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The women who built a preservation legacy in Coral Gables

Three women stand under an archway
Photo Courtesy of Kelley Schild
Standing under the historic Douglas Entrance that gave The Villagers its start: Longtime leader Dolly MacIntyre flanked by her daughter Sheffield Bessellieu (left) and granddaughter Sylver Gonzalez-Rivas (right), both Villagers.

In 1966, a bunch of women, mostly architects鈥 wives, got together to clean up the decaying Puerta del Sol entrance to Coral Gables at Douglas Road and Tamiami Trail.

They scraped, they painted, they chased pigeons from the rafters. They named themselves The Villagers. Sixty years later, the all-volunteer group is still thriving, the oldest historic preservation organization in the county.

Altogether, they鈥檝e approved more than 280 grants worth at least $1.7 million and awarded more than 200 scholarships to students interested in historic preservation.

In Coconut Grove alone, The Villagers has been responsible for preservation projects at The Barnacle and Vizcaya, as well as work at The Kampong, the Old School House, Plymouth Congregational Church and other places.

Last year, The Villagers鈥 tour of Coconut Grove houses brought in $58,000. A garden tour raised an additional $33,000.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a very simple concept,鈥 said Kelley Schild, a former president. 鈥淲e do two or three fund-raisers a year and all the money goes for grants. We have no paid staff, no building. I think (the organization鈥檚) simplicity is why it鈥檚 survived for as long as it has.鈥

Over the years, The Villagers鈥 influence has spread. Leaders of the organization started Dade Heritage Trust and were among the founders of the Florida Trust for Historic Preservation.

A proclamation issued last month by the City of Miami commended the group for its 鈥60 years of dedicated service, advocacy and leadership in preserving the cultural, architectural and historic heritage of our community.鈥

The Villagers has been remarkably stable. The organization has about 180 members, said former president Gina Guilford 鈥 the same as in 1998, according to the Miami Herald.

Still, Guilford, 66, and her sister, Schild, 63, are among the younger members, Guilford noted. These days, women tend to join later in life, sometimes after they retire from careers, Schild said.

Dolly MacIntyre and the Douglas Entrance

The women who founded The Villagers originally set out to save the , the grand arched Puerto del Sol entrance built in the 1920s by George Merrick, who founded the city of Coral Gables.

By the mid-1960s, it was in disrepair. The Food Fair chain wanted to tear it down and build a supermarket and parking lot. Architect James Deen persuaded 60 colleagues to buy the property, which was 10 acres that included shops and apartments.

The clean-up effort was first led by Deen鈥檚 wife, Pat, but very quickly a preservation enthusiast, Dolly MacIntyre, became involved and was at the forefront of much of the Douglas Entrance work.

鈥淭he members scrubbed and painted bathrooms and refurbished the elegant ballroom as well as raised money,鈥 wrote MacIntyre, who died last year.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how she got involved with it,鈥 said MacIntyre鈥檚 daughter, Sheffield Bessellieu, 鈥渂ut she was up there on the ladder and everything.鈥

MacIntyre鈥檚 father was a career Navy officer, and she had grown up everywhere at bases around the world. 鈥淪he never really had roots, and when she came to Miami, that got her to thinking how important preserving history could be,鈥 Bessellieu said.

A Miami News society columnist praised The Villagers as a 鈥済et-things-done-and-social club.鈥

In 1976, when the Florida Trust for Historic Preservation began, MacIntyre and Jude were listed as founders.

Over time, The Villagers dropped their roles of hands-on renovation and became strictly a fund-raising organization.

READ MORE: 鈥業 don鈥檛 want our legacy to die鈥: A family鈥檚 fight to keep Seminola鈥檚 history alive

In Coconut Grove, they鈥檝e taken on several projects at The Barnacle over the decades, said Marlin Ebbert, who joined The Villagers in 1989 and is a past president of The Barnacle Society. That included rebuilding the foundation of the boat house and the roof of the carriage house.

At The Kampong, The Villagers supported refurbishing the study of famed botanist David Fairchild as well as the stables and office of Miami鈥檚 first female physician, Eleanor Galt Simmons. They鈥檝e also backed preservation efforts at El Jardin (home to Carrollton School of the Sacred Heart), the Women鈥檚 Club of Coconut Grove and the Marjorie Stoneman Douglas house.

Their house tours tend to be highly organized affairs, with shuttle buses taking people around to various sites. For the Grove tour last December, The Villagers showed five private homes plus historic sites like the Old School House.

Some of their donations have been substantial 鈥 such as the $60,000 to renovate the lighthouse keeper鈥檚 cottage on Key Biscayne, but others have been relatively small, like the check they wrote in April for $1,981 to the Coconut Grove Sailing Club for two signs explaining the club鈥檚 history.

They have also supported many efforts in Coral Gables. They were early leaders advocating the resurrection of the Biltmore Hotel, and they contributed to refurbishing the Merrick House. They鈥檝e also spread to historically black areas, including the Hampton House and the Black Precinct and Courthouse Museum.

The Villagers鈥 work 鈥渋s not really about the past,鈥 Schild said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about the future. Our goal is to see that buildings get used, not necessarily for the original purpose, but are used.鈥

Most of the time, the group doesn鈥檛 get involved in political fights, but members have stood up in support of renovating long-vacant structures like the Marine Stadium and the Coconut Grove Playhouse.

With the playhouse, Schild said, 鈥渨e don鈥檛 care what you do. Just do it. The West Grove fight is understandable, but the more people fight, the less gets done. At some point, it just becomes obstructionist.鈥

The same goes for the Olympia Theater.

鈥淭hese places need to be occupied,鈥 Schild said.

In April, the group celebrated its 60th with a Magical History Bus Tour, visiting 35 sites that The Villagers had helped fund, including the Douglas Entrance and the Black Precinct Museum, using a script first developed by MacIntyre. 鈥淲e gave out goody bags to bus goers that had one of Dolly鈥檚 favorite snacks 鈥 Bugles Chips,鈥 Guilford wrote.

Bus riders were encouraged to wear 1960s clothing, and many did. The bus ride was followed by a party with music, food and 鈥 of course 鈥 auctions.

As part of the 60th celebration, the group formed a Rebranding Committee to consider a name change. Guilford said. While they officially remain The Villagers, they are now the on social media, and they鈥檙e considering whether to make that their formal name, in part to distinguish themselves from the residents of The Villages, the massive retirement development in Central Florida.

Annual dues are about $100 to $120 a year, depending on how long one has been a member. It used to be that a new member had to be sponsored by two active members, but in recent years, said Guilford, that has changed and potential members can apply online.

The key is that they must be dedicated to historic preservation, Guilford said. Members need to participate 鈥 working a shift at the house and garden tours 鈥 and showing up at least two general meetings.

As the society columnist noted decades ago, they鈥檙e still a 鈥済et-things-done鈥 club.

This story was originally published in the , a SA国际传谋 News partner.

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