Dodge Taylor
1902
- 1950
Born
in Jackson, Michigan in 1902 to Annie Dodge and Dr. Edwin Taylor, Dodge
Taylor came to Florida in 1923 as a young graduate of Dartmouth College
in New Hampshire. He started as the sales manager for the W. J. Howey
Company and eventually managed Howey's extensive citrus interests in Lake
County until Mr. Howey died in 1938. Dodge Taylor continued managing the
W. J. Howey Company for Grace Howey until she sold the company assets.
Dodge
Taylor married Mary Lane Anderson, who had three children, and he had
an adopted son. Dodge's father, Dr. Edwin C. Taylor, built the Dodge Taylor
House after he followed his son to Howey in 1925 to retire, but he was
kept busy as head of the Howey Sanitarium, located in the Floridan Hotel.
Fresh, tree-ripened grapefruit and canned juice were used to treat diabetes
and hypertension at the sanitarium. In the winter of 1929, more than 300
doctors from all over the United States, Canada and Europe visited the
sanitarium to observe methods of treatment and laboratory work, according
to the elder Taylor. The younger Taylor family moved into the stucco-sided,
red tile roof house after his parents died.
When
Dodge Taylor and C. V. Griffin Sr. purchased the assets of the W. J. Howey
Company and Town in 1940 from widow Grace Howey, Dodge became the Executive
Vice-President of the firm. Howey-in-the-Hills was one of 150 Florida
towns and cities that were in default on their bond obligations. Taylor
and Griffin refinanced the bond issue and paid it off in 11 years. By
the end of the 1960s, it was reported that the Town had no bonded indebtedness.
Taylor
wrote the Citrus Plank for Governor Fuller Warren's campaign platform
in 1948 and after Warren's election, conducted hearings which brought
about the Florida Citrus Code of 1949. he served as Chairman of the State
Improvement Commission and refused to allow crippling changes in the citrus
law which he was instrumental in passing. Dodge was active in the formation
of the Florida Citrus Mutual, and was Chairman of the Florida Citrus Commission
when he died. The influence that Lake and Orange Counties had in the citrus
industry was in large measure attributed to Dodge Taylor's expertise.
When Dodge Taylor died of a heart attack at home May 13, 1950 at the young
age of 48, he was already referred to as "Mr. Citrus".
Dodge
served as Mayor of Howey-in-the-Hills. He is remembered with the Dodge
Taylor Memorial Trophy given annually by the Florida Junior Chamber of
Commerce. The State Road 19 Memorial Bridge is dedicated to the memory
of Dodge Taylor as is the Taylor Memorial Cemetery in Town.
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