Alexander Thom (surgeon)
Alexander Thom (October 26, 1775 – September 26, 1845) was a military surgeon, judge and political figure in Upper Canada.
He was born in Scotland in 1775, the son of a farmer named Alexander Thom, and studied at King's College in Aberdeen.
He joined the British Army and became a surgeon in 1799. He served with the 41st Foot in Lower Canada from 1803 to 1813. He married Harriet E. Smythe (Hannah Smith?) at Niagara in 1811. Thom was taken prisoner during the War of 1812. He was chosen as the surgeon for the military settlement at Perth in Upper Canada in 1815 and served as the doctor there until 1822. Thom built a sawmill and gristmill on the Tay River at Perth. After the death of his first wife, he married Eliza Montague and then Betsy Smythe after Eliza died in 1820. He was named a justice of the peace and became a judge in the district court in 1835. Thom was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada in a February 1836 by-election but defeated in the general election that followed later that year.
He died at Perth in 1845.
His daughter Harriett married Perth lawyer , the son of judge Henry John Boulton. Another daughter Catherine Rosamund married Chief Justice John Godfrey Spragge.
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- 1775 births
- 1845 deaths
- Members of the Legislative Assembly of Upper Canada
- Scottish emigrants to pre-Confederation Ontario
- Scottish emigrants to pre-Confederation Quebec
- Alumni of the University of Aberdeen
- British Army regimental surgeons
- Scottish surgeons
- 19th-century Canadian physicians
- 19th-century Scottish medical doctors
- Upper Canada judges
- Immigrants to Upper Canada
- Canadian justices of the peace