Florida has long been a beacon for retirees but for many the American dream of owning a home there was a fantasy. That changed in the 1950s when the so-called &#x201C;installment land sales industry&#x201D; hawked billions of dollars of Florida residential property sight unseen to retiring northerners. For only $10 down and $10 a month working-class pensioners could buy a piece of the Florida dream: a graded home site that would be waiting for them in a planned community when they were ready to build. The result was Cape Coral Port St. Lucie Deltona Port Charlotte Palm Coast and Spring Hill among many others&#x2014;sprawling communities with no downtowns little industry and millions of residential lots.<br/><br/>In <i>The Swamp Peddlers</i> Jason Vuic tells the raucous tale of the sale of residential lots in&#xA0;postwar Florida. Initially selling cheap homes to retirees with disposable income by the mid-1950s developers realized that they could make more money selling parcels of land on installment to their customers. These &#x201C;swamp peddlers&#x201D; completely transformed the landscape and demographics of Florida devastating the state environmentally by felling forests draining wetlands digging canals and chopping up at least one million acres into grid-like subdivisions crisscrossed by thousands of miles of roads. Generations of northerners moved to Florida cheaply but at a huge price: high-pressure sales tactics begat fraud; poor urban planning begat sprawl; poorly-regulated development begat environmental destruction culminating in the perfect storm of the 21st-century subprime mortgage crisis.
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