Showing posts with label Dania Beach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dania Beach. Show all posts

Saturday, March 5, 2022

A lust for wandering, a mission to promote: Dania’s prolific A.C. Frost

 

Dania Main Street 1912
Florida State Archives

By Jane Feehan

Andrew Christian Frost was remembered for having “one of the best minds in Broward County.” He was also noted for his long list of accomplishments, occupations and life of ceaseless travel. He wandered across the United States and Europe, seeking opportunities, even after settling in Modello, now Dania Beach, in 1901 with his very large family.

Frost, known as A.C. Frost, was born in Denmark in 1846 where he worked in the logging business and carried mail. He immigrated to the United States in 1873, living in New York then moving to Illinois peddling wares. He found his way to Oconto, Wisconsin, which included a Danish community. While there, he opened a general store, served as postmaster, was elected to the state’s legislature, married and had four children.

When his wife died after seven years of marriage, Frost left his children in the care of a friend and returned to Denmark for six months. Not seeing the viability of a new life there, he came back to Wisconsin where opportunities expanded. Businessmen, impressed by his resourcefulness and initiative, asked him to travel along their new rail line from Georgia to the Gulf Coast where he could find a place to settle. Frost took them up on their suggestion, made the trip and returned uninspired.

His inspiration was to come from James E. Ingraham, resident of Green Bay, Wisconsin, an engineer and associate of Henry Flagler of the Florida East Coast Railway. Town building along the Florida coast grew rail business. Frost was encouraged to move to Florida; he saw an opportunity for growth and moved to Miami in 1899 with his third wife (the previous two died) and 10 children. What follows is an abbreviated timeline of his accomplishments and travel after his 1899 move to Florida until he died at 77.
  • 1901 moved to Modello (Model Land Co.)
  • 1902 built the first house in Modello
  • 1904 returned to Wisconsin where he recruited a group of 30 Danes to move to his South Florida settlement
  • 1904 instrumental in founding the town of Dania*, incorporated in 1904 (name changed to differentiate from a town of similar name near Miami)Dania was the first town to be incorporated in Broward County, which became an entity in 1911
  • 1905 Frost built the first school building (first of two) in Dania. He also built the first post office and later the first general store.
  • 1907 traveled back to Europe for six months with one of his sons
  • 1907-1910 traveled to California, Mexico and Seattle (left business operations to his sons)
  • 1911 instrumental in founding Broward County
  • 1911 platted Lakeview, a community west of Lake Mabel (Port Everglades) with C.E. Pratt
  • 1911-1914 returned to Oconto where he served for two terms as chair of the town council and on the board of city commissioners
  • 1914 returned to Dania
  • 1920-22 traveled to Maryland, reasons for and activities there sketchy but one historian suggests he founded another town.
  • 1924 – Died in Dania

Some say he earned $100,000 selling property for Model Land Co., was instrumental in getting a canal extended from the Atlantic Ocean (from probably Lake Mabel) to Dania for drainage and encouraged draining of the Everglades to promote farming, particularly of tomatoes. A.C. Frost’s was a strange life, but one well lived. Perhaps some or part of the reports of his accomplishments are exaggerated, or not, but his progeny of 10 children underscore part of an impressive legacy.

One more thing: he built Dania’s first cemetery, where his remains … remain.

*Dania became Dania Beach in 1998. It currently has a population of about 32,000

Copyright ©2022. All rights reserved. Jane Feehan.
 

Sources:

Miami Evening Record, Dec. 6, 1904

South Florida Sun-Sentinel, Aug. 10, 2004

Dania Beach

RootsWeb

Broward Historical Commission: Cooper Kirk, “Andrew Christian Frost: Developer Had a New Vision Every day”


Tags:  Dania Beach history, A.C. Frost, History of Dania Beach

Sunday, December 27, 2020

Pirate's World in Dania Beach: rides, big-name concerts and ... troubles


Pirate's World entrance 1967
 State of Florida Archives/Florida Memory,
Dept. of Commerce Collection




By Jane Feehan 

Pirate’s World opened to great fanfare April 8, 1967 in Dania Beach, Florida. Recreation Corporation of America had big plans for the “Disneyland-like” park located on 87 acres between A1A and U.S. 1 off Sheridan Street.

