

Wellington
Short Story....
In the beginning
there was water. Lots and lots of water. For the beginnings of
what was to become Wellington started in the Everglades swamp
(look at a map, the Everglades is Wellington's Southwestern
boundary).
In 1951, Charles
Oliver Wellington, a very successful accountant in New York,
made a decision to purchase some investment property in South
Florida. Following the recommendations of Arthur William Glisson
(known to all in Wellington as Bink Glisson), several tracts of
land were assembled and purchased by Mr. Wellington. Shortly
after the land purchases, the State of Florida passed
legislation creating the Acme Drainage District. The initial
purpose of the district, created in 1953, was to provide for
drainage and flood control on the assembled acreage and make the
property suitable for agriculture. This was a huge undertaking
as the total size of the tract was over 16,000 acres.
Bink Glisson was
hired by C.O. Wellington to oversee the property that was soon
to become known as the Flying Cow (Charles Oliver
Wellington) Ranch. Bink also served as the Acme Drainage
District's first employee and general manager. In many respect's
Bink was the first rock to anchor what was soon (44 years later)
to become the Village of Wellington. He served the District in
many capacities for 40 years, and retired in 1993 with a big
sendoff attended by hundreds of his friends and neighbors. Bink
and his wife Joan are enjoying their retirement year’s right
here in Wellington.
Mr. Wellington
was the first Chairman of the Acme Drainage District and served
until his death in 1959. Oddly enough it was probably Mr.
Wellington's death which led to the decision to develop portions
of the property to raise capital to pay for estate taxes.
Carrying on as the District Chairman until he retired in 1984
was C.O. Wellington's son, Roger.
Major
construction did not begin until the first large tract of land,
7,400 acres was sold to the Investment Corporation of Florida (ICOF)
in 1971 for a cost of about $800 per acre. In 1972, a joint
venture between ICOF and Alcoa Aluminum was formed to begin the
construction of a new community. Construction began in 1972 and
hundreds of homes were sold during that period. In 1976 Alcoa
decided to sell their interest back to ICOF. Two years later the
remaining properties of ICOF were sold to Gould Florida, a
division of the large electronics corporation Gould, Inc.
William Yilvisaker, the Chairman of Gould was an avid polo
player. It was his contribution that produced the Palm Beach
Polo and Country Club.
In 1985 Gould
decided to pull out and sold it's remaining acreage to Corepoint,
Inc. Corepoint was than succeeded by Lennar Homes who purchased
the assets of Corepoint from First union Bank who held $35
million in defaulted loans. Since that time Lennar has also
purchased the remaining 500 lots in Bink's Forest. In another
distressed real estate sale, Glenn Straub purchased the Palm
Beach Polo and Country Club, for $20 million from the Resolution
Trust Company in 1993.
The next step in
the evolution of Wellington was probably it's most important for
the future. After years of trying, a determined group of
Wellington residents succeeded in a referendum vote taken in
November 1995. The Village of Wellington was officially born on
December 31, 1995 (to qualify for certain Florida State funds it
was necessary that the Village be chartered in 1995 or millions
of dollars in state funds would have been lost). Official
operations commenced on March 28, 1996.
The first five
elected officials took office on this date. They are Kathy
Foster, Carmine Priore, Paul Adams, Thomas Wenham and Mike
McDonough. Kathy Foster was elected the first Mayor by her
fellow Councilmen, and Carmine Priore was elected Vice Mayor
(the Mayor and Vice Mayor positions were voted upon by the five
Council members, not the electorate). In April of 1998
Wellington held it's second election for Village Council. Thomas
Wenham was reelected, unopposed and Mike McDonough was replaced
by Al Paglia. At the end of April the Village Council elected
Carmine Priore as Mayor, and Paul Adams as Vice Mayor.
In 2002, the
residents of the Village of Wellington voted to elect the Mayor
versus having the electorate method continue. The Council now
consists of Thomas Wenham, Mayor and Vice Mayor Robert Margolis,
and council members Lizbeth Benacquisto, Carmine Priore and
Laurie Cohen. Although the Mayor is now elected by the
residents, all five council members have the same amount of
authority.
In 1953, fewer
than 100 individuals resided in the area. Today, the Village is
an affluent community with an estimated population of nearly
47,000 people. The Village of Wellington offers tremendous
diversity: from apartments to estate homes at the Polo Club;
from town homes to the Aero Cub where the residents have
airplane hangars attached to their homes. The Village of
Wellington includes some of the world’s premier equestrian
facilities, horse farms, agriculture and nurseries. The primary
sources of employment within the Village are construction,
agriculture and retail sales. Approximately 95% of employed
Village residents are employed outside of Wellington. The
community is mainly composed of golfing and equestrian areas
with an upscale shopping mall and many small specialty boutiques
and restaurants.
"Wellington is about Quality of Life. Education,
Recreation, Senior Services, Our Equestrian Community and
the Environment – All of these combined make Wellington
special”
- Village Manager Charles Lynn