Jesse Ketchum - Place of Birth, Date of Birth, Age, Wiki, Facts, Net Worth, Birthday, Biography and Family

Jesse Ketchum, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Family, Facts, Age, Net Worth, Biography and More in FamedBorn.com


How to Pronounce Jesse Ketchum

#50
Most Popular
Boost
Mar 31, 1782 Died on 07 Sep 1867 (aged 85)

Canadian politician

Aries

About Jesse Ketchum

  • Jesse Ketchum (March 31, 1782 – September 7, 1867) was a tanner and political figure in Upper Canada. He was born in town Spencertown, New York in 1782 to parents Mollie Robbins Ketchum and Jesse Ketchum Senior.
  • After his mother died, he was taken into a foster home; his foster father was a tanner.
  • He ran away from home in 1799 and joined his brother Seneca, who was farming north of York (York Mills, now part of Toronto) in Upper Canada.
  • At the beginning of the War of 1812, he purchased a tannery from a recent immigrant from the United States who had decided to return there after war was declared.
  • Ketchum joined the local militia, but his loyalty was called into question after York was temporarily held by the Americans.
  • After the war, he helped fund the rebuilding of the bridges over the Don River and also contributed to the building of the first common school at York.
  • Ketchum was known for his great and practical interest in schools, a quality that won him the affectionate title, "Father Ketchum." He taught Sunday school at the Methodist church, which he helped to establish in the area.
  • He opposed the exclusive control of the clergy reserves by the Anglican church and was known as an opponent of the Family Compact.
  • In 1828, he was elected to represent York in the 10th Parliament of Upper Canada; he was reelected in 1830 but did not run again in 1834.
  • Although he had supported William Lyon Mackenzie in the assembly, he did not take part in the Upper Canada Rebellion. Shortly after the rebellion, he relocated his tannery to Buffalo, New York, although he continued to live in Toronto.
  • In 1845, he moved to Buffalo, leaving his property in Toronto to his children from his first wife.
  • He continued to be a generous benefactor to the community there until his death in 1867.
  • Ketchum contributed to churches and schools in Buffalo.
  • Ketchum Hall at Buffalo State College was named in his honour, as is Ketchum Street on the city's Lower West Side.
  • Ketchum is buried at Forest Lawn Cemetery in Buffalo.
  • A public school in Toronto was named "The Jesse Ketchum School" and in Buffalo twelve schools were named after him.
  • His brother Seneca remained in Canada and died in York Mills in 1850.Jesse Ketchum's home was a recognized landmark in early York, largely because of its size.
  • It was a large frame building, painted white, and stood at the north west corner of Yonge and Adelaide.
  • Henry Scadding described the home as a "dwelling in the American style with a square turret bearing a rail rising out of the ridge of the roof." The date of construction is unknown, but estimated to be around 1813 or 1814.
  • John Ross Robertson claims Jesse Ketchum was one of the first people to bring sidewalks to York after he placed tanned bark outside of his home.
  • The house was ultimately destroyed around 1838 or 1839 to cut up the land for building lots.Ketchum Manufacturing, a company now located in Brockville, Ontario, which manufactures agricultural supplies, was founded by Jesse Ketchum's descendants in Ottawa, Ontario.

Search Celebrity

    Celebrity of the day
    English singer-songwriter, rapper and actor

    Dappy

    English singer-songwriter, rapper and actor