| Southern
Gentleman: Calvin Lehew the Visionary…
The father of The Factory at Franklin gives his recipe for success.
Born
in Leipers Fork in Williamson County, developer Calvin Lehew
has rubbed elbows with presidents and international
world leaders,
but today you can find this gentle, unassuming soul in his
office at The Factory in Franklin., his latest entrepreneurial
venture.
Thirty-five years ago, he built Carter's Court in a Franklin,
a retail center that resembled a European village, and it soon
became the seventh-largest tourist attraction in the state.
Built in 1929, The Factory has been home to Dortch Stove Works,
Magic Chef and Jamison Bedding. Calvin bought the sprawling
complex seven years ago and, after am environmental clean-up,
began opening
the facility in sections. Today, The Factory at Franklin
has 83 tenants.
Calvin's
philosophy is simple: "The Factory is
for artists and creative folks. What I want to do is bring
out more
of the artist in people. I want an environment here that
is conducive to creativity. We have about 11 learning centers
here. To be
able to open a place in The Factory it either has to be
creative,
unique, artistic, musical or food. We have five restaurants
here. Even our offices here fit that theme."
"We
have learning centers for children where they come in and make
pottery or take music and painting lessons. Kids need to
create something themselves to build a positive self-image.
I don't want this to be a shopping center. I want it to appeal
to the creative, right brain. I want to bring out things
in people that they didn't know they had. I think we do an injustice
to our children by not letting them go the route they
want to go. So much religious teaching makes us feel unworthy.
But Jesus
said, 'I come to give you life and give it more abundantly.'
Young people need to know that they are worthy of being whatever
they aspire to be."
After losing his parents while still a teenager, Calvin
became friends with Sen. Albert Gore Sr. and his wife
Pauline.
"I
didn't appreciate small town life then because I wanted
to see the lights of the big city," Calvin says.
"Mrs. Gore offered me a job through Sen. Gore as a page in the
Senate
in 1956. That's when this country boy went to the
big city – Washington
D.C. I was an elevator operator and lived on E. Capitol St.
on the third floor of a boarding house.
"That
was something quite different for a teenager. That was one of
the greatest times of my life.
I got to know
five
presidents, three of them on a personal daily basis
before they became
president – Kennedy,
Johnson and Nixon, when they were Senators. I look
back on those years and wonder why I didn't enjoy
them more. I met
Kruschev and the leaders of the world at that time."
When
John Kennedy Jr.'s George magazine interviewed country singer
Garth Brooks, Brooks suggested doing the interview at
The Factory. JFK, Jr. himself came to the complex
for the meeting.
"I
worked for his dad and go to know him when he was just a kid
and he and his sister Caroline would ride my elevator. He and
Garth sat right out here in front of my office
for the interview
and only a few weeks later, John was killed
in the plane crash."
"I
bought the Factory about seven years ago and we've opened
in phases. First we did an environmental
clean-up. Then we began opening up sections with a restaurant
called Magnolia's,
and one of the main buildings with antiques
and furniture stores. Before we even had the roof on, Faith Hill
did a live broadcast
here."
Practically
a member of the Gore family, Calvin has many stories about his
years
in Washington
with them. "I will never
forget the time I was driving Senator and
Mrs. Gore to some kind of dinner at the White House. When we
got there, Sen. Gore said, 'Calvin,
you've never been to one of these
shindigs. Pull your car over there and
come on in here with us.' He was
in a tux and Mrs. Gore and their daughter,
Nancy, were in formal dress
and I wasn't. That's what I
liked about him."
"I
was Al Gore Jr.'s babysitter when I was there. He's
nine years younger than I am. One time,
when the Gores were out of town, I was staying with him overnight.
It was Sunday morning
and I had the TV on low and he comes
in, about half awake, rubbing his eyes, and he sees me watching
television. He said, 'Calvin,
why are you watching TV? The New
York Times is right outside the
door there.' He gets the paper and lays
it on the dining room table and starts
reading it – not the funny papers
but the front page. He was 7 or 8 years
old. He was never a child, the youngest
of the children and he was always with
his parents."
"When
he was running for president, I had lunch with him and some other
people downtown and he asked me, as political candidates
will do during a campaign, 'How I am
doing, Calvin? Is there anything I need to do differently?' This
was when everyone was advising him on how to dress and look.
I said, 'No,
Al, just be yourself.' He laughed
and said, 'Nobody’s
ever told me that before.'"
"He
started out in theology at VU and his parents programmed him – either
consciously or subconsciously – to
be a big leader. But I don't think
that's where his heart was. People
emulate their parents and are programmed
by watching others."
Those
years inspired Calvin to become a success in whatever he set
his
mind to
and he eventually
became
a popular
speaker on
positive thinking. "I used to give
seminars and workshops on success principles. I had this board
and wouldn't let the audience see what
was written on it at first. I'd
tell them, 'When
I flip this over, I want the first
thought that comes to mind – regardless
of your age, whether or not you're
married or have money – what's
the first thing that comes to mind?'
I turn it over and it says 'What
would you do if you knew you could
not fail?'
"On
his radio programs, the essence of Earl Nightingale's
message was about what we think
about. He said if you do these five things, you can do, be and
have anything you desire – set
a goal, believe in it, have faith,
act and give and receive. If you don't have a good self-image,
you will not succeed.
Our success comes from the neck
up.
