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THE STYX - THE AFRICAN-AMERICAN SETTLMENT ON PALM BEACH

Palm Beach• BY: Augustus Mayhew

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By 1900, Palm Beach’s bespoke hotels attained standing as the world’s greatest resort while The Beach Club’s baccarat tables and dice games fashioned it the “Monte Carlo of America.” In stark contrast, the Styx, located within an approximate 12-acre white-owned parcel in earshot of The Breakers and the Royal Poinciana Hotel, housed an enclave of cottages and shops rented to hundreds of Black resort workers and their families from the mid-1890s until around 1910.

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As turn-of-the-century Palm Beach evolved into a Millionaires Playground, Black families were evicted from the Styx and moved across the lake to West Palm Beach. Although Blacks and white people lived close to each other for more than a decade, they were divided by irreconcilable social and economic gaps. The era’s segregation laws and restrictions prevented Blacks from realizing the legitimacy of their lives, their voices unheard and ignored, making for a skewed episodic historical narrative.

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And yet, as dolled-up as Palm Beach was with Gilded Age frills, the remote island’s pursuits offered departures from putting greens, tea dances, and countless wardrobe changes. Lassoing ten-foot alligators, taking ostrich rides, wagering bets on cakewalks, and shark fishing were equally popular pastimes. Alligator Joe was as much a Palm Beach icon as a Vanderbilt. Add to this disparate appeal, the attraction of the Styx.

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In 1900, The Weekly Lake Worth News described The Styx as, “One of the points of interest at Palm Beach, and one that no one should miss, is the settlement north of the Inn. The settlement begins as soon as one is clear of the links and covers a considerable area. Those who have seen the celebrated Grants Town, on the island of New Providence, and the homes of Jamaicans, say that while both are picturesque, neither is of more interest to the visitor than this village on Palm Beach.”

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Shifting sands

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At first, the Styx was appreciated as a tourist attraction, adding a Caribbean touch of Bahamian and Jamaican atmosphere to its resort image. The Royal Poinciana and The Breakers set up baseball teams with colored players. The off-duty porters and waiters played to full grandstands twice a week on a diamond built at the north end of the golf course between the two hotels located one block south of the Styx. Moonlight Monday-night Cakewalks performed by daytime maids and wheelchair drivers to ragtime rhythms were known to attract 1,000 spectators in the Cocoanut Grove. “The most characteristic and picturesque of Palm Beach functions,” declared The New York Times in February 1903, “though it is difficult to describe the odd charm of this open-air event.”

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Regrettably, a century later, rather than detailed narratives about the actual lives of those who lived there. the Styx’s historical chronicle often dwells on either retelling or dispelling myths. Who owned the Boston House?  What happened to Tony’s Cigar shop? Instead, no matter how many times the story is disproved of a deliberate fire set to destroy the settlement on the same night residents were given free tickets to a circus, some form of the story is revived. Just as circumstances are regularly obscured regarding the demolition of the town’s legendary mansions, making their demise the greater part of their legacy, the Styx’s disappearance became its history, as that final chapter accounts for most of the available public records.

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After all, the Palm Beach Daily News was purposed to promote the pursuit of leisure, a hotel guest’s golf scores and fishing triumphs, menus and table settings, not detail the realities of individuals who made resort life possible. The history of Black men who pedaled wheelchairs or delivered steamer trunks and Black women who baked cakes or made beds, depends on family scrapbooks and letters, diaries, oral history accounts, and fragmentary newspaper mentions. Because Palm Beach was part of Dade County until 1911, The Daily Miami Metropolis regularly featured two weekly columns, “Colored Column” and “The Colored People – Here and Elsewhere.” Both features mentioned the comings and goings of Black people and their churches on Palm Beach. Interestingly, these columns, rather than mention the Styx, most often referenced Blacks as living on Palm Beach or the East Side, as Palm Beach was once called.

