"One other change has occurred: the subdivision is no longer exclusively Jewish." "Some would play instruments and we'd sing Jewish songs. There were bon- fires and swimming. On rainy days, we'd play auction bridge—never contract— and a card game called kaluke. I never spent a summer in the city," he says proudly. Part of the reason for the existence of the Colony and Mt. Pleasant was the fact that South Haven was an incredibly pop- ular Jewish destination after the turn of the century. At one point, the town had 52 Jewish resorts (among them: Zipperstein's, Mendelsohn's, Zlatkin's, Levin's, and Fi- delman's), two Jewish butchers, two Jew- ish grocers, a synagogue (First Hebrew Congregation, which still exists), and "the Corner." Ms. Germaine claims that at one point South Haven was "packed with Jews be- dish culture, the Colony had no appeal to me. It was for people from the old coun- try." The Colony was used as a commune during the 1960s ("There was a lot of dope smoking over there," Mr. Shochet says) and later it became a tennis camp. It is now unused. Mt. Pleasant survived the death of its neighbor, the Colony, and the movement of its families from the cities to the sub- urbs. In 1955, the subdivision installed an elevator from the top of the cliff down to Lake Michigan, to allow its aging founders to make use of the beach. During the height of the move to the suburbs, life was a little quieter at Mt. Pleasant — "A lot of houses stood emp- ty then," Mr. Wretzky says. Then in the 1970s, interest was rekindled as the grandchildren of the founders began re- Above: Jerry Wretsky Left: Where the mailboxes still read Katz, Segal and Zuckerman. cause everyone wanted that beach." After World War II, life changed in the area. Jewish families left the cities for the greenery and quiet of the suburbs and lost the need to escape to places like the Colony. The Colony closed during the 1960s even as Mt. Pleasant lived on. Mr. Wret- zky believes the Colony failed because it didn't cater to him and his third-gener- ation peers. "It died out with its mem- bers," he says. "Every later generation wants more assimilation. With its Yid- turning with their children, and new- comers, including gentile families, began to purchase property. By the early 1980s, real-estate prices rose dramatically, which coincided with a boating and tourism renaissance in South Haven. Today, Mt. Pleasant resembles an af- fluent Jewish suburb more than a camp of the Workmen's Circle. The cottages all have been expanded and embellished. The cars include Cadillacs, Saabs and BMWs. Like suburban Jewish communities everywhere, Mt. Pleasant now has its share of intermarriage, wealth, materi- al abundance and divorce. Mr. Shochet says, "It's no longer socialist in any form. The younger generation has taken over. Kids have cars. There's cable and a VCR in every home." There is still a women's luncheon and a community calendar, but the Work- men's Circle is now a memory. Using a metaphor for the enormous social changes, Mr. Wretzky describes a 1985 storm that altered the whole beach. "All of the big trees of my childhood were destroyed, trees I'd known my whole life," he says. "We've seen so many families that have come apart because of divorce since the 1980s. Divorce was uncommon when I was a kid." One other change has occurred: the subdivision is no longer exclusively Jew- ish. "The vice mayor of Chicago now has a house up here and he's Hispanic," a long- time resident says, with a mixture of am- bivalence and pride. What makes Mt. Pleasant unusual is the degree to which the residents con- tinue to carry on the experiences of their ancestors. Most cottages are still in the families, often jointly owned by several great-grandchildren of a founder. "I don't know everyone any- more," Ms. Germaine says. "But to me, the houses will al- ways keep the names of the original family, even if they've changed hands." "The children's children con- tinue to come up here," Mr. Shochet adds. "Four genera- tions have used my cottage. I've cut these bushes every year since I was a boy." As a neighbor drops of homemade preserves, Ms. Ger- maine points out that five gen- erations of her family have slept in her father's cottage. "The parents have al- ways looked out for the kids. You know, we've never needed lifeguards at the beach because people look out for one an- other." Seventy years later, there is a sense that much time has passed at Mt. Pleas- ant. The trees are tall. The cottages have been extensively renovated. Vegetation has broken through sidewalks now 30 years old. Mt. Pleasant is "the place where my family history begins, where my roots are. My earliest childhood memories are here," Mr. Wretzky says. After he married, Mr. Wretzky and his wife decided to live year-round at Mt. Pleasant, and he raised his children in the subdivision. "I know some of these kids' great- grandparents," he says. "I'm currently re-building the stairs to the beach, and I want them to be as close to the way they were when I was a kid. "People scatter, but my old gang still comes back." ❑ Stephen Sagner is a writer in Ann Arbor.