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Henry Baars

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Henry Gerhardt Sophus Baars was a wealthy businessman who made his fortune in the lumber and shipping industries. He was the patriarch of the historically significant Baars family, whose vast land holdings shaped much of Pensacola's development.

Henry Baars
Born February 29, 1844
Oldenburg Province, Germany
Died 1909
Pensacola
Occupation Lumber and shipping agent
Religion Episcopalian
Spouse Mary Ellison Baars
Parents Ernest and H. Seibers Baars
Children John Ernest Baars
Theo Dunwody Baars
Annie Ellison
Henry Gerhardt Baars
Four more died in infancy

Contents

Early life

Born in Oldenburg Province in Northwestern Germany in 1844, Baars was the son of a prosperous lumberman and farmer. His father had intended for him to become heir to a landed fortune, but changed his plans when Kaiser William and Otto von Bismarck began formation of a large conscript army. To help his son avoid service in the army, the elder Baars purchased a military substitute for the boy, and arranged for Henry to take a small partnership with Carl Epping & Sons of London, a British timber trading company. In 1860, the firm sent Henry to their office in Savannah, Georgia.

Baars had barely arrived and begun his business career when the Civil War erupted. He enlisted in the Confederate army, and four years later was discharged, wounded and penniless. Within months, though, he had managed to reopen the Epping office and had wooed a beautiful Southern belle named Mary Ellison Dunwody. The couple were married, and in 1871 Baars elected to move to Pensacola, where prospects for lumbering and the timber trade seemed far better. Shortly thereafter Baars ended his association with the Epping company and began his own firm.

In Pensacola

From 1871 forward, fortune smiled upon the Baars. They had eight children, four of whom survived infancy. Baar's business enterprises soared; he was soon acting as agent for up to seventy-five lumber mills, shipping lumber to four continents and nearby islands. Baars was joined in the enterprise by his brother-in-law, Brian Dunwody, and later by his sons Theo and John Ernest. A second firm, Baars, Dunwody & Company, was formed to facilitate lumber exports, followed by a third, the Dunwody-Aiken Towing Company, to operate tug boats related to local shipping.

Baars also astute in recognizing that lumbering and the timber trade would come to an end, and he encouraged his sons and associates to begin planning other business interests. Their ventures into real estate and land development followed.

At the end of the Spanish-American War young Theo Baars took advantage of an opportunity and employed the foresight to acquire warrants issued to discharged service personnel. Those pieces of script were exchangeable for acreage on Northwest Florida's Perdido Key, a place totally unknown and thus unattractive to most discharged soldiers and sailors. From this effort, the Baars family acquired some 12,000 acres at minimal expense, which they held on to for almost seventy years, until the property had appeal for development.

Henry Baars continued operating his successful ventures until his death in 1909, when he passed away. He is buried in St. John's Cemetery.

Personal life

Throughout their married life, Henry and Mary Ellison Baars enjoyed a unique "game". On gift giving occasions, he would ask her what she wanted, and she would respond: "Just buy me a piece of land." Baars did, and eventually Mary Ellison's holdings exceeded 6000 acres, all in the path of the city's growth. At one time, the Baars built a mansion on the city's perimeter. Mary Ellison intended to develop the surrounding area with vacation homes for wealthy northerners; however, the plan was scrapped when economic conditions soured, and the area was eventually developed as the Cordova Park neighborhood.

Baars was active in the community. He and Mary Ellison worked with others to fund construction of the new Christ Church building erected in 1903-04. A member of the Chamber of Commerce, Baars strove to fund and build improvements in the downtown area. He and Mary Ellison were also patrons of the arts.

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