William Gooderham Sr.

William Gooderham (August 29, 1790 – August 20, 1881) was a Canadian distiller, businessman, and banker, founder of the Gooderham and Worts company.Born in Scole, Norfolk, England, the son of James and Sarah Gooderham, Gooderham emigrated to York, Upper Canada in 1832 to invest and partner in a wind powered flour mill with his brother-in-law, James Worts. Briefly operating as Worts and Gooderham until Worts died in 1834, Gooderham continued to operate the mill as the William Gooderham Company. In 1837, he added a distillery to make efficient use of surplus and second-grade grain. Having taken Worts' son, James Gooderham Worts under his guidance since Worts death, they became partners in 1845 and renamed the company as Gooderham and Worts. Expanding their business, they introduced gas for illumination, expanded use of steam power in the plants and built their own wharf to ship their consignments - by the 1860s they owned schooners on the Great Lakes. During the 1860s and 1870s, Gooderham was a community and business leader in the Toronto industrial landscape and in transportation and financial services, as well as on the stock exchange, and in the council and the board of arbitration of the Toronto Board of Trade.In the summer of 1842, he participated with Bishop John Strachan in the founding meeting of Little Trinity Anglican Church, where he later was a warden for 30 years. A marble memorial for Gooderham is mounted on the west wall inside the church.In 1864, he was appointed president of the Bank of Toronto.

Personal facts

William Gooderham Sr.
Birth dateAugust 29, 1790
Birth place
England , Norfolk , Scole
Nationality
Canadians
Date of deathAugust 20, 1881
Place of death
Ontario , Toronto
Children
William Gooderham Jr.
George Gooderham Sr
Known for
Gooderham and Worts

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William Gooderham Sr. on Wikipedia