'Henry Bradley Plant' (
October 27,
1819 -
June 23,
1899), was involved with many
transportation projects, mostly
railroads, in Florida. Eventually he owned the
Plant System of railroads which became part of the
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad.
Plant City, located near
Tampa, was named after him.
Early Life
Henry Bradley Plant was founder of the
Plant System of
railroads and
steamboats. He was born in
Branford, Conn., the son of Betsey (Bradley) and Anderson Plant, a farmer in good circumstances. He was the descendant of John Plant who probably emigrated from England and settled at
Hartford, Conn., about
1639. When the boy was six, his father died. Several years later his mother married again and took him to live first at
Martinsburg, N.Y., and later at
New Haven, Conn., where he attended a private school. His grandmother, who hoped to make a clergyman of him, offered him an education at
Yale College, but, impatient to begin an active career, he got a job as captain's boy, deck hand, and man-of-all-work on a steamboat plying between New Haven and
New York. He was then eighteen.
Pre Civil War
Among his various duties was the care of
express parcels. This line of business, hitherto neglected, he organized effectively, and, when it was taken over by the
Adams Express Company and later transferred from steamboats to railroads, he went along with it. After a few years he was put in charge of the New York office of the company. In
1853 his wife, Ellen Elizabeth (Blackstone) Plant, to whom he had been married in 1842, was ordered South for her health. Several months spent near
Jacksonville, then a tiny hamlet, impressed the shrewd Yankee with the possibilities of the future development of
Florida.
The next year he became the general superintendent of the Adams Express Company for the territory south of the
Potomac and
Ohio rivers. In the face of great difficulties he successfully organized and extended express service in this region, where transportation facilities, although rapidly growing, were still deficient and uncoordinated. At the approach of the
Civil War the directors of Adams Express, fearing the confiscation of their Southern properties, decided to transfer them to Plant. With the Southern stockholders of the company he organized in
1861 the
Southern Express Company, a
Georgia corporation, and became president. His company acted as agent for the
Confederacy in collecting
tariffs and transferring funds. In
1863, following a serious illness, he took an extended vacation in
Europe, and he returned by way of
Canada.
Post Civil War
After the war, the railroads of the South were practically ruined and many railroads went bankrupt in the
depression of 1873. In this situation he found his opportunity. Convinced of the eventual economic revival of the South, he bought at
foreclosure sales in
1879 and
1880 the
Atlantic and Gulf Railroad and Steamboat Company and the
Charleston and Savannah Railroad. With these as a nucleus he began building along the southern
Atlantic seaboard a transportation system that twenty years later included fourteen railway companies with 2,100 miles of track, several steamship lines, and a number of important hotels. In
1882 he organized, with the assistance of Northern capitalists, among whom were
H.M. Flagler,
M.K. Jesup, and
W.T.Walters, the
Plant Investment Company, a
holding company for the joint management of the various properties under his control. He reconstructed and extended several small railroads so as to provide continuous service across the state, and by providing better connections with through lines to the North he gave Florida orange growers quicker and cheaper access to Northern markets.
Tampa, then a village of a few hundred inhabitants, was made the terminus of his southern Florida railroad and also the home port for a new line of steamships to
Havana.
For the accommodation of winter visitors he built in Tampa, in the style of a Moorish palace, an enormous hotel costing $2,500,000. The hotel was called the Tampa Bay Hotel and was famous for its fanciful Moorish and Victorian architecture. The hotel now serves as the main building for the
University of Tampa and houses the
Henry B. Plant Museum. The subsequent growth in wealth and population of Florida and other states tributary to the Plant System made its founder one of the richest and most powerful men in the South. A good physical inheritance, preserved by temperate habits, made it possible for Henry Plant to keep working until almost eighty years of age.
Later Life
His first wife died in February
1861, and in
1873 he married Margaret Josephine Loughman, the daughter of Martin Loughman of New York City, who with one of his two sons survived him.
In his will he attempted to prevent the partition of his properties to the value of about $10,000,000 by forming a trust for the benefit of a great-grandson, but the will was contested by his widow and declared invalid under the laws of the state of New York. This decision made possible the consolidation of his railroads with other properties to form the
Atlantic Coast Line Railroad. His son,
Morton Freeman Plant (1852-1918), was vice-president of the Plant Investment Company from 1884 to 1902 and attained distinction as a yachtsman. He was part owner of the Philadelphia baseball club in the
National League, and sole owner of the New London club in the
Eastern League. Of the younger Plant's many gifts to
hospitals and other institutions the most notable were the three dormitories and the unrestricted gift of $1,000,000 to the
Connecticut College for Women.
External links
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Henry B. Plant Museum at the
University of Tampa
References
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