SWD | |
Type | Private |
Industry | Insurance Real Estate Mortgage Banking |
Predecessor | Telfair Stockton Company, 1884 |
Founder | James R. Stockton Sr. |
Defunct | 1983 |
Headquarters | , |
Area served | Florida, Georgia & Alabama |
Key people | Brown L. Whatley Joseph W. Davin Jim Stockton (partners) |
Parent | General American Oil Company (1964) |
Stockton, Whatley, Davin & Co. (SWD) was one of the largest mortgage banking, real estate and insurance firms in the Southeast of the United States. It was founded in 1884 as the property management Telfair Stockton Company [1] and operated until 1983 when it was broken up by its new owner Phillips Petroleum Company. The assets were sold to First National Bank of Boston and Gate Petroleum. [2]
Prior to its breakup the company was headquartered in Jacksonville, Florida and was the developer of Ponte Vedra Beach in the early 1930s. [3] At its height, SWD had a real estate portfolio worth $100 million and a mortgage loan servicing portfolio of $3.8 billion, providing services in Florida, Georgia and Alabama. [2]
The original company was founded by Telfair Stockton, Sr. in 1884. Following his Marine Corps service in World War I, his son, James R. Stockton Sr. joined the firm to learn the business. When Telfair died in 1932, James ran the company until merging with the Whatley Davin Development Company. The three principals were James Stockton Sr., Brown L. Whatley and Joseph W. Davin.
The San Marco district of Jacksonville was developed by SWD in the 1920s, [4] [5] as was Ponte Vedra Beach in the early 1930s. [3] [5]
The abandoned San Jose Hotel was purchased from the Alfred I. duPont Testamentary Trust in 1946. [5] The hotel became the San Jose campus of The Bolles School, but hotel's golf course and clubhouse opened in 1947 as the San Jose Country Club after $300,000 was spent on renovation. The kitchen was expanded and a new Pro Shop was built. Steam and sauna rooms were added to the Men's lockers; a Woman's locker room was constructed. [5] The San Jose Country Club is on the National Register of Historic Places. [6]
Brown Whatley wrote to Florida mortgage bankers in late June 1952 urging them to meet in Jacksonville to discuss common problems and possible solutions. Later that summer, the Mortgage Bankers Association of Florida was formed with membership from more than 60 companies. [5]
In 1960, J.J. Daniel was president of SWD. He pushed development of the Deerwood section of Jacksonville, and the companion Deerwood Country Club, the most exclusive gated community at the time and for many years thereafter. [5] The company was servicing over 50,000 mortgages valued at $420 million, making it the 4th largest mortgage company in the United States. [5]
SWD and Arvida Corp. were two of the largest real estate companies in Florida in the 1960s. Management of approximately $100 in land from Miami-based Arvida was entrusted to SWD in 1961 when the two created an alliance. [5]
The main offices of SWD in downtown Jacksonville were demolished in late 1962 and replaced with a seven-story office building designed by architects Saxelbye & Powell. [5] The 79,052 sq ft (7,344.2 m2) building opened in November, 1963 in addition to ten other offices in Florida. [7] The company's executives occupied one floor, the staff utilized five floors and the seventh floor was reserved for the employee lounge. [5]
The General American Oil Company purchased SWD in 1964. [8] [5]
Don Davis was named General Manager of Deerwood Country Club in 1965, a position he held for over 20 years. In 1978, Davis was promoted to Operations Vice President of SWD, responsible for all Deerwood Club operations, including the sale of residences and home sites. William F. Aberly joined SWD as Financial Vice President in 1965 and retired as chairman and CEO in 1984 prior to the company's dissolution. [9]
Like his father, James Stockton, Jr began working with his dad at SWD. While on safari to Africa in 1970, he envisioned another golf course resort development like Ponte Vedra in the wild landscape along the coast. After he returned to Florida, he arranged to purchase 1,600 feet of ocean frontage near property SWD had available since the 1960s. He engaged a golf course architect and an engineering firm to draw plans for a new development named Sawgrass that eventually encompassed 1,200 acres. [10]
Phillips Petroleum Company acquired SWD early in 1983 in the $1.1 billion purchase of the General American Oil Company of Texas, which announced a plan to sell SWD. [11] [5] A number of banks and corporations made combined offers for the 50,000+ acres of real estate and $100+ million in mortgage notes. When the bids were analyzed, Phillips saw that they would maximize their return by selling SWD's real estate and mortgages separately. [5]
First National Bank of Boston was not interested in the real estate, so their offer of $120 million for the mortgage banking business was accepted. [12] Gate Petroleum bid $60 million for the real estate portfolio, which was less than the value of the assets, but they were the only entity that submitted an offer on just the real estate, so the properties were sold to Gate. [13] [5]
Palm Valley is a census-designated place (CDP) in St. Johns County, Florida, United States. The population was 19,860 at the 2000 census.
Sawgrass is a census-designated place (CDP) in St. Johns County, Florida, United States. The population was 4,880 per the 2010. This population change is a -1.3% decrease since 2000. The area is located in Ponte Vedra Beach. Sawgrass is home to The Players Championship (TPC), established in 1974. The tournament offers the highest prize fund of any tournament in golf.
Ponte Vedra Beach is a wealthy unincorporated seaside community and suburb of Jacksonville, Florida in St. Johns County, Florida, United States. Located 18 miles (29 km) southeast of downtown Jacksonville and 26 miles (42 km) north of St. Augustine, it is part of the Jacksonville Beaches area, and on the island nicknamed San Pablo Island.
John Stephens Peyton is an American businessman and politician who is currently president of Gate Petroleum. He served as Mayor of Jacksonville, Florida from 2003 to 2011, when he was succeeded by Alvin Brown. He was the second Republican to be elected to the position since 1888. After his term he returned to Gate, his family business, and succeeded his father Herb Peyton as the company's president in January 2012.
SWD may refer to:
The Bolles School is an American private college preparatory day and boarding school in Jacksonville, Florida. It has a lower school, a middle school, and a high school, spread across four campuses around the Jacksonville area, and enrolls about 1,800 students a year. The school was founded in 1933 as an all-boys military academy. It dropped its military focus in 1962 and became coeducational in 1971. Its athletics programs have been recognized as some of the best in the Florida High School Athletic Association by Sports Illustrated magazine.
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Jaquelin James Daniel was an American lawyer, businessman, civic leader, and newspaper publisher. He was born and lived most of his life in Jacksonville, Florida, where he led the effort that resulted in the Jacksonville Consolidation of 1968, which combined city and county governments to improve services. He was known in his lifetime as one of the city's and state's most politically powerful people.
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Sawgrass Country Club is a private member owned country club in the southeastern United States, located at Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, southeast of Jacksonville. A Distinguished 5 Star Platinum Club of America and a Premier Private Country Club of Northeast Florida. The club hosted the PGA Tour's Tournament Players Championship five times, from 1977 through 1981.
Deerwood was the first gated community in Florida, US. After it was established in the mid-1960s, it was the most exclusive residential area on Jacksonville's Southside. The golf course hosted the Greater Jacksonville Open in the late 1960s and early 1970s, forerunner of The Players Championship, and was once the site of talks between President Gerald Ford and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat in November 1975.
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Gate Petroleum is a privately held diversified corporation headquartered in Jacksonville, Florida, the 11th largest in Florida in 2022. In FY 2022, the company ranked No. 338 on the Forbes list of America's Largest Private Companies and had sales of $1.44 billion and employment of 3,500.