| Birthdate: | |
| Birthplace: | Kentville, Nova Scotia, Canada |
| Death: | Died in Nova Scotia, Canada |
| Managed by: | June Barnes |
| Last Updated: | |
http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?id_nbr=4767&PHPSESSID=7ubpa8k89qksrrd2rlv2q41di5
William Bennett Webster
Doctor, geologist, and politican; b. 18 Jan. 1798 at Kentville, N.S., eldest of three sons of Dr Isaac Webster and Prudence Bentley; m. on 11 Sept. 1826 Wilhelmina Moore, and they had four children; d. 4 April 1861 at Halifax, N.S.
After early schooling in the Cornwallis area, William Bennett Webster went to Scotland, where he studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh. After graduation he travelled widely on the Continent and visited several clinics. About 1822 he returned to Nova Scotia to settle in Kentville. He followed his father in his profession, his Presbyterianism, and his inventiveness. He inherited considerable property and in his turn acquired more. In 1855 he was elected to the assembly for King’s County and held the post until 1859 when the constituency was divided. He was then elected to represent Kings County, Southern Division, a seat he held until his death.
An amateur geologist, he studied the minerals of the Blomidon area in company with Abraham Gesner, his brother-in-law, and formed an outstanding geological collection which was eventually presented by his widow to the Provincial Museum. He discovered an interesting fossil which was named Dictyonema Websteri in his honour. He was also remembered as a man who invented “mechanical contrivances.” An interest in town planning prompted him to lay out the main streets of Kentville, which a century later remain as he drew them.
| 1798 |
January 18, 1798
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Nova Scotia, Canada
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| 1826 |
September 11, 1826
Age 28
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Canada
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| 1861 |
April 4, 1861
Age 63
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Nova Scotia, Canada
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