John H. H. Phipps (a.k.a. Ben Phipps) (November 3, 1904 - April 19, 1982) [1] was an American heir, businessman, plantation owner, conservationist and polo player. He owned radio and television stations in Florida and Georgia.
His father was John Shaffer Phipps (1874–1958) and his mother, Margarita Celia Grace (1876-1957). He had two brothers, Michael Grace Phipps (1910–1973) and Hubert Beaumont Phipps (1906–1969), and one sister, Margaret Phipps Boegner (1906-2006). His paternal grandfather was Henry Phipps, Jr. (1839–1930) and his maternal grandfather was Michael P. Grace (1842-1920). He grew up at Old Westbury Gardens in Old Westbury, New York.
He attended Groton School, a private boarding school in Groton, Massachusetts, but he was expelled after he brought a skunk into the church. [2] He transferred to Phillips Exeter Academy, another private boarding school in Exeter, New Hampshire. [2] He graduated from Yale University, where he played on the polo team. [2]
He purchased radio stations in the Tallahassee area in the 1940s and in Georgia in the 1950s. [3] He also owned the WCTV television station in the Tallahassee-Thomasville, Georgia area. [3]
He was involved with the Phipps-Florida Foundation, the Caribbean Conservation Corporation, and the Tall Timbers Research Station and Land Conservancy. [3] He served on the board of trustees of the New York Zoological Society from 1941 to 1980. [3] He was also a patron of the American Museum of Natural History. [3]
He donated his land on Alligator Point, Florida to The Nature Conservancy for the study of birdlife. [3] Additionally, he funded a research project to restore the sturgeon breeding grounds in the Apalachicola River and Suwannee River in Florida. [3]
He played polo at the Gulfstream Polo Club, a polo club established by his family north of Delray Beach, Florida in 1923. [4] In 1941, together with his brother Michael Grace Phipps, Charles Skiddy von Stade and Alan L. Corey, Jr., he won the U.S. Open Polo Championship at the Meadow Brook Polo Club against the Westbury team (Gerald Dempsey, Earle Hopping, Stewart Iglehart and Windsor Holden White). [4]
He was married to Elinor Klapp Phipps. [3] They had two sons:
They resided in New York City. [3] Upon his father's death, he inherited the Orchard Pond Plantation. He also developed the Ayavalla Plantation in Leon County, Florida as a quail-hunting plantation. [3] He died at the Tallahassee Memorial Regional Medical Center in April 1982. [3]
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John Shaffer Phipps was an American lawyer and businessman who was an heir to the Phipps family fortune and a shareholder of his father-in-law's Grace Shipping Lines. He was a director of the Hanover Bank, U.S. Steel Corp. and W. R. Grace & Co.
The Phipps family of the United States is a prominent American family that descends from Henry Phipps Jr. (1839–1930), a businessman and philanthropist. His father was an English shoemaker who immigrated in the early part of the 19th century to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, before settling in Pittsburgh. Phipps grew up with Andrew Carnegie as a friend and neighbor. As an adult, he was Carnegie's business partner in the Carnegie Steel Company and became a very wealthy man. He was the company's second-largest shareholder and also invested in real estate.
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