During the years following World War II, Ferré grew his wealth by purchasing bankrupt glass, cement, and carton factories. At one point, his family empire owned 80 corporations in Puerto Rico, the United States, Venezuela, and Panama.[2]
In 1965, Ferré's real estate company, the Ferré Florida Corporation, financed the construction of the 30-story New World Tower in the Central Business District in Miami. At the time, the building, which cost $6 million to construct, stood as the tallest in Florida.[5] Its construction represented part of a broader effort to revitalize Miami.[6]
^Vigil, Maurilio E. (1987). "Hispanics in Local Office- State and Local Levels". Hispanics in American Politics: The Search for Political Power. p. 102.
^ ab"Jose Antonio Ferre Aguayo". Sarasota Herald-Tribune. 19 September 1990.
^"Boston U Names a Kennedy". The New York Times. 21 October 1961. "Edward M. Kennedy, youngest brother of President Kennedy, was one of three persons elected today to the Board of Trustees of Boston University. Other elected were Stephen P. Mugar of Belmont, President of the Star Market Company, and Jose A. Ferre, industrialist."
^"30-Story Miami Building Will Be Tallest in Florida". The New York Times. 27 November 1963.
^"MIAMI REVERSES TREND OF DOWNTOWN DECAY; Enormous Project". The New York Times. November 3, 1987.