John Plankinton


John Plankinton was an American businessman and a Milwaukee-based meatpacking industrialist. He is noted for expansive real estate developments in Milwaukee, including the Plankinton House Hotel, and also for his generous philanthropy.

Early life

Plankinton was born on March 18, 1820, in New Castle County, Delaware, the son of Eli Plankinton and Mary née Johnson. In 1832, when he was 12 years old, the family moved to Pittsburgh, where Plankinton attended public schools and received most of his early formal education. He met his future wife, Elizabeth Brachein, while a teenager in Pittsburgh, and they were married in 1840. Plankinton's first job was as a butcher, and he pursued this career for some 22 years.

Mid-life and career

Plankinton was 24 years old in 1844 when he moved with his wife and new son to Milwaukee, Wisconsin Territory. He was going to form a business with a friend that had already moved to Milwaukee prior, but his friend formed a partnership with another person before he arrived using as an excuse that this other person had more money and skills available for the new business he had in mind. Plankinton was disappointed and upset over the lack of confidence, so with his capital of $400 he built a general store in opposition and operated it for a few years and lived above the business. In 1849 he began selling beef and hog products from his store that he processed and packaged himself. He became the leading butcher and meat packer in Milwaukee with his first year at $12,000 in sales.
Plankinton became acquainted with Frederick Layton around 1850 and formed a business partnership with him a couple of years later. His two daughters, Hannah and Elizabeth, were born around this time. The meat packing partnership enterprise of 1852 was called Layton and Plankinton Packing Company. Layton retired and left the firm in 1861 to start a meat packing firm of his own. Plankinton continued the Milwaukee business for the next couple of years and in 1864 formed a new enterprise with Philip D. Armour – Plankinton & Armour Company. They expanded their facilities by branching out into Chicago and Kansas City. They also had an exporting branch in New York City that operated on a commission basis. Plankinton & Armour Company's sales in 1880 was $15 million. In late 1884, 20 years after they formed their partnership, it was officially broken up. Armour continued with the branch firms in Chicago, Kansas City, and New York City.
Plankinton reorganized his part of the Milwaukee meat packing business and Patrick Cudahy became his facility superintendent and a business partner. The firm was known as John Plankinton and Company. Plankinton's poor health became an issue in 1888 and a major portion of his business went to Cudahy and his brother. The Cudahy brothers eventually renamed the meat packing enterprise "Cudahy Brothers Company". They moved the entire facilities in 1893 some two miles from the Milwaukee city limits to a 700-acre parcel of farm land known unofficially as "Porkopolis". It was later-named officially as the town of Cudahy, Wisconsin.

Plankinton House Hotel

When Milwaukee incorporated as a city in 1846, the American House Hotel in the center of town on Grand Avenue had been operating for three years. This wooden structure was completely burned down on July 4, 1861. Plankinton purchased this strategically located piece of real estate and constructed the Plankinton House Hotel there out of sandstone blocks and brick, chosen because they were fireproof.
The hotel was in the French Renaissance architectural style. It had 400 rooms and could accommodate 600 guests. Built as an upscale hotel intended for business people and the wealthy, its frontage occupied on Grand Avenue. Inside was an elegant dining room that matched those of the most expensive hotels in the world and could accommodate over 300 people. Late in the 1890s, it was expanded to double the size of the hotel.
Plankinton's luxurious hotel had a mansard roof and was the tallest building in Milwaukee at the end of the 19th century. The downtown location proved in the long run to be a good one. Transportation in the city improved considerably in the 20th century, with streetcars operating on the avenue where the hotel was located. The hotel and residence remained popular with the well-to-do until it was torn down in 1915, after spanning almost 50 years of existence.

