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A Man of Salt and Trees - The Life of Joy Morton (Paperback)
Loot Price: R418
Discovery Miles 4 180
You Save: R91
(18%)
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A Man of Salt and Trees - The Life of Joy Morton (Paperback)
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List price R509
Loot Price R418
Discovery Miles 4 180
You Save R91 (18%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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A Man of Salt and Trees is the first full-length biography of Joy
Morton (1855-1934), founder of The Morton Arboretum-an
internationally acclaimed outdoor museum of woody plants-and Morton
Salt-the brand that for over a century has been a household name in
the United States. Joy Morton's story begins in pre-Civil War
Nebraska Territory and concludes in the midst of the Great
Depression in Chicago, the city in which he lived for over a half
century. Using the voluminous correspondence of the Morton family,
Ballowe tells the story of the Nebraska farm boy who grew up to be
a small town banker who became a leading citizen of Chicago and
Illinois and a major figure in the nation's economic and
technological development during the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries. Morton left his mark in several areas, from
business and city planning to transportation and environmental
preservation. He was a contributor to the development of Daniel H.
Burnham and Edward Bennett's 1909 Plan of Chicago, which continues
to affect the way Chicagoans protect the Lakefront and approach
transportation and park issues throughout the region. During the
last three decades of his life, Morton served on the Chicago Plan
Commission. His interest in transportation led him to become an
investor and a director in railroad transportation and a champion
of inland waterway traffic. He also single-handedly financed early
advancements of the teletype, a technology that advanced the
economic and cultural development of the 20th century. Toward the
end of his life, Morton funded the University of Chicago's
explorations of Mississippian Indian culture in central Illinois
and traveled throughout the world visiting ancient as well as
modern cultures and gardens. The Morton Arboretum stands today as a
natural expression of a desire Joy Morton had from childhood, when
he learned from his father, the founder of Arbor Day, and his
mother, a dedicated gardener, that a necessary complement to a good
life is the cultivation and preservation of the environment.
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