Anderson Abbott
- In full:
- Anderson Ruffin Abbott
- Born:
- April 7, 1837, Toronto, Upper Canada
- Also Known As:
- Anderson Ruffin Abbott
Anderson Abbott (born April 7, 1837, Toronto, Upper Canada—died December 29, 1913, Toronto, Ontario, Canada) was a doctor and surgeon who was the first Canadian-born person of colour to graduate from medical school. He served in the Union army as a civilian surgeon during the American Civil War.
Early life and family
Abbott was born to an affluent family. His parents, Wilson Abbott and Ellen Toyer, both free from enslavement, were from Mobile, Alabama, where they owned and operated a general store. Mobile passed a law that required all free black persons to provide bonds signed by two white men as proof of the free person’s good behaviour, but Wilson Abbott did not abide. After settling briefly in New Orleans and New York, the Abbotts moved to Toronto in 1835. They gained wealth and standing, purchasing nearly 50 properties in the Toronto area.
Anderson Abbott was educated at the Buxton Mission School, a racially integrated school near Chatham, Canada West (as Upper Canada was called after 1841), that was noted for its superior education. The school was part of the Elgin Settlement, a safe haven for refugees from enslavement established in 1849. Later, he studied at the Toronto Academy, where he was an honours student, followed by Oberlin College in Ohio. In 1857, Abbott enrolled at University College in Toronto to study chemistry. In 1858, he began studies at the Toronto School of Medicine, which later became affiliated with the University of Toronto. Following a supervised placement with Alexander Augusta, the first black doctor in North America and the head of Toronto City Hospital (later Toronto General Hospital), Abbott was licensed in 1861 to practise medicine and became the first Canadian-born black doctor in Canada.
Medical career and practice
Abbott felt compelled to apply his medical services to the American Civil War effort and served in a segregated regiment, the Coloured Troops. Later, he acted as a civilian surgeon in several Washington, D.C., hospitals that served Union forces. Among his experiences as a surgeon, Abbott cared for a dying President Abraham Lincoln. Upon his return to Canada, Abbott married and moved to Chatham. There he was appointed coroner for Kent County. He was also a public advocate for integrated schools. After living in other Ontario towns, he accepted an appointment in Chicago, Illinois, becoming medical superintendent of Provident Hospital, a training hospital for black nurses, in 1896. After returning to Toronto in 1897, he spent his later years writing on black history and other topics.
An earlier version of this entry was published by The Canadian Encyclopedia .