"Our
thinking causes us to be successful. Philosophy, psychology,
spiritual teachings – Jesus said, 'As a man thinketh
in his heart, so is he. Be
ye transformed by the renewing of your heart.'
"When
I was attending George Washington University, Mrs. Gore asked
me, 'What are you going to do with your life?' I
said, 'I don't know – I
guess I am going to be a
congressman.' She was
good at giving advice and
she was smart and she said,
'You ought to go back home
and
graduate from your home college.'
So that’s when
I transferred to the University
of Tennessee my senior year.
"I
took psychology and philosophy in college because it was an elective.
I majored in business because money was always my
goal. Because of Earl Nightingale, I set
my goal to be a millionaire by the time I was 35. "When
you set a goal or intention, automatically little miracles start
taking
place. Your
hunches and intuition will tell you what to do. You’ll start receiving
phone calls and seeing people."
"You
don't have to be an expert to succeed. A fraternity
brother and I went down
to Tallahassee, Fla., in 1963 to open a Jerry's restaurant. It
didn't work but we liked
Tallahassee. It was the
state capitol and Florida State was there. We looked around and
said what does this town need? A discount
drug store! Let's open
one. We were crazy – we didn’t
know a thing about pharmaceuticals.
We discounted everything 20 percent everyday. We hired pharmacists
on a 50-50 profit basis.
When you don't know what
you need, hire somebody who does.
"We
sold lots of beauty products to the Florida State girls and the
housewives. They'd come in and buy a case of their
favorite Aqua Net hairspray.
"Problems?
Yes. We didn't want to pay for expensive shelving
so we bought this
cheap, pressed sawdust board. We stocked the shelves for the
Grand Opening, went home to grab about three
hours sleep, came
back to open the store – there was
green shampoo all over the floors because the shelves had all
collapsed.
"I
didn't know how to file our drugs with the State of Florida
and they almost
put me in jail. Morphine and narcotics are supposed to reported
every 30 days. I didn't know that. We kep
making mistakes
but we corrected them.
"Soon
we opened other stores in Albany, Ga., Gainesville, Fla., and
then in Dothan, Ala. When I sold out to my partner, we
had stores in three states.
"My
point to that story is that you don't have to be an
expert or have
a degree to become whatever you want to. I became the largest
custom home builder in Williamson County and I couldn't
build a dog
house.
"I
know how to get people involved. I know how to use faith, believing
in yourself
then acting toward your goal.
"Then
something told me that to make that millionaire goal faster,
I needed to get into real estate. You could borrow lots of
money and have equity.
"Well,
I hit that $1 million net worth at 33, not 35 – it
was one of the most disappointing days of my life. I was expecting
that when I became a millionaire, all my problems would be
over.
"I
had stopped-up commodes, leases where I hadn't been paid
and
leaky roofs. But the point is that it isn't the destination
of
the journey, it's that – wow, this stuff works.
Set a goal, believe in it, have faith and act, you can do,
be, have anything. Especially the materialistic things.
"I
haven't gone after fame so I don't know about that.
If
you don't feel good about yourself and help others you'll
fail.
"The
Factory is a demonstration of that. If I had known that just
the electrical work alone on this building and the next one would
be $650,000, I wouldn't have done this project. Not knowing
what you're getting in to can be one of your biggest allies.
Ignorance, low I.Q., I call it. That's what’s made
me successful. I'm sincere when I say 'not knowing
what I was getting into' was a blessing. You have to give
to receive. So I thought, I’m going to try something
else.
"Thirty-five
years ago I decided to develop a European village with a Southern
flair. So I built Carter's Court in Franklin
across from the Carter House. It became the seventh largest
tourist attraction in Tennessee.
"Four
banks turned me down on financing for The Factory. The fifth
bank, First Tennessee, said okay. Then when I was looking for
permanent financing, a man in banking here in Franklin, Rufus
Bagsby, called me and said he wanted to talk with me. He said,
'When I was 17 years old and my wife was 16, we came and sat
in front
of your desk when you were a loan officer for Security Federal.
You went out of your way to make us a $14,000 loan on our first
house. We weren't even of legal age but you went overboard
to make us that loan. I want to pay you back. Today I have
a $10 million loan with him at a low interest rate.
"Several
years ago, I was on my way to Japan. I was into the study of
the mind and what causes people to be successful.
On a layover
in San Francisco, I saw a book called Science of Mind and it
got my attention. It was by Dr. Ernest Holme. The principles
in the Bible from a positive standpoint. It all dovetails into
psychology and philosophy.
"If
I do something negative to you, it will come back to me. Maybe
not from you, but from the universe. Eastern religion calls
it 'karma.'
"People
are afraid to fail. It's more comfortable to be
in a comfort zone than to venture out and appear ridiculous.
People will love you for being yourself.
"My
father, who
only had a third-grade education, taught me to never put anyone
down for the way they're dressed because someday you
may have to walk up to their mahogany desk and ask them for
a job.
That stuck in my mind. I'll never forget that.
"I'm
surprised because the odds were against me on The Factory. But
the more success I’ve had, the less I'm surprised.
I'm studying infinite intelligence now and am looking to
my next big task. But it won't be in the physical world
but in the mental.
"The
Factory has turned out better than I could ever have imagined,
even with the problems, I keep going back to the common denominator.
Earl Nightingale said success is 'the progressive realization
of a worthy ideal.'
"Success
can be the person that wants to open up a little business
or the school teacher, or housewife – money does not
bring happiness." |