Harold Gary Morse, who transformed his father’s cluster of a few hundred mobile homes in central Florida into the gigantic retirement utopia The Villages and made it a must-stop on campaign trails with his funding of Republican politics, has died. He was 77.

Morse died Wednesday, according to The Villages Daily Sun, the newspaper that Morse once owned. No cause of death was given.

Over the past few decades, The Villages grew into a sprawling, unmatched symbol of a new American ideal of retirement, a veritable Disney World of the old and not-so-old. Kids were allowed to visit, but banned from living there. Morse assumed control in 1983, and built what is today the home to nearly 100,000 people in one of the nation’s fastest-growing areas.

It wasn’t the first place to congregate so many older adults together – developer Del Webb built Sun City in Arizona and Sun City Center in Florida at the start of the 1960s. But it is unmatched in both the breadth of its vision and its scale: 600 holes of golf, dozens of restaurants and stores, and so many activities – archery to scrapbooking to Spanish classes – that it almost seems like summer camp for seniors. Residents zip along in souped-up golf carts to town squares that look like Hollywood sets, downing cheap margaritas and dancing in gazebos before returning to homes that range from simple ranches under $90,000 to mansions topping $1 million.

“He basically built a Sun City on steroids,” said Andrew Blechman, author of a book on the development, “Leisureville: Adventures in a World Without Children.”

“Gary Morse was a wizard and The Villages was his Oz,” Blechman said.

Advertisement

Each election season, that Oz became the home to roaring crowds eager to greet a parade of candidates who hoped to collect the votes of doting seniors, and the contributions of Morse, who pumped hundreds of thousands of dollars into Republican candidates and committees and loaned them his jet.

Florida Gov. Rick Scott said Morse “demonstrated what makes our state so great – the idea that anyone can make a positive, lasting impact in the lives of generations to come.”

Another Republican, Sen. Marco Rubio, called Morse “a friend” and said he “looked at the pastures and prairies of Florida’s interior and saw the American dream – not just for him, but for the tens of thousands of seniors who have been able to enjoy their golden years and continue to live them to their fullest.”

Jeff Johnson, director of the AARP in Florida, said Morse reshaped the traditional idea of retirement communities from towering condos into a more suburban feel so packed with activities that residents say they’re busier than when they worked full time.

Its place as a political landmark, he said, was unmistakable.

Copy the Story Link

Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.