Samuel Zimmerman
Samuel Zimmerman | |
---|---|
Born | 7 March 1815 Huntingdon, Pennsylvania |
Died | 12 March 1857 Hamilton, Canada West |
Samuel Zimmerman (7 March 1815 – 12 March 1857) was a Canadian railway promoter and entrepreneur instrumental in the construction of the Great Western Railway of Upper Canada.
Biography
Zimmerman was born in 1815 in
The Zimmerman Bank issued its own chartered banknotes, which are on display in the Bank of Canada Museum.
Zimmerman died on March 12, 1857, en route from Toronto to Niagara in Hamilton, Ontario, one of the victims of the Desjardins Canal disaster.[2] He was buried at his estate and later moved to St. David's Methodist Church to be buried with his wife Margaret Ann Woodruff (b.1828, m. 1848 and d. 1851). He was survived by his second wife Emmeline Dunn (m. 1856) and sons (John and Richard) from his first marriage.[1]
His son Richard Zimmerman later became a doctor[3] and returned with his Toronto born wife Emma Jane Rogers to Niagara Falls.
References
- ^ a b "Biography โ ZIMMERMAN, SAMUEL โ Volume VIII (1851-1860) โ Dictionary of Canadian Biography". Retrieved 7 July 2017.
- ^ a b "Niagara Falls - Samuel Zimmerman & his Estate: a history". www.niagarafrontier.com. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
- ^ "RootsWeb: ONTARIO-L [ONT] Marriages - Toronto 1887". archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
External links