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  1. Morton Freeman Plant (August 18, 1852, in Branford, Connecticut – November 4, 1918, in New York City) was an American financier . Biography. Morton Freeman Plant was the son of Henry Bradley and Ellen Elizabeth (Blackstone) Plant. His father was a pioneer railroad builder in the South.

  2. Morton F. Plant. Morton Freeman Plant was born on August 18, 1852 in Branford, Connecticut. He was the son of a railroad and shipping magnate. During his lifetime, he displayed dazzling business acumen and more than doubled his significant inheritance.

  3. Sep 19, 2016 · The original owner of the house was an American businessman named Morton F. Plant, who had been born with a pretty big silver spoon in his mouth. Morton was the son of Henry Bradley Plant, who had built an enormous railroad and steamship network across the South that came to be known as the Plant System.

  4. Jun 22, 2020 · Morton Freeman Plant - from the collection of the New-York Historical Society. Plant paid Bernard M. Baruch $700,000 for a vacant lot at the the northeast corner of on Fifth Avenue and 86th Street, safely distant from the encroaching mercantile district.

  5. Morton Freeman Plant was an enthusiastic sportsman, his favorite recreations being yachting, baseball, and golf. He owned the steel schooner “Ingomar,” built by Nat Herreshoff, which entered twenty-two races in one season abroad and won nineteen prizes.

  6. Jun 1, 2017 · In 1917, Morton Freeman Plant made a deal with jeweller Pierre Cartier: Plant would give Cartier his Fifth Avenue mansion in exchange for $100 and a necklace of 128 natural pearls, valued...

  7. Branford House was built in 1902 for Morton Freeman Plant, a local financier and philanthropist, as his summer home; he named it after his hometown of Branford, Connecticut. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on January 23, 1984.