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In framing my narrative for the Styx’s history, I relied on The Daily Miami Metropolis columns, Weekly Lake Worth News and Tropical Sun reports, the Palm Beach Post archive, and the Historical Society of Palm Beach County’s abridged history of the Styx on their website, as well as Everee Clark’s book. Since Palm Beach’s inception as a resort, every newspaper reported on the island’s seasonal activities, some in meticulous detail. I utilized as sources the New York Sun and New York Herald-Tribune, Washington’s Evening Star, and the Pittsburgh Gazette.

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The Daily Palm Beach News, a seasonal paper first owned by Henry Flagler, was “devoted to society happenings and events of interest at the Palm Beach hotels and Lake Worth cottages.”

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Palm Beach 1900

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During the summer of 1899, the lakefront Royal Poinciana Hotel expanded, making it the largest wooden hotel in the world, while 100 rooms were added to the Palm Beach Inn. With Flagler’s two hotels accommodating 1,500 guest rooms, in January 1900 the Palm Beach Inn was rechristened The Breakers. The oceanfront hotel’s new 185 by 60-foot dining room was lit by 576 incandescent lights, of such incomparable grandeur that The Breakers hosted the season’s social highpoint, the Washington Birthday Ball.

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At the beginning of that season, guests returned to find five oceanfront cottages built to the north of the hotel, already reserved for lengthy stays by former US Attorney General Wayne McVeagh, actor Joseph Jefferson, Boston’s Mrs. William Woods, Pittsburgh Gazette publisher E. M. O’Neil, and Carnegie Steel’s Henry Phipps.  After a round of golf on the redesigned 18-hole golf course, guests fished for “the big one” from the hotel’s 1,600-foot pier. Or, they might pack a bag and walk to the end of the pier where they boarded a steamer headed to Nassau or Havana. By 1910, both hotels were enlarged again, the Royal Poinciana housing 1,300 rooms and The Breakers increased to 700 rooms and suites.

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The Styx

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The Styx began as a Flagler-era “tent city” during the mid-1890s that grew into a well-defined district for Black families, first regarded as compatible with the resort’s far-flung remote image. The May 1903 articles are believed the earliest reports describing the Styx as a public health concern. These stories stated Blacks were ordered to “observe sanitary laws and keep their premises clean and tidy or pay a $10.00 fine.” At the time, the Styx consisted of rented plots with Black tenants owned by several prominent white Palm Beach pioneers, including E.M. Brelsford, Enoch Root, and James Monroe Munyon, a manufacturer of homeopathic patent medicines.

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The Tropical Sun reported on efforts to improve conditions, as East Side property owners solicited assistance from the local Board of Trade. As Henry Flagler was settling into Whitehall, his palatial 75-room, 100,000 square-foot, Carrere & Hastings-designed, lakefront, Palm Beach mansion, he, and others, also promised “… to rend what aid they could.” But when no action was taken, Elisha “Cap” Dimick, chair of the East Side property owners group, believed, “if the health officer was to insist property owners put in sewers, it would have to be done, or else the buildings would have to be removed.”

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When a year passed and there was no progress, public health concerns grew. Enoch Root voiced, “… conditions were such as to cause all decent people to shudder houses of ill-fame, blind tigers, and other dens of iniquity.” (Certainly, Root was not referring to Bradley’s Beach Club or the town’s speakeasies.) Property owners agreed “to do what was best,” which decoded as Styx tenants would be evicted, their dwellings razed, and moved to West Palm Beach. From his private island called Dreamland, James Munyon notified county authorities to order a sheriff’s deputy to serve his 150 tenants with a 30-day notice to remove their dwellings. Guy Metcalf, who happened to own the Tropical Sun newspaper until 1905 when he sold it to Henry Flagler’s Model Land Company, gave tenants a 30-day notice to vacate.

