History of Hollywood Florida
The City of Hollywood is a mature and
built-out community, where rapid population growth in the 1950s and
1960s has given way to a population that is stable in size but
undergoing significant changes in its composition. The October 1997
issue of Money Magazine noted that Hollywood's demographics best
represent what the United States will look like in the year 2022.
Hollywood's racial diversity, cultural variety, and blend of the old
and young are where the country is headed. Twenty-seven percent of
Hollywood's residents are 55 or older; thirteen percent are 45 to
54; and thirty-one percent are 25 to 44. Hispanics make up seventeen
percent; African Americans thirteen percent; Whites sixty-eight
percent; and Asian Americans two percent of the population. The
magazine forecasts that this will be the composition of the United
States in the year 2022, with the exception that Hispanics will be
fourteen percent and Asian Americans five percent. Hollywood, the
"City of the Future," is proud of its cultural and racial diversity.
A coastal city of over 130,000
residents located in Broward County, Hollywood is nestled between
Fort Lauderdale and Miami. Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International
Airport abuts the city, while Port Everglades, the second busiest
cruise port in the world, is partially within its municipal
boundaries. Interstate 95, the Florida Turnpike, Tri-County Commuter
Rail, and two major railroads cut through the city in a north-south
direction. Miami International Airport and the Port of Miami are
less than twenty-five miles away, providing further opportunities
for Hollywood residents and companies to have access to the global
marketplace. The region is served by a substantial post-secondary
educational infrastructure, including Florida Atlantic University,
Florida International University, the University of Miami, a number
of smaller private universities and colleges, and a community
college system.
From its formal incorporation by adoption of a municipal charter
on November 28, 1925, the City of Hollywood has transformed itself.
Beginning as an undeveloped tract of pine forests, palmetto plants,
and tangled undergrowth interspersed with tomato farms and low lying
marshland, it has become the second-most populated city in Broward
County and the ninth largest city in the State of Florida. Founded
by the planning visionary Joseph Wesley Young, a Washington state
native and former resident of California and Indiana, the original
one square mile of farmland has grown to over 28.87 square miles
with a gross taxable value of real and personal property in 1998 of
over $5,408,266,000.
Joseph Young first arrived in South Florida in
January 1920 to survey several parcels of land that would be
suitable for the site of his "Dream City in Florida." His initial
vision included a wide boulevard extending from the ocean westward
to the edge of the Everglades with man-made lakes paralleling each
side of the roadway. One end of each lake would empty into the
Intracoastal Waterway and the other would serve as a twin turning
basin for private yachts. Also included in Young's vision was the
sectioning of Hollywood into districts, a precursor of present day
zoning regulations, with a centrally located business district,
large park spaces, a golf course, schools, and churches. Hollywood,
in Joseph Young's vision, "will be a city for everyone - from the
opulent at the top of the industrial and social ladder to the most
humble of working people." Unique in Young's city plan was the
incorporation of three large circles of land located along his
planned principal boulevard. These circles became the sites of a
ten-acre park (originally named Harding Circle and later renamed
Young Circle), the City Hall complex (originally named City Hall
Circle and later renamed Watson Circle), and a military academy
(Academy Circle.) Academy Circle, now Presidential Circle, is the
current site of a focal commercial structure. Having formerly lived
in California, Young chose as the name of his "Dream City" the name
of the Southern California town that had once been so attractive to
him.
With the formation of the Hollywood Land and Water Company,
composed of twenty-six departments covering every aspect of
city-building, Joseph Young began earnestly bringing to reality his
vision of Hollywood. In February 1921 Young purchased at
approximately $175 per acre the first parcel of land that would
evolve into present-day Hollywood. Young was successful in
attracting numerous potential Hollywood residents to visit and
eventually purchase property in Hollywood. By 1925, the Florida real
estate market had reached all-time highs with speculators constantly
bidding up Hollywood real estate in a frenzy of buying. Construction
continued at a rapid pace with the building of the Hollywood
Boulevard Bridge across the Intracoastal Waterway at the cost of
$110,000. By January 1926, Hollywood numbered approximately 2,420
dwellings with approximately 18,000 people, thirty-six apartment
buildings, 252 business buildings and nine hotels either completed
or under construction. The city had grown to include 18,000 acres,
six-and-a-half miles of oceanfront and an assessed value of
$20,000,000. With this phenomenal growth, residents from the
neighboring communities of Hallandale to the south and Dania to the
north petitioned the legislature and the Hollywood City Commission
to permit their annexation into Hollywood.