RCA built about 15 park rides and installed the vintage (1897) wooden Steeple Chase from Coney Island and the Crow’s Nest Tower from the New York World’s Fair. Kids looked forward to the Banyan Tree Slide and the swaying suspension bridge with an aerial view of the park. Family fun and all the rides came with the price of one ticket: $3.50 for adults and $2.50 for children under 12.

High school and college students comprised most of the park’s workforce; there were long lines at the employment office in its early days. Young people worked as pirates, ushers, guides at a shooting gallery and servers at the alcohol-free tavern. No doubt C.T. Robertson, president of RCA, and architect/designer Bob Mimick knew how to promote the park. With high school bands, dancing girls, a yearly Miss Pirate’s World and a Rock Music World Championship, there was no place to go but up for the popular spot. One year, children arriving on a Freedom Flight from Cuba were provided a day of fun, courtesy of a radio station; all this was the stuff of good public relations.
Crow's Nest 
 State Archives of Florida


Named for the “devil-may-care days” when pirates like Gaspar, Jean Lafitte and Black Caesar cruised in and out of Florida’s harbors and coves, Pirate’s World proved to be more than family fun by the time it closed its doors in 1973. 

Trouble probably started with the rock concerts. Rockers Tina Turner, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, Black Sabbath, Jethro Tull and David Bowie were among those who performed there. Concert goers numbered in the thousands. In 1971, hundreds of kids crashed the Grand Funk Railroad concert without paying. Cops were called. The city of Dania Beach asked (demanded?) money for crowd control, $5 - $25 per hour per officer. Reportedly, the chief was to get the higher amount … until Hollywood’s Sun-Tatler got wind of the arrangement and published a story. The demand for crowd control fees was quickly dropped.

Drugs commanded other headlines. As many as 35 park attendees one weekend were arrested for drug sales and use. Another weekend, 11 drug arrests. It became a regular occurance. Dania Beach wanted a head tax of five cents per ticket for crowd control and drug patrol. Robertson and his attorney claimed it was illegal (the city got a similar but less fee/tax from Dania Jai Alai).

Pirate’s World was grabbing headlines for all the wrong reasons. Sheriff Ed Stack promised to investigate and declare the park a public nuisance. State Attorney Ken Jenne promised the same. In 1973, the auditorium that hosted as many as 9,000 teenagers during its concert series was shut down because of unsafe construction. The building’s steel roof ribbing was spaced too far apart; its ceiling was a patchwork of burlap and plastic. Pirate’s World lost its license. The auditorium was closed.

Stack, Jenne and the city of Dania Beach were ecstatic. There were additional legal maneuvers, but the park’s end was clear.

Log Flume ride
Florida State Archives

The last day of Pirate’s World operations was Dec. 2, 1973. Offers from developers came in for the land and promises were made but not kept for several years to demolish the landmark. In late 1975, kids were seen jumping off the remaining condemned buildings. Today, it features residential and retail buildings.

Some blame the opening of Disney World in 1971 for the demise of Pirate’s World. Others would say troubles began with the concerts and drugs … and bad headlines. It lost family appeal.


Copyright © 2020. All rights reserved. Jane Feehan

Sources:

Miami News, Feb 1, 1967
Miami Herald, April 7, 1967
Miami Herald, April 10, 1967
Miami Herald, May 4, 1967
Miami Herald, May 21, 1967
Fort Lauderdale News, Sept. 5, 1969
Fort Lauderdale News, July 31, 1971
Fort Lauderdale News, July 26, 1972
Miami Herald, June 3, 1973
Fort Lauderdale News, June 9, 1973
Fort Lauderdale News, Dec. 20, 1974
Fort Lauderdale News
, Sept. 4, 1975
https://theconcertdatabase.com/venues/pirates-world



Tags: Florida attractions, Pirate's World, Dania Beach, Concerts, Dania Beach history