Associated businesses

Plankinton was associated with Frederick Layton and others when in 1865 they took over the River and Lake Shore City Railway Company and incorporated it into the Milwaukee City Railroad Company. Plankinton also financed the construction of the first Milwaukee public library in 1882, which at the time was on Grand Avenue between Fourth and Fifth Streets.
On February 7, 1887, the Plankinton Bank began operations, established with capital of $200,000, the majority from the bank's President and Vice President. The bank grew into the leading bank in Milwaukee, but was forced to seek new investors following Plankinton's death, when several smaller stakeholders withdrew entirely and the Plankinton estate reduced its share. Day increased his holding to $96,000 and was appointed as the bank's new President, and was succeeded as Vice President by William Plankinton. Loans made to Frank A. Lappen & Company totalling $250,000 precipitated a crisis when, on May 12, 1893, the sheriff seized the Lappen companys' stores and it became clear that little of the money would be recovered; at the same time, Day had borrowings of $300,000 from the bank. The subsequent run on the bank began on May 14, was ended with rumours of support from Armour, but necessitated a bank reorganisation and seeking new investors, who failed to materialise. The failure was considered inevitable and it ceased operations on June 1, 1893. With Day being blamed for the failure, William was appointed assignee with a bond of $1,600,000, a role subsequently being passed to Irving M. Bean and then Henry Herman over the following decade. According to a report in The Evening Republican, it was believed that depositors would not lose money based on "the character of men who are stockholders in the institution".

Family

Plankinton was married twice. By his first wife, Elizabeth née Brachein, he had a son and two daughters, his eldest daughter dying of heart disease at the age of 17. After being widowed, Plankinton married his second wife, Anna née Bradford, in 1875. In 1864, Plankinton purchased the James Rogers mansion along with its surrounding seven acres of parkland, and spent $200,000 remodelling it into the "most elegant and expensive home in the city". In the Fall of 1876, work began on the William Plankinton Mansion, a gift from his father following his wedding of William to Mary Ella Woods in April of that year. It was located adjacent to Plankinton's own mansion and was completed in 1876. The architect, Edward Townsend Mix, was the most illustrious in Milwaukee at the time and the construction supervisor was described as a "master mechanic" who had built other mansions and had handled the renovation of Plankinton's own property. The cost of the John Plankinton mansion is not known, but the scale can be inferred from the $5,000 spent to add a carriage barn just after the mansion was completed, as at the time $750 was sufficient to build a country cottage and $7,000 was enough for a major stone-and-brick villa. Plankinton also built a mansion for his daughter in 1886–87 when she was engaged to Richard Henry Park, at a cost of $150,000. Elizabeth never occupied the house as the wedding was called off after Park married another woman in September 1887. In fact, she only visited the house a single time. Plankinton's first grandchild was born in 1881, when his son had a son, William Woods Plankinton ; Plankinton's will left the bulk of his estate in trust to his grandchildren and in the alternative to the hospital, so the child became the heir to the family fortune. When Elizabeth died childless in 1923, her share went to her nephew.

Death

Plankinton died in his home on the evening of March 29, 1891, attended by his family, close friend Jeremiah Quin, and his long-time doctor. He was buried in the Forest Home Cemetery in Milwaukee and a large monument and pillar is built on the site. Other family members buried there include both of John's wives and all of three of his children. The obituary began: "Milwaukee today mourns the loss of her foremost citizen, whose generous public spirit and many deeds of benevolence, whose great business ability and modest, upright life are imperishably written on the pages of Milwaukee's history." Acts of philanthropy include Plankinton's donation of two lots for the formation of the First Holland Presbyterian Church, which subsequently became the Perseverance Presbyterian Church. Plankinton also supported the formation of a soup house to feed the poor, by providing the building rent-free, along with a generous amount of money, and a daily supply of meat.

Legacy

A statue in bronze of Plankinton from Park is now located in The Grand's Plankinton Arcade. Elizabeth Plankinton commissioned artist Susan Frackelton to prepare and illustrate a hand-illuminated volume, Voices of Friends, with reminiscences of her father from his personal friends, those "who knew and loved him well". It included contributions from Cudahy, Frackelton, Frank Gunsaulus, General Charles King, Layton, and Quin. It was displayed at the Layton Art Gallery, to whom Elizabeth bequeathed $25,000 in her will. The gallery has since closed, but the volume has become a part of the rare books collection of the Milwaukee Central Library.
The Wisconsin Meat Industry Hall of Frame was initiated in 1993, and Plankinton was one of three new inductees added in 1995. The accompanying profile describes Plankinton as a philanthropist and "A Merchant Prince and Princely Merchant", a title also used in his Milwaukee Sentinel obituary.