During this period, construction along Hollywood
Beach was rapidly transforming the coastline. Construction was
underway on the Hollywood Broadwalk, a unique cement promenade,
thirty feet wide, stretching along the shoreline for a distance of
one-and-a-half miles and patterned after Atlantic City's famed
boardwalk. Hollywood Beach also boasted Florida's largest and best
appointed bathing pavilion, the Hollywood Beach Casino located on
the Broadwalk, built at a cost of $250,000 and complete with 824
dressing rooms, eighty shower baths, a shopping arcade and an
Olympic-sized swimming pool. The "Atlantic City of the South" added
more allure with the opening in February 1926 of the Hollywood Beach
Hotel, which was situated on an 800-foot expanse of oceanfront
property at the eastern end of Hollywood Boulevard. The Hollywood
Beach Hotel would rise seven stories in height, include 500 rooms
with private baths, contain the world's largest solarium, and boast
a private wire connection direct to the New York Stock Exchange for
use by hotel guests. It was built at a cost of more than $3,000,000.
The hotel quickly became the winter home of many northern
industrialists, visiting celebrities, and the site of several of
Hollywood's fanciest social affairs.
On September 18, 1926, disaster struck Joseph
Young's "Dream City." A vicious hurricane slammed into the South
Florida Atlantic coast with Hollywood among its targets. The city
was devastated by the hurricane's high winds and surging
floodwaters. It claimed thirty-seven lives, uprooted trees, ripped
electrical wires down, tore roofs off buildings, and flattened
signboards and houses alike. Millions of dollars in property losses
were incurred and the seemingly unlimited growth of Hollywood
stopped overnight without warning. Again, Joseph Young took up the
challenge and led in the rebuilding of Hollywood as head of the
Hollywood Relief Committee. During this time of despair, the
Hollywood Municipal Band would assemble on Hollywood Boulevard to
play rousing marches and other inspirational music as the rebuilding
was undertaken. However, the huge task of rebuilding and the
financial losses inflicted by the hurricane were enormous and caused
thousands of Hollywood's residents to abandon their new found homes
and return to northern cities. The population of Hollywood declined
precipitously from 18,000 to approximately 2,500 and property values
plummeted as former residents sold properties for whatever the real
estate market would yield. As a result of the turmoil, the residents
of the communities of Hallandale and Dania seceded from Hollywood,
refusing to pay municipal taxes to what was now, in essence, a
bankrupt municipality.
During this period, Hollywood had also been expanding its
residential stock of homes by building new residences in the western
reaches of Hollywood in an area that would become the Hollywood
Hills section. Young had contracted with the Highway Construction
Company of Ohio and its founder, Samuel Horvitz, to begin
construction in this area. By February 1927, in the aftermath of the
hurricane and the ensuing collapse of the real estate market,
construction had ceased as Young found himself unable to meet
financial commitments to Horvitz and other lenders.
Undeterred, Joseph Young's vision of his "Dream City" included
one last inspiration. While grounded in a speedboat on a mud flat in
shallow Lake Mabel one afternoon, Young developed his visionary
concept while awaiting rescue from his predicament. His idea was to
dredge a deep-water seaport from the shallow lake north of Hollywood
to the Atlantic Ocean, so that ships from around the world could
dock and disembark eager visitors and tourists to Hollywood. In
February 1928, Young's vision became a reality. From that initial
predicament, the present day Port Everglades grew from a shallow
lake into one of the busiest seaports in Florida.
Despite his best efforts to promote the new seaport and the City
of Hollywood, Young's precarious financial situation caused him to
ultimately lose control of his vast Hollywood holdings to a
sheriff's auction on the steps of a Fort Lauderdale courthouse in
1930. Young continued to live in his beloved city until April 1934,
when he collapsed in his Hollywood Boulevard home and died of heart
failure at the age of 51.
In the wake of Young's financial collapse and untimely death, two
of his principal creditors formed new corporations in an attempt to
renew the growth of Hollywood. Led by Hollywood, Inc., a slow but
perceptible growth was re-ignited in Hollywood in the decade of the
1930s. Early in the 30s, construction began on Federal Highway (U.S.
1), the main north-south route to the industrial northeast, from
Dania to Hollywood. Construction also began on the Hollywood Hills
Inn on the site of the westernmost circle. In 1932, the inn was
converted into the Riverside Military Academy and the circle renamed
Academy Circle. By 1934, the city added to its recreational
facilities with the opening of the Orangebrook Golf and Country Club
and Dowdy Field, a local baseball park that later became the spring
training home of the Baltimore Orioles for a short while. In 1935,
the city added a water softener system to its municipal water plant
and the original Fiesta Tropicale celebration was inaugurated.
By the end of the decade, Hollywood's population
had risen from 2,689 in 1930 to 4,500 in 1935 and to 6,239 in 1940.
