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Strickland's Landing closes for business [killed by death tax]
Gainesville Sun ^ | Tuesday, May 21, 2002 | GARY KIRKLAND

Posted on 05/21/2002 2:38:52 PM PDT by xlib

For all of Elaine Thornton's life, the sight of Kingsley Lake has brought to mind happy thoughts of her family and memories of work and play.

"What we see now is a ghost-like silhouette of what's been our way of life, and it's hard," she said.

Thornton is the eldest daughter of Frow Woodrow Strickland, who for 56 years owned and operated Strickland's Landing, one of North Florida's favorite swimming holes, perched on Kingsley Lake next to Camp Blanding.

Frow Strickland died April 15 at the age of 90, and two days later his five children learned their lives and the landing's would be taking a drastic turn. Before the cloud of grief had even lifted, they learned that Uncle Sam would be expecting a check for estate taxes by January, a check so large that the only way to pay it was to sell the estate their father had spent a lifetime building.

Daughter Gloria Valinski, the youngest of the kids, says there was agreement they'd all like to keep it open, but also a realization they had no other choice but to close and sell.

The 20 acres of sandy beachfront is more than just a business. Frow's father, Alonzo, owned it before him. Frow was born there, and he and his wife Beth raised their family there.

"I learned to swim before I could walk," said Thornton. "We were raised on the lake, so the lake was part of our lives."

It was the place where generations of kids from Jacksonville to Gainesville learned to swim. It was a favorite spot for church picnics and family reunions.

As Frow Strickland ran it, fun was the rule, but there were limits - no alcohol, no skimpy bathing suits, in fact there used to be a "no G-strings" sign by the front gate.

"He didn't put up with any messin' around, so to speak," Valinski said.

And, Thornton said, that was part of the appeal.

"He had a very strict set of rules, and he didn't relax them regardless," Thornton said. "It didn't change, and that's what people liked about it."

And with the guests held to such high standards, employees and family members had to serve as examples.

At Frow Strickland's memorial service that was held at the landing's boat ramp, Valinski recalled one story told of a young lifeguard who arrived for his first day at work, walking through the gate five minutes late, wearing only a bathing suit.

Her father promptly gave him an about face order, and told him to not come back until the next day, on time, with a shirt, shoes, sunscreen and a fresh haircut to go with the bathing suit.

Every family member had a job to do - actually several jobs. Thornton said her father did cut the three girls a bit of slack, when they were exempted from the dreaded trash picking duties.

She said her first job was at age 10, working as a secretary, answering the phone, taking reservations and messages.

"I always had a lot of responsibility," she said.

And that went for the other four children as well. Thornton said the trash picking and restroom cleaning were the least favorite jobs. The most favorite?

"I think they all took pride in making cotton candy," she said.

Thornton said one of her favorite things to do as a child was to go down to the waterfront, wander amongst the guests and take great pride in sharing a little information.

"I would tell them that my daddy owned this place," she said. And if there were disbelievers, she would track down her father to set them straight.

Frow Strickland earned a football scholarship to Stetson, where he earned a degree in business, and then returned to Kingsley Lake to start his lakeside empire.

He set the same rigid standards for himself that he required of others.

In the beach setting, he arrived to work with dress pants and a short-sleeve button-down shirt, always with two pockets, to hold his pens.

Just short of six-feet, with crystal clear blue eyes, he had curly auburn hair as a kid that gave way to a balding fringe in his later years. His head was usually covered with a Gator ball cap. Even though the hair under the hat was scarce, it was combed.

"When we buried him we put a comb in his pocket, because he always had a comb in his pocket," Valinski said.

At his memorial service one person described him as "20 years in the past and 20 years in the future at the same time."

About his only diversion from work was a little bit of fishing and Gator football. He held his 50-yard-line, row 31 tickets for decades. Up until January he went to work every day.

"He was a workaholic, for sure - vacation was torture for him," said Valinski. "It wasn't something he saw as work, it's what he did with his life.

"He could talk your ear off, but it was always about business. He wasn't a real socializer when it came to parties."

The beach at Strickland's Landing offered a clean place to swim, without the shivers that come with a dip in the springs. The combination of sun and sand apparently did more than produce golden tans.

"Lots of people met their husbands and wives out there," Thornton said.

But now, at the time of year when business would be moving to its summertime peak, the front gate is sprouting a "closed for business" sign.

Thornton's husband, Donald, the long-time manager, is now busy with all the details of selling and settling the estate.

Valinski said every day there are people who drive up to the gate who haven't heard the news until they read the sign.

"It's gut-wrenching to watch; they're so disappointed. They kind of just don't believe it," she said.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: deathtax; estatetax; stricklandslanding; taxes; taxreform
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"Before the cloud of grief had even lifted, they learned that Uncle Sam would be expecting a check for estate taxes by January, a check so large that the only way to pay it was to sell the estate their father had spent a lifetime building."

But--but-- I thought the estate tax only affected the rich!

