Orlando Sentinel

Ringing endorsemen­t: Land family lauds statue

- By Stephen Hudak Staff Writer

When Betty Land, widow of longtime Apopka Mayor John Land, previewed a city-commission­ed statue of her late husband at the artist’s studio a few weeks ago, she noticed something amiss.

Her husband’s clay figure had a wedding ring on.

“Well, John never wore a ring in all the years we were married,” 90-year-old “Miss Betty” told Winter Park sculptor Pete Pasha, who was startled but prepared to fix the error.

“I was there with my chisel ready to cut the ring off ” before sending it to the American Bronze Foundry in Sanford for casting, Pasha said. “She said, ‘Nope. Leave it there.’ ”

With the Land family’s blessing, the Apopka City Council last week approved the sculpture’s final design.

Betty and John Land wed in 1949, the year he was first elected mayor, and were married until he died in 2014 at 94,

months after losing an election for only the second time in six decades. He is believed to be the longest-serving mayor in Florida’s history.

“Usually when you talk about a man not wearing his wedding band, it’s not exactly a positive thing,” said Cathy Waters, 63, one of John and Betty’s three children. “But not Daddy.”

Waters said her father got into the habit of not wearing his ring or other jewelry while working in the family mill, Consumers Lumber and Veneer Co., which made and sold wood-and-wire vegetable crates to farming and citrus operations. A snagged ring could cost you a ring, the finger or both. Land, whose mayoral salary was $1 for about a quartercen­tury, made crates until the 1970s when he became Apopka’s mayor full-time.

Known to many Apopkans as “Uncle John,” the thin, wiry mayor was an Army veteran of World War II who started city meetings with a well-researched American history lesson. He often wore red, white and blue ties and welcomed citizens to City Hall with butterscot­ch and peppermint candies.

Though State Road 414 bears his name and the Legislatur­e honored him for his longevity and service, city leaders decided to recognize his legacy to Apopka with two statues — one standing in front of City Hall and the other seated on a park bench at Kit Land Nelson Park.

They envisioned visitors taking a seat beside him for a picture.

The city set aside $107,288 for the statues and hopes to have both installed later this year. The City Hall figure is finished while the park statue will soon be cast in bronze at the American Bronze Foundry.

Commission­er Diane Velazquez described the seated figure as “welcoming — it just gives you a feeling of being very friendly and embracing.”

Pasha’s statues depict the mayor as he looked in the ’70s.

“It’s Daddy in his 50s,” Waters said.

He’s sporting a suit and tie, an American flag pin on his lapel and two-toned dress shoes on his feet.

The resemblanc­e must be a good one.

Not only did the family sign its approval to Pasha’s clay model, but Eric Hooper, 92, the late mayor’s friend and hunting buddy for 70 years, walked into the artist’s Winter Park studio and blurted out, “Well, there he is. You got him.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY STEPHEN HUDAK/STAFF ??
PHOTOS BY STEPHEN HUDAK/STAFF
 ??  ?? Winter Park sculptor Pete Pasha adjusts the clay statue of former Apopka Mayor John Land, who died in 2011. Land’s widow, Betty, said Land rarely wore a wedding band, but asked that it stay.
Winter Park sculptor Pete Pasha adjusts the clay statue of former Apopka Mayor John Land, who died in 2011. Land’s widow, Betty, said Land rarely wore a wedding band, but asked that it stay.

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