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When the 1904 season ended, Dr. Henry C. Hood, chairman of Palm Beach’s sanitation committee, told The Weekly Lake Worth News, “ … while some of the tenants had gone elsewhere and some of the dwellings had disappeared, the razing process was by no means complete and the menace to public health continued.” Continuing the incongruous reports characterizing the Styx’s drawn-out impasse, Enoch Root stated, “… the better class, the thrifty ones, had gone away and only the riff-raff remained.”  James Munyon expressed, “Prompt rent payers would not be disturbed but would be OK’d for continued residence at this time …”  Six years passed with few mentions of the Styx.

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The Styx makeover

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Then, in March 1910, Beach Club owners J. R. “Jack” and Edward R. “Colonel” Bradley bought the largest remaining part of the Styx, paying $55,000 to James Munyon for a 264-foot wide ocean-to-lake parcel adjoining the north side of their Main Street holdings. At that time, the Styx was described as, “… the famous Negro settlement which has dance halls and has been the scene of cock fights, prize fights, and other undesirable affairs.” The plan for the summer of 1910, the Tropical Sun reported, was to remove the existing structures, fill in the five-acres of marsh sections, remove the barn-like buildings along the lake, as well as build a road along the lakefront where both brothers planned to build their homes on the northside of the existing Beach Club. Further, the Bradleys would do away with “the eyesore of small unsightly shops … where the afternoon promenade of the wheelchair contingent congregated.”  By December, the Bradleys had spent more than $35,000, dredging 60,000 yards of soil creating an acre of new lakeside ground and filling-in where Styx buildings once stood.

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In 1911 Town of Palm Beach alderman unanimously passed Ordinance No. 2, “Alderman John W. Doe introduced an ordinance for the prevention and suppression of Negro lodging houses, restaurants, and dance halls, within the limits of the Town of Palm Beach. Ordinance to be known as Ordinance No. 2.”

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Palm Beach, 1900. The Styx, pictured above, was an established Black settlement located one block north of Main Street extending from the lakefront east to the ocean. Tony’s Cigar Store and other storefronts lined a central path that became known as Palm Beach Avenue, later renamed North County Road. Courtesy Historical Society of Palm Beach County.

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Styx, c. 1900. The roof sign on the left reads Boston House. “The lover of the old and the picturesque will find material here for hours of observation, and even the most casual observer cannot fail to be interested. There is no order as to the placing of the houses, which are tucked away in all sorts of retired little nooks, sometimes in pairs, again in threes or fours, and not infre-quently standing alone and completely hidden from their neighbors by the thick growth of small trees and bushes.” The Weekly Lake Worth News, 1900.

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1928. Main Street intersection with North Palm Beach Avenue, later known as County Road. Author J. Wadsworth Travers wrote about the Styx in the 1928 edition of History of Beautiful Palm Beach, “… many of the residents moved to West Palm Beach in 1894, it was 1912 before the last vestige of the Styx passed into history.” Courtesy Historical Society of Palm Beach County.

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Thomas and Priscilla Peppers and their family, pictured above, were Styx pioneers, featured in Everee Jimerson Clarke’s book Pleasant City – West Palm Beach, part of Arcadia Publishing’s Black America Series. Clarke’s book maps the prolonged exodus of Blacks from the Styx, stating the community “had begun moving across the lake once West Palm Beach was incorporated in 1894.” According to Clarke, their numbers increased after 1905 when the Pleasant City subdivision was established as an exclusive Black quarter in West Palm Beach.

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The Styx, c. 1900.

 

Sunset Avenue, Palm Beach The Styx vanished without a trace. The lost world of the Black community at Palm Beach now exists in the memories and photographs of family members, some whose ancestors helped build Palm Beach, several church histories that reorganized in West Palm Beach, and the archives at the Historical Society of Palm Beach County. Courtesy Historical Society of Palm Beach County.

