John Black (merchant)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/John_Black_(merchant) an entity of type: Thing

جون بلاك هو تاجر وسياسي كندي، ولد في 1765 في أبردين في المملكة المتحدة، وتوفي بنفس المكان في 1823. انتخب عضو الجمعية التشريعية لنيو برونزويك ‏ عن دائرة Northumberland County ‏ (1793 – 1795). rdf:langString
John Black (c. 1765 – 4 September 1823) was a Scottish merchant and politician in New Brunswick. He represented Northumberland County in the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick from 1793 to 1795. He was born in Aberdeen and came to Saint John, New Brunswick in 1785 as an Admiralty agent. Black was also an agent for Blair and Glenie, a Scottish firm that traded in timber. In 1787, he went into business in Saint John for himself. His brother William and two cousins later joined him in the business. He also became involved in the trade of salted fish with the West Indies and established his own trading fleet of at least nine vessels. Black encouraged the local production of hemp for the production of cord for use on ships. rdf:langString
rdf:langString جون بلاك (سياسي كندي، مواليد 1765)
rdf:langString John Black (merchant)
rdf:langString John Black
rdf:langString John Black
rdf:langString Aberdeen, Scotland
xsd:integer 30736056
xsd:integer 1085053254
rdf:langString Hon. John Black, Black-Binney House, Halifax, Nova Scotia
rdf:langString Merchant and politician
rdf:langString Christopher Billopp
rdf:langString James Boyle Uniacke
rdf:langString Catherine Billopp
rdf:langString Mary McGeorge
rdf:langString جون بلاك هو تاجر وسياسي كندي، ولد في 1765 في أبردين في المملكة المتحدة، وتوفي بنفس المكان في 1823. انتخب عضو الجمعية التشريعية لنيو برونزويك ‏ عن دائرة Northumberland County ‏ (1793 – 1795).
rdf:langString John Black (c. 1765 – 4 September 1823) was a Scottish merchant and politician in New Brunswick. He represented Northumberland County in the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick from 1793 to 1795. He was born in Aberdeen and came to Saint John, New Brunswick in 1785 as an Admiralty agent. Black was also an agent for Blair and Glenie, a Scottish firm that traded in timber. In 1787, he went into business in Saint John for himself. His brother William and two cousins later joined him in the business. He also became involved in the trade of salted fish with the West Indies and established his own trading fleet of at least nine vessels. Black encouraged the local production of hemp for the production of cord for use on ships. In 1806, he moved to Halifax, Nova Scotia. Black was named president of the North British Society in 1809. In 1813, he was named to the Nova Scotia Council. Black was married twice: first to Mary, the widow of John McGeorge, in 1797 and then to Catherine, the daughter of Christopher Billopp, in 1807. Black constructed what is now known as the Black-Binney House, displaying influences from contemporary Scottish and Aberdonian architecture of the time. After suffering poor health later in life and travelling to Britain in hopes of a cure, Black died in Aberdeen. His daughter Rosina Jane married James Boyle Uniacke.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3424
xsd:gYear 1765

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