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Wilson Ruffin Abbott
Businessman and landowner in Toronto (c 1801–1876) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Wilson Ruffin Abbott (c. 1801 – 1876) was an American-born Black Canadian and successful businessman and landowner in Toronto, Ontario. He was the father of Anderson Ruffin Abbott, Canada's first Black physician.
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Biography
Born to a Scotch-Irish father and a free West African mother in Richmond, Virginia, Wilson Ruffin Abbott left home when he was aged 15 to work as a steward on a Mississippi River steamer.[1]
He married Ellen Toyer, and moved to Akron, Ohio, where he opened a general grocery store, but left in 1834 after receiving a warning that his store was to be pillaged.[1] In late 1835 or early 1836, he moved to Toronto, Upper Canada, where he prospered as a businessman.[1] He served in the militia that protected Toronto from the rebels in the 1837 Upper Canada Rebellion and was elected to Toronto city council in 1840.[2]
His son Anderson Ruffin Abbott in 1861 became the first African Canadian to practise medicine.[3]
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Death
Wilson Ruffin Abbott died in Toronto, aged 74 or 75.[citation needed]
References
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