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Principals

 

Jake Long’s fine attention to detail, coupled with John F. Long’s  visionary range, combined to form an ideal, balanced, finely-honed business enterprise.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jacob F. Long - General Partner

 

 

John F. Long - Founder

           

 

Legacy

John F. Long Properties, LLLP

In 1954 John F. Long began the most ambitious project of his career.  His idea was to not only build  a tract of houses in a specific area, but to include provisions for schools, churches, hospitals, shopping centers, and parks.  Working with Gruen and Associates, an internationally recognized architectural, engineering and planning firm, Long created the state’s first Master Planned Community. Named after his wife, Maryvale was an instant hit. 

Applying the same mass production techniques to homebuilding that Henry Ford had used in the automobile industry, Long was able to offer a 3 bedroom, 2 bath house, with swimming pool, for less than $10,000. Soon houses were selling at the rate of 100 a week,  an average of six months before completion. And so began the company which is now known as John F. Long Properties LLLP.

The Long family has been involved in the planning of West Valley Recreation Corridor, a 47-mile stretch of trails, riparian habitat, picnic grounds, and playing fields; a new Multi-generation Community Center for Maryvale; a Vocational Technology Institute for the West Valley; and Algodón Center, a 1000 acre Business Park in the Loop 101/Agua Fria Freeway corridor. 

Jacob F. Long 

("Jake") began working in the family home-building business as an apprentice carpenter when he was just 18. He then continued learning the business from the ground up.  After learning many trade skills, he was mentored by the company's construction superintendent, and upon the superintendent's retirement, Jake became Superintendent of Construction. Jake continued learning all facets of the business by moving into the office in 1988 where his management skills were honed under his father's tutelage.  Jake's business acumen, along with his understanding of the construction field, have allowed him to advance as the Chief Operating Officer of John F. Long Properties LLLP and General Partner of Algodón Center LLLP.  His responsibilities include:

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Overseeing all administrative functions

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Managing company investments

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Managing all real estate operations

 

Jake is also head of the John F. Long Foundation Board, and is closely involved in a number of community and civic activities:

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Banner Health Foundation Board Member

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Luke Air Force Base Honorary Squadron Commander

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Friends of the West Valley Recreation Corridor Board Member

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Fighter Country Partnership Board Member

John F. Long (Founder) was an unassuming, yet supremely confident man whose character was forged by the tough times of the Depression.  While others may see him as a visionary perfectionist whose innovative building techniques spread from his native Arizona around the world, or even as a humanitarian whose philanthropy is equally far reaching, Long described himself as a bit of a ‘lone wolf’, an ordinary, hard-working man who, when he sees something that needs to be done, does it. Like so many Americans of his generation, John F. Long’s success was the product of hard work, ingenuity, and a little luck.  He was born the first child of German immigrant parents who came to the Valley in the 1910s, met and married.  “We wouldn’t have dreamed of asking for money,” Long recalled.  “We learned to work for what we got.  I had my first job at age 8 selling the Phoenix Gazette in front of the old Lightning Delivery building at Central and Jefferson, where Patriot’s Park is now.”

 

The death of his father and the subsequent loss of the family store only accelerated his transition from childhood to adulthood.  A boyhood spent on a farm taught him both how to work with his hands and reinforced the value of such work.  Many years later Long said, “Those early years conditioned me for the “real” world.  The better conditioned a person is for the real world, the better they can adjust to it.  Sure it can be real brutal – that’s life.  We didn’t have much, and so I never expected much.  I think this was beneficial, though it sure didn’t seem like it at the time.”  After graduating from Glendale High School, and with the effects of the Great Depression still lingering throughout the country,  he road the rails, “grabbing a handful of boxcars,” in search of  work.  Pearl Harbor ended all of that.  Uncle Sam soon recruited Long and found him a job as an engine mechanic on B-17s and B-24s, where he eventually saw duty in Italy.

 

Mustered out of the service after WWII, Long returned home, unsure of the future.  He married his sweetheart, Mary Tolmachoff. He’d met Mary at age 17, while watching her play softball for the Webster’s Dairy girls' team.  She was also a first generation Arizonan whose parents were part of a group of Russian émigrés who came to farm the land around Glendale in the years before World War I.

 

So, with a G.I. loan, his own hammer, and other tools he borrowed from his stepfather, John and Mary set to work building a home for themselves.  “We did it the hard way,” remembered Long, “learning as we went along.  It took us 6 months and cost $4,000 to build, and before it was finished we were offered $8,400 for it.”  With profits like that to be made, the Longs decided to stick with homebuilding a little longer.

 

Mary was promised the next house.  And then, the one after that.  But the post-war housing boom was on, and it was not until three years and numerous houses later that Mary finally got her own home.  Soon enough there were three children to look after.  Manya, Shirley, and Jake didn’t leave much time for hammering nails, and Mary’s hands-on building days were done.

 

“I didn’t have any intention of getting into homebuilding in a big way and I didn’t do any market research,” says Long.  “We tried with each house to build it better and easier.  Soon it just seemed the thing to do.”

 

It is with this history of integrity and great character that Long founded and led the company now known as John F. Long Properties LLLP

 

 

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Algodón Center and the Algodón Cotton Bolls symbol are Registered Service Marks of Algodón Center LLLP
Last updated January, 2010