1. William Plankinton was an American businessman, manufacturer, and industrialist.

1. William Plankinton was an American businessman, manufacturer, and industrialist.
William Plankinton followed in his father's footsteps in the meat packing and meat processing industry.
William Plankinton was implicated in a scandal of fraud and embezzlement, for which he was sued.
William Plankinton was born in Allegheny, Pennsylvania, on November 7,1843.
William Plankinton was the son of John Plankinton and Elizabeth Bracken Plankinton.
William Plankinton received his early education in the Milwaukee public schools.
William Plankinton was employed by his father after he graduated from the Milwaukee college.
William Plankinton soon became a partner in his father's pork and beef packing company.
William Plankinton helped to establish branches in Chicago, Kansas City and New York.
The firm became known in 1893 as the William Plankinton Packing Company when the Cudahy brothers moved their operations south to a site just outside of Milwaukee.
William Plankinton helped found and organize several companies, including the Milwaukee-based Johnson Electric Company.
William Plankinton founded and was part owner of the Western Portland Cement company in Yankton, South Dakota.
William Plankinton held several public offices and was a director of the Milwaukee museum, the city public library, and the Milwaukee industrial exposition.
William Plankinton was associated with Layton art gallery and the local Chamber of Commerce.
William Plankinton was one of the financial backers of the Postal Telegraph Company that involved telegraph lines in Wisconsin and Michigan.
William Plankinton became vice-president of the William Plankinton Bank in 1891 upon his father's death.
William Plankinton was involved with settling the affairs when the bank failed in 1893.
William Plankinton was sued to pay back all that was owed to the depositors and creditors.
Philip Danforth Armour, the Chicago meat packer businessman of Armour and Company, was reported to have given $600,000 in gold to help the William Plankinton bank pay back those it owed money to.
William Plankinton lived next door to his father in a mansion on Grand Avenue in Milwaukee given to him by his father as a wedding gift.
William Plankinton left an estate valued at approximately $4 million to his heirs.