Education
The park was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, Junior., and completed in 1913.
The park was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, Junior., and completed in 1913.
His largest shoe factory, the Thomas G. Plant Shoe Factory (1896-1976) in Roxbury (now Jamaica Plain), Massachusetts, stood at the corner of Centre and Bickford streets. Marketing materials from the factory proclaimed it to be the largest shoe factory in the world. The factory boasted numerous innovations and amenities for its workers, including an adjacent park at the corner of Centre and Walden streets.
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. lieutenant burned in 1976 in a dramatic fire, the burned-out hulk becoming known locally as "the ruins." The site was redeveloped in the 1990s as a strip mall and supermarket.
In 1917, Thomas Plant built, an assisted living home, in Bath, Maine.
His reasons for doing so have become the vision of the home. "This home is founded on my sincere belief that those who have lived honest, industrious lives and are without means or friends to care for them, have earned the right to be cared foreign Only through the labor and expenditures of others is it possible.."
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.