John Hale Levi

John Hale Levi
Miami Beach City Commissioner
In office
1918–1947
13th Mayor of Miami Beach
In office
1944–1945
Preceded byMitchell Wolfson
Succeeded byHerbert A. Frink
10th Mayor of Miami Beach
In office
1937–1941
Preceded byLouis F Snedigar
Succeeded byVal C. Cleary
Personal details
Born(1875-09-16)September 16, 1875
DiedJanuary 26, 1948(1948-01-26) (aged 72)
Miami, Florida, US
ProfessionEngineer

John Hale Levi (1875–1948) was an engineer and politician who served as the City of Miami Beach's 10th and 13th mayor.

Levi was revered for his contributions to the creation of the island and city of Miami Beach.[1]

Born in West Virginia, he studied at the Pratt Institue in New York.[2]

Hale became an engineer with the Consolidated Ship Company. On a trip through South Florida to meet entrepreneur, Carl Fisher in 1912, he ended up in Biscayne Bay, off the coast of Miami. Levi proposed the idea of dredging the bay bottom to make a usable island from the mangrove that was Miami Beach at the time.

He and Fisher along with the Lummus brothers and John S Collins built the infrastructure that started the land boom on Miami Beach.

Levi was in charge of Fisher's developments which were to include man-made islands, hotels, polo fields, golf courses, streets and entire subdivisions until Fisher passed away in 1938.[3]

Politics

Levi was elected to the city council in 1918. He earned the position of 10th and 13th mayor of Miami Beach. He was on the Miami Beach city council for over 27 years.

He became director of the Miami Beach First National Bank.

“They say Carl Fisher was the father of the beach, and that I am the son of the beach,” he told Time Magazine in 1940.[4]

Levi died of complications from pneumonia in 1948.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Hodges, James (May 5, 1940). "Biography in Brief". Miami Herald. Retrieved 24 December 2025 – via Newspapers.com.
  2. ^ "Levi Seeks Re-election". Miami Herald. May 14, 1945. Retrieved 24 December 2025 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. ^ Carson, Ruby Leach (1955). "Forty Years of Miami Beach" (PDF). Tequesta. XV (XV): 3. Retrieved December 25, 2025.
  4. ^ "FLORIDA: Pleasure Dome". Time Magazine. February 19, 1940. Retrieved 22 December 2025.

Sources