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The Styx: Removal 

 

Several men owned and collected rent on portions of the land under the Styx community, including Henry Maddock, E.M. Brelsford, and James M. Munyon. Each of these landlords dealt with many tenants, other property owners, local and state officials, and usually an agent to represent his interests. The local newspaper, The Tropical Sun, reported the ongoing efforts of the white community to improve or remove the conditions in the Styx, revealing a complex (if one-sided) view of the situation: 

 

May 1903: Sanitation conditions had greatly improved since Eugene F. Haines, Justice of the Peace of the Thirteenth District, had taken over as agent for James Munyon. Haines issued orders to the blacks to “observe perfect sanitary laws and keep their premises clean and tidy or pay a $10.00 fine.”

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October 1903: Four blacks were arrested for operating a “blind tiger” [or “speakeasy,” where alcoholic beverages were sold illegally]. Another man, apparently white, was arrested for the same reason across the lake on Banyan Street.

 

January 1904: “East Side” property owners [Palm Beachers] Senator Elisha Dimick, Thomas Tipton “T. T.” Reese, Enoch Root, and Harry Redifer asked the West Palm Beach Board of Trade for help with conditions at the Styx. Flagler and others, they said, had also promised, “to rend what aid they could.” 

 

Senator Dimick (chair of the East Side owners) had approached the state health officer, who said the local officer was authorized to handle the problem. Officers had already come from two other areas and presumably reported to Tallahassee, but nothing had changed. Dimick believed, “if the health officer was to insist that the property owners put in sewers it would have to be done or else remove the buildings.” Dr. Henry J. Hood, chair of the West Side (West Palm Beach) owners and supervisor of the local health officer, Dr. Richard B. Potter, offered to speak with him. Dr. Hood also acted for E. M. Brelsford, who he said would evict his tenants if others did. Representatives for Sidney Maddock, [unnamed] Russell, and Munyon were sure their clients would agree. A three-man committee was organized to act as liaison with the Styx residents. 

 

February 1904: At a subsequent meeting, Enoch Root, the Palm Beach postmaster, called conditions “bad beyond all powers of imagination.” He described the Styx as “hundreds and hundreds of unsightly huts, some of them but little more than shoeboxes, all jumbled up together, and with no system of sewerage, and the filth was allowed to remain. [M]oral conditions were such as to cause all decent people to shudder [with] scores of houses of ill-fame, blind tigers and other dens of iniquity.”

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All property owners were said to have agreed to “do what was best.” Munyon authorized George Currie (then Dade County treasurer) to have a deputy serve his 150 tenants with 30 days’ notice to remove their dwellings. Maddock said he would follow suit when the season ended. Guy Metcalf had given 30 days’ notice to Russell’s tenants, not only to vacate, but also “to remove their ‘shacks.’” The unnamed purchaser of Russell’s property, Metcalf said, intended “to make a cleaning out of all [illegible] element, and conditions that have brought about so much fear of epidemic.”

 

In 1910 T. T. Reese convinced his employers, brothers Edward R. and John R. Bradley, to purchase Munyon’s land in the Styx, adjacent to their existing property, from the Beach Club northward 264 feet to John Bradley’s cottage, and from the lake to the ocean. The plan for that summer, The Tropical Sun reported, was to remove all the old shacks on the Bradley property, fill in the marshy sections, remove “ugly barn-like buildings” along the water’s edge that were “damaging the value of contiguous estates,” and add a road along the lakefront.

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There was no mention of the residents, who apparently had relocated for the most part about 1906 to the all-black Northwest neighborhood of West Palm Beach, which had been established since 1894. According to the Palm Beach Daily News:

 

Many negroes had been allowed to put up “topsey-like” houses, [which] have seen their best days [and] will disappear within the next few months. The entire tract will be leveled, filled in, and ornamental trees … will be planted. [T]hree large and commodius [sic] villas … will be built of concrete and Miami stone. 

