated to this industry. You can see that the opening to the can is embedded in the word "gum". Our Citrus Heritage."Walter Coachman and a man named W. T. Sessions probably did more than any others to create jobs in this area around the turn of the century. Their industry was turpentine and their customers included owners of wooden ships that required pine gum caulking for their vessels. Thus was born Coachman's Consolidated Naval Stores that owned more than 2 million acres of the state's finest pine forests. In camps recalled by this mural, and scattered throughout this region, workers collected gum that was distilled into turpentine widely sold across America. The extraction process is shown as a worker, known as a 'chipper', removes bark and cuts a pattern called 'cat faces.' The bark was so strong, virgin trees sometimes required two chippers using the same axe to reach the gum. Inserted into the gash, a metal strip served to direct the gum into clay Herty pots. The pots were emptied into barrels that were lifted onto wagons drawn by mules to the stills where turpentine was refined. Coachman became a prime developer in this area. Consolidated remains a leader in the real estate and agricultural development. Members of his family still call Lake Placid home."
" The Spaniards brought orange seeds to Florida about half a millennium ago. The first orange tree seeds were planted in the Lake Placid area by Seminole Indians, and by the first white settler Joshua Lastinger. Over a hundred years old, some of these trees still produce fruit and stand on C.R. 17, just past the new bridge north of town. Today, more than 100,000 Highlands County acres hold over 91 million citrus trees that produce over 30 million, 90-pound boxes of oranges. About 80% of all the orange juice consumed by Americans comes from this region. This mural is painted on a wall at the crossroads of Florida's citrus industry. Although the citrus industry has historically encountered dangerous frosts and times of drought, fortunately, agricultural research has produced better ways to irrigate trees and protect fruit from freezing temperatures. As a result of this research, trees are more productive and disease-resistant. Strides have been made toward better equipment, transportation, and processing the fruit. The industry employs more than 3000 full-time workers and another 10000 part-time employees during the harvesting and processing season. Altogether, more than $225 million a year is pumped into our area's economy from our historic citrus industry."
And, The Old Post Office.
"It was supposed to have been a routine mail delivery. After all, on a regular basis, mail was transported from Arcadia to Lake Placid and back, two days each way. It took a couple of mules pulling a wagon to get the job done. Along the way, and about four miles south of the Lake Placid Post Office, small Buck Lake was a great place to stop and let the mules get a drink. So, there wasn't any reason for the mail carrier to be concerned. But, on this particular day, something frightened the mules and they bolted. The whole rig, the mail and the mules all plunged into the lake that reaches over 60 feet at its deepest. Divers say what remains of that accident lies at the bottom of Buck Lake to this day. This mural commemorates that tragic event. But it also honors John J. Hoy, Lake Placid Postmaster for 19 years, beginning in 1953. He saw the first canceling machine arrive and a year later, a postage meter was installed. He served as president of the National Association of Postmasters, Florida Chapter. Our first post office was built in a day. On February 5, 1919, folks brought their drygoods boxes and constructed the the office over by the railroad depot. Two years later, Angus McCuley got the post office moved into his store and became postmaster. The following year, in February, postal service was handled out of the Arcade Hotel at Interlake Blvd and Main Avenue. While Hoy was postmaster, the building that hosts this mural was built in 1963. The old post office building now houses the Greater Lake Placid Chamber of Commerce Welcome Center, the Mural Society, and the Lake Placid Board of Realtors."
There are lots more murals depicting different aspects of the town and local area. But, I think there has been enough of my time spent putting these down. If you're interested in learning more about them...you can visit the web site I put in above.
Also, there are about 4 dozen bird pictures painted on the walls in the business district. All the ones that we saw were painted by Jayne Ford and noted which year they were painted:
These are just a few of them...to give you a good idea of how pretty they are!
And, here are a few more pictures of some of the great trash cans...these are truly unbelievable!
This car trash can even has sound effects: when you push in the flap to put trash inside, it sounds like the car's starting and the engine is revving! Amazing!
After our walk around town, we stopped at a little restaurant on Interlake Blvd called The Placid Pastry Shoppe. Peter had the best Philly Cheese Steak sandwich that he's had outside of Philadelphia yet, he says. It was a really cool place:
This is the mural painted on the wall, inside the restaurant.
Then, on the way home, I had to get pictures of the orange groves...and, the truck carrying all those picked oranges to whereever they carry them: