Robert L. McKenzie House
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The Robert Lee McKenzie House (also known as the Belle Booth House) is a historic house in Panama City, Florida, at 17 East 3rd Court. It was added to the U.S. National Register of Historic Places on August 21, 1986.
Robert Lee McKenzie Robert Lee McKenzie (October 16, 1870 – December 13, 1956) was an entrepreneur, a real estate developer, a founder and first mayor of Panama City, Florida, and an instrumental figure in the early history of Bob Jones University. Biography Busin ...
was the first mayor of Panama City and a civic leader for fifty years. The house is a two-story clapboard frame dwelling built in the Dutch Colonial style typical of turn-of-the-20th-century houses in Northern Michigan. It was built in 1909 by Belle Booth who married R. L. McKenzie in 1912; the house was enlarged in 1925. McKenzie acquired waterfront property and organized the Gulf Coast Development Company with the intent of making Panama City "Atlanta's outlet to the Panama Canal." McKenzie served as mayor of Panama City and two consecutive terms as state representative from Washington County in the Florida Legislature. "Most of the important events of the town's development for a period of over 50 years (1902-1956) are linked with his name and efforts," and the office/library of the McKenzie House was the center of his business activities. In 1964, the park across the street was renamed McKenzie Park in honor of his service to the community.Florida state historical markers


Gallery

File:R.L. McKenzie House - abt 1925.jpg, Pre 1925 File:PC McKenzie House01.jpg, alt=, 2008 File:Robert L. McKenzie House.jpg, alt=, September 2017


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External links



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National Register of Historic Places

Florida's Office of Cultural and Historical Programs
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Bay County listings
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Bay County markers
Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Florida Buildings and structures in Panama City, Florida Houses in Bay County, Florida National Register of Historic Places in Bay County, Florida Vernacular architecture in Florida Houses completed in 1909 {{BayCountyFL-NRHP-stub