 

The rest of the Styx residents were not asked to leave until 1912, as the Bradleys developed their land into the town’s second subdivision, Floral Park. That year Pleasant City, established in 1905, was created. A 1913 ad in The Tropical Sun advertised its remaining lots for sale by Currie Investment and Title Guaranty Company: “This is a high class colored subdivision north of town. Four hundred lots have already been sold and we have about 75 more yet for sale from $150.00 up.” Currie chose ‘pleasant’ names for the streets: Beautiful, Comfort, Merry, Cheerful, Contentment—even an Easy Street. Present day Pleasant City is bordered on the north by Northwood Road, on the south by 15th Street, on the east by Dixie Highway, and on the west by the FEC railroad tracks.

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“HE TRICKED US . . .                                                              AND BURNED OUR HOMES DOWN”

February 7, 2014

by rosysophia · in History

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I sat in on a lecture a couple of years ago and listened as a docent from Whitehall talked about Henry Flagler, the man who forged a path through the wilderness of Florida to do the impossible– build a railroad clear to Key West. I didn’t know much about Flagler at the time, but I knew enough to know that many call him a great man and a visionary. I also knew the legend of the Styx, the community on Palm Beach island. where the black workers lived. They worked to build up the area for Flagler, to bring in all the wealthy tourists. They lived in shacks and little homes they’d built.

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The local legend tells us that Flagler then saw the attractiveness of Palm Beach as a resort getaway, but knew visitors wouldn’t want to see the “squalor” of the Styx when they arrived in pristine Palm Beach. Supposedly, in 1912, Flagler invited all the blacks off Palm Beach for a circus of sorts– some say a cookout –and then set the Styx ablaze while everyone was out.

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I raised my hand after the lecture to ask the docent about this, and everyone laughed, waving it off as a silly inquiry. I couldn’t help but notice everyone in the room was white.

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The legend is sensationalized in the book Palm Beach Babylon, and many people believe it to be true. While whites saw the Styx as “dirty” and “uninhabitable,” these were homes the blacks lived in, people who built the hotels, the beautiful places whites flocked to for their vacations.

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In present-day Florida, I’ve heard racists say horrible things about the blacks “on the other side of the tracks.” Pleasant City, where the blacks settled after they were forced off Palm Beach, is not so pleasant today, and neither is the crime rate in West Palm Beach as a whole. Having driven through Pleasant City, and read about the town, I’m sad to see its decline.

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Flagler saw what Palm Beach could be.

Naturally, there was more than one reason to get rid of the Styx. It was a health hazard, they say. But I don’t think anyone can ignore the bottom line. What rich white fellow wants to visit an island that has a bunch of black people living on it, in a time when blacks were considered nothing more than laborers?

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When the blacks were evicted, Pleasant City was born, and developers gave the streets lovely names such as Merry and Contentment because “the Negroes were naturally happy people” Everee Clark recalls. Many of them were still employed on Palm Beach, but they weren’t allowed there after sunset.

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Author Eliot Kleinberg dismisses the tale as false, and Inez Lovett, a little girl at the time, remembers no fire. Kleinberg says the owners of the land had to evict the last of the blacks, and then set fire to what was left of the settlement.

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But I met a woman recently who claims otherwise.

She knows an elderly lady who was there when it happened.

“I was there,” the old woman had recalled. “Flagler tricked us. They got us out of there, invited us off the island, then burned our homes down.”

I was there, the old woman said.

What do you think?

This is part of the research for a book I am writing. I’d love to hear your thoughts, readers. Florida might be a beautiful place, and I’m certainly in love with it . . . but I don’t want to wear my rose-colored glasses while I write this book.

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Others may laugh at what the legend claims, but I say there’s a bit of truth in every piece of fiction. The only question is, just how much truth are we talking about here?

THE DEVELOPEMENT OF THE STYX SITE

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John and Col. E.R. Bradley bought the Styx propert, cleared and leveled the land and proposed a new residential subdivision.  The location is now home to the Publix Supermarket, The New Palm Beach Hotel, St Edward's Catholic Church  and the Palm Beach Synagogue, among other establishments.

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The property extended from Bradley's Beach Club (Casino) on Lake Worth to the Atalntic Ocean.  

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Floral Park subdivision plat, 1912.

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