E. D. Tillson | |
Birth Date: | 26 March 1825 |
Birth Place: | Normandale, Ontario |
Death Place: | Tillsonburg, Canada |
Spouse: | Mary Ann Van Norman (m. 1850) |
Parents: | George Tillson |
Edwin Delevan Tillson was a businessman and politician from Tillsonburg, Ontario, and the town's first mayor.[1]
Tillson was born on March 26, 1825, in Normandale, Ontario to George Tillson and Nancy Barker. He would attend Norwalk Academy, Ohio for seven months, and then taught for three months, using the money he made there in order to fund his first sawmill with Wright Barker, and Charles Cody on Clear Creek in 1846.[2] [3] Edwin would then marry Mary Ann Van Norman in 1850. By the 1860s, Tillson owned many mills and businesses throughout Tillsonburg, including a sawmill, a grist-mill, a planning-mill, a sash-and-door factory, and a store. In 1865, Tillson began to expand his business to include an oat mill, which would be the basis of his "Tillson Pan-Dried Oats" which became a famous cereal throughout Canada.[4] Tillson initiated Tillsonburg's incorporation as a town in 1872, and served as its first mayor, previously acting as a reeve of the town.[5] In 1881, Edwin began work on the Annandale House, built on his farm, and nowa national historic site[6] Tillson would die on January 31, 1902, in the Annandale House.[7] [8] [9] [10]