Pope started working in his father's real estate business at an early age. He was a natural promoter and salesman. He is said to have closed his first real estate deal when he was just 12 years old. During the
Great Depression, he took different jobs working as a promoter and salesman. He and his brother had some success promoting speedboats and aquaplanes on lakes throughout Florida. In the early 1930s, his wife Julie showed him an article in
Good Housekeeping about a man charging visitors money to see the manicured gardens around his mansion home. From this, they hatched the idea of
Cypress Gardens, and over the next few years they worked to convert a section of swamp land on the shores of
Lake Eloise into a
theme park garden. On January 2, 1936, Dick and Julie Pope officially opened their famed theme park, charging visitors 25 cents each to visit. Cypress Gardens was an immediate success. Cypress Gardens would eventually grow to over 200 acres of land, and host more than a million visitors annually. The theme park provided visitors with an escape from the everyday world, and originally featured idyllic
botanical gardens and
southern belles working as hostesses. During World War II, a group of soldiers waiting to deploy to war from
Tampa, Florida saw photographs of water skiers on the lake at the park, and they mistakenly believed that water ski shows were part of the entertainment offered there. When a small group soldiers arrived at the park, ready to pay the entrance fee to watch the water ski show, Julie Pope rounded up her children,
Dick Jr. and Adrienne, and their friends, and staged an impromptu water skiing exhibition. It was a success, and the next weekend, 800 more soldiers arrived to see the show. From that point on, water ski shows were a staple of the Cypress Gardens brand. Pope worked tirelessly to promote his theme park. He produced over 500 news reels and 75 short films to promote the park. In the 1970s, Cypress Gardens purchased Magnolia Mansion, the New Orleans style mansion, built on Lake Eloise by citrus magnate,
John A. Snively. At its height, Cypress Gardens was nationally famous. It was used as a set location for a variety of films, including
Moon Over Miami (film). An episode of the Tonight Show with
Johnny Carson was filmed there. The park features prominently in the first Cinerama film "This is Cinerama" from 1952, with dramatic water-skiing stunts showing off the immersive widescreen capabilities of the new format. The park attracted such celebrity guests as
Elvis Presley,
Betty Grable, and
King Hussein of Jordan. ==Impact on Florida tourism==