1 posted on 05/21/2002 2:38:53 PM PDT by xlib
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To: xlib
Way to go, Ted Kennedy and John Kerry. Hey; you avoided taxes by inheriting/marrying great wealth. The "little people" can just go screw themselves. Besides, small business owners vote Republican anyway...
2 posted on 05/21/2002 2:41:57 PM PDT by pabianice
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Comment #3 Removed by Moderator

To: xlib
I'm sure this story is repeated every day across the country. Good, valued, community-strengthening businesses destroyed by the greed of the government. Now this property will probably give way to a couple dozen half-million-dollar lake homes. Nothing wrong with that, but the average guy & gal will have one less place to take their family, and they'll have the democrats to thank for it.
4 posted on 05/21/2002 3:11:20 PM PDT by xlib
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To: xlib
What a damn shame. I grew up on the Southside of Jax and made many a foray to "The Landing." My Gator cap is off to these fine folks and to their admirable father. May he rest in peace.
5 posted on 05/21/2002 3:19:28 PM PDT by ExpatGator
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To: ExpatGator
As Frow Strickland ran it, fun was the rule, but there were limits - no alcohol, no skimpy bathing suits, in fact there used to be a "no G-strings" sign by the front gate. "He didn't put up with any messin' around, so to speak," Valinski said. And, Thornton said, that was part of the appeal. "He had a very strict set of rules, and he didn't relax them regardless," Thornton said. "It didn't change, and that's what people liked about it." And with the guests held to such high standards, employees and family members had to serve as examples. At Frow Strickland's memorial service that was held at the landing's boat ramp, Valinski recalled one story told of a young lifeguard who arrived for his first day at work, walking through the gate five minutes late, wearing only a bathing suit. Her father promptly gave him an about face order, and told him to not come back until the next day, on time, with a shirt, shoes, sunscreen and a fresh haircut to go with the bathing suit.

They don't make 'em like that anymore.

6 posted on 05/21/2002 3:25:54 PM PDT by xlib
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To: xlib
Lakefront property? Mandatory selling? Wonder if the Nature Conservancy or some organization of similar ilk bought it...
7 posted on 05/21/2002 3:30:39 PM PDT by Black Agnes
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To: xlib
I don't agree with death taxes, but isn't there a really easy way around them?

If these folks had turned this into a corporation and all become officers in the company, then when one of the officers dies, there is no death tax to pay.

Am I right or am I wrong?

8 posted on 05/21/2002 3:31:10 PM PDT by who_would_fardels_bear
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To: Black Agnes
Don't know that it's sold, yet.
9 posted on 05/21/2002 3:43:55 PM PDT by xlib
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To: *Taxreform
*Index Bump
10 posted on 05/21/2002 3:48:45 PM PDT by Fish out of Water
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To: who_would_fardels_bear
"Am I right or am I wrong?"

Hope you get an answer .... I'd like to know, also.

11 posted on 05/21/2002 3:52:38 PM PDT by knarf
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To: xlib
Hey, according to little Dickie Gephardt, the guy won life's lottery. Why should we be concerned?

(/sarcasm)

Actually, there are a thousand stories like this across the nation. And the liberals - Gephardt, Daschle, Kennedy, et al would much rather trash this family's business to give the money to the layabouts, welfare moms and the everlastingly inefficient and bumbling government bureaucrats. Only in America.

12 posted on 05/21/2002 3:55:54 PM PDT by jackbill
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To: who_would_fardels_bear
I don't agree with death taxes, but isn't there a really easy way around them?

Yes, there are a lot of ways around them, if you want to hire a bunch of lawyers and estate planners. These appear to be just simple folks who had no idea that the government was out to screw them. I've seen it repeated time after time.

13 posted on 05/21/2002 3:58:26 PM PDT by jackbill
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To: knarf
Hard to imagine it's that simple to evade the death tax. I would think that creating the corporation, and giving shares to the heirs, would itself be a taxable event (possibly at a lower rate.) But I'm no expert--is anyone reading this who is?
14 posted on 05/21/2002 4:00:11 PM PDT by xlib
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To: xlib; JD86
xlib, JD86 is an expert.
15 posted on 05/21/2002 9:53:04 PM PDT by summer
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To: jackbill
I was just recently screwed by the gubmint. I spent over $1600 to reseed my lawn. Then a couple of weeks later out of nowhere the city implements an emergency water restriction plan. Now I can only water my lawn for 10 minutes twice a week!

And they aren't making any exceptions.

The kicker is that I have been planning on going to City Council meetings for quite some time. If I had been going, I would have seen this coming and done something else instead.

These poor folks had plenty of time to create a limited S-Corp or some such thing. It would probably only have put them back a couple of thousand. If they couldn't afford that, then they could have sold a small sliver of the land to pay the lawyer bills; rather than now having to sell off the whole property.

If we don't keep ourselves informed about the big bad wolf of government, then he will come knocking on our door at very inopportune moments and we will be screwed.

16 posted on 05/21/2002 10:07:40 PM PDT by who_would_fardels_bear
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To: who_would_fardels_bear
re-route your grey water to go out onto the lawn.

Use one of those perferated hoses to spread it. Having a down hill slope helps.

If the city gives you a hard time, you at can at least say you're doing your algore best to conserve and wisely use the water they deem so precious.

Charge THEM for the double duty you're doing with THEIR one-time allotment.

17 posted on 05/22/2002 12:33:10 PM PDT by knarf
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To: JD86
'Phone's ringin'
18 posted on 05/22/2002 12:35:48 PM PDT by knarf
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To: xlib
I'm no expert, but this is essentially true. The family could have formed a Limited Liability Partnership, with the patriarch as the majority holder and the kids with a minority share and no controlling interest. Then when the patriarch died, the kids would assume the controlling interest, with no estate tax to pay.
19 posted on 05/22/2002 1:05:19 PM PDT by Ranxerox
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To: xlib

My name is Alison, I grew up spending lots of time at the lake. I got married and moved away and just moved back. I am so very sad to hear about the landing closing. I wanted to take my children there for a snow cone, cotton candy, and of course a game of air hockey in the game room. My heart goes out to the family, my thoughts are with you. Please know that your family has spent a lifetime of making thousands of family’s a lifetime of memories. I just want to cry! If any person out there is looking for a great investment this is the place. It’s a place where family, and spending time together was most important on their list.I just don’t get it why doesn’t the government help places like this to stay in business. Because family values are no longer an issue amongst our lovely top officials.


20 posted on 10/12/2007 2:24:56 PM PDT by alliworldusa
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