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In the 1920s, newspapers and real estate developers colluded in a scheme to sell tiny vacation lots to subscribers. A zealous advertising campaign spawned a land-buying frenzy that sprouted dozens of waterfront summer colonies across the country. The resulting legal, social and environmental mayhem caused some of these communities to disappear or be drastically altered in character, while others managed to survive more or less intact. Drawing on newspaper accounts of the day, this book explores how the scheme eluded accusations of fraud, creating an assembly line for middle class resorts through a lucrative merger of real estate and journalism. Pell Lake, Wisconsin, serves as a case study that yields the best evidence for determining if it was all a scam. Told here for the first time, the story of this unusual alliance and the communities it created offers lessons for today's entrepreneurs, journalists, advertisers, real estate developers, environmentalists and anyone who has ever lived in a resort community.
Margaret B. Barker is a retired attorney living in Madison, Wisconsin. She has written for legal publications and, with a strong interest in family history, has had several articles published in genealogical journals.
Table of ContentsPrefaceIntroduction1. The Lake, the Farmer and the Dentist2. Creating a Newspaper Colony3. The Genesis of the Scheme4. Closing In on the Deal5. The Early Colonies and the Promotional Articles6. The Later Colonies and the Display Ads7. The Economic Aftermath8. Hybrids and Clones9. William Randolph Hearst10. Environmental Factors11. Legal Aspects12. Racial Issues13. Social Considerations14. Pell Lake in Context and ComparisonConclusionAppendix: Resort LocatorChapter NotesBibliographyIndex