In the 1940s World War II came to Hollywood. The military academy
site was taken over and converted into the United States Naval Air
Gunners' School; the Hollywood Beach Hotel became the United States
Naval Indoctrination and Training School; and the Hollywood Golf and
Country Club became an entertainment and recreation center for U.S.
servicemen. With the end of the war in 1945, new management was
installed at the Hollywood Beach Hotel; the hotel repainted and
refurbished and building permits were secured to build the largest
swimming pool and cabana club in the United States. The city's
population continued to grow, reaching over 7,500 in 1945 and almost
doubling to 14,351 by 1950. Even two hurricanes in the fall of 1947
failed to deter the city's renewed growth.
Continuing its growth into the decade of the 1950s, a $1,000,000
bond referendum providing funds for the construction of Hollywood
Memorial Hospital was passed in 1951 after an initial rejection by
the city's electorate. The hospital was opened in February 1953,
providing 100 hospital beds and a major medical facility for
southern Broward County. In 1952, Joseph Watson became Hollywood's
twenty-second city manager since the city's incorporation in 1925.
During the next eighteen years, Hollywood would know only one city
manager. In 1954, Hollywood Boulevard was extended from State Road 7
westward to U.S. 27 along the eastern edge of the Everglades in
Broward County. This triggered the westward expansion of the city.
The remainder of the decade saw the continued growth of Hollywood as
Hollywood, Inc., moved ahead with the development of the Hollywood
Hills section and set aside a tract of land for the future Hollywood
Mall. In 1958, Hollywood celebrated the opening of the Diplomat
Hotel on Hollywood Beach and for years thereafter, the Diplomat
Hotel became the temporary residence of many of America's
celebrities, entertainers, and dignitaries as they visited,
performed, and basked in Florida's warm winter sun.
By the beginning of the 1960s, Hollywood had over 12,171 single
family homes and 2,422 hotel units in addition to thousands of other
housing structures. In 1964, the county's tallest cooperative
office-apartment building at the time, the eighteen-story Home
Federal Tower, was constructed in downtown Hollywood. A spurt of
growth during this decade resulted in an increase of the housing
stock to 35,045 single-family residences with a similar increase in
other accommodations. In the middle part of this decade, Hollywood's
municipal boundaries continued to expand from its eastern border on
the Atlantic Ocean to new areas of unincorporated Broward County to
the west, north, and south. From a population of 22,978 in 1955,
Hollywood grew to 35,237 in 1960, almost doubling to 67,500 in 1965,
expanding to 106,873 by 1970, and finally reaching over 121,400 by
1975. During this period of explosive growth, Hollywood instituted a
growth management program which revised land use controls in an
effort to manage and improve the quality and quantity of development
so that needed public improvements and services could be coordinated
with the barely controllable population growth.
Unique to Hollywood is the location
of the Seminole Indian Reservation, a politically independent
entity, within the corporate limits of the city. In 1971, Hollywood
was the site of the "Pageant of the Unconquered Seminoles" which
drew the attendance of Native Americans from across the United
States.
Celebrating the city's Fiftieth Anniversary in 1975, Hollywood
adopted the nickname the "Diamond of the Gold Coast." In its
anniversary year, Joseph Young's "Dream City" had grown to include
over 27,500 single-family residences, 34,581 apartments and other
types of residential structures and a population exceeding 125,400
people.
In recent years, Hollywood has continued to add luster to its
reputation as the Diamond of the Gold Coast with the opening of the
Anne Kolb Nature Center located in Hollywood's West Lake Tract. The
center boasts over 1,500 acres of mangrove preserves and is the site
of a protected bird rookery and sanctuary as well as a fish nursery
ground. On Hollywood's North Beach, a sea turtle hatchery and
preserve has been developed. The historic downtown arts district
along Harrison Street and the Hollywood Art & Culture Center
have become centers of activity in the cultural arts and
entertainment communities of South Florida.
Prior to 2000, the four members of the City Commission and the
Mayor were elected in citywide elections with the Mayor serving a
two-year term and the Commissioners a four-year term. In November
1998, however, a straw ballot indicated the residents' willingness
to consider expanding the Commission to six members, each elected by
a distinct district rather than citywide. In March 1999, after a
heated debate, the electorate narrowly approved a charter revision
to divide the city into six districts; each represented by its own
commissioner and expanded the term of the Mayor from two years to
four years. The primary and general elections in February and March
2000 were the first held under the new system. Two incumbent
Commissioners were reelected in their new districts, four new
Commissioners were voted into office, and the Mayor was reelected to
a four-year term. The Mayor, the presiding officer at City
Commission meetings, continues to be elected by the city at large.
What is next for Hollywood? While buildings and roads and
infrastructure are important, the real future of Hollywood lies with
its new generations that will mature to lead the City to even
greater heights barely imaginable by Joseph Young in 1925. As
important as our history might be, the past is merely prologue to
the future.
|