词条 | Thomas Gustave Plant |
释义 |
The factory boasted numerous innovations and amenities for its workers, including an adjacent park at the corner of Centre and Walden streets. The park was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, Jr., and completed in 1913.[2] He also started a nursery and kindergarten on site, for the children of his workers. [3] Plant used his fortune to build Lucknow, an estate on a mountain overlooking Lake Winnipesaukee in Moultonborough, New Hampshire, where he lived with his second wife. Plant lost a considerable amount of his wealth investing in Russian bonds and in Cuban sugar, and then went into bankruptcy following the collapse of the stock exchange in 1929. His creditors allowed him to live in his home even as they dissolved his estate. Nearly the entire estate and its grounds have been repurchased by a preservation trust, and is now known as the Castle in the Clouds, a tourist attraction. The factory changed hands several times in the 20th century, and by the 1970s was used as artist workspaces. It burned in 1976 in a dramatic fire,[4] the burned-out hulk becoming known locally as "the ruins." The site was redeveloped in the 1990s as a strip mall and supermarket. The Plant HomeIn 1917, Thomas Plant built The Plant Home, an assisted living home, in Bath, Maine. His reasons for doing so have become the vision of the home.
Mr. Plant endowed the home with 3,300 shares of his shoe company, equating to $400,000 at the time. The home sits on the banks of the Kennebec River in Bath and provides private apartments and assisted living care to low-income elders. References1. ^Tom Plant: The Making of a Franco-American Entrepreneur, 1859-1941 (Studies in Entrepreneurship), by Barry Hatfield Rodrigue, Garland Publishing (1994), {{ISBN|0-8153-0988-0}}. {{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Plant, Thomas Gustave}}2. ^Olmsted Archives, Job Number 03792, Thomas G. Plant Company, Roxbury, Massachusetts (09 Grounds of Commercial & Industrial Buildings). 3. ^[https://www.jphs.org/locales/2004/1/5/thomas-g-plant-shoe-factory-operated-nursery.html?rq=plant JP Historical Society], Thomas G. Plant Shoe Factory Operated Nursery from Boston Daily Globe on June 23, 1918 4. ^The Shoe Factory’s Demise: Jamaica Plain’s Most Unforgettable Fire, by Walter H. Marx, Jamaica Plain Gazette: Jamaica Plain, MA. August 9, 1991. 5 : 1859 births|1941 deaths|People from Moultonborough, New Hampshire|American people of French-Canadian descent|People from Bath, Maine |
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