John Ker (planter)


John Ker was an American surgeon, planter and politician in Louisiana. Together with several major Mississippi planters, in the 1830s Ker co-founded the Mississippi Colonization Society, promoting removal of free American blacks to a colony in West Africa. The state group modeled itself after the American Colonization Society, where Ker later served as a vice president.
Born in North Carolina, where his father was the first president of the new state university, Ker moved with his family as a youth to Mississippi after 1817, when his father was appointed to the state supreme court. He went to medical school in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and returned to the South. Serving as a surgeon in the War of 1812 and Creek War, Ker later owned a cotton plantation in Louisiana and served in the state house.

Early life

John Ker was born on June 27, 1789 in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. His father, David Ker, born in Downpatrick, Northern Ireland and of Scottish ancestry, immigrated with his wife Mary to the United States in the 1780s. He served as the first President of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, which was chartered in 1789 and opened for students in 1795.
The family moved to Mississippi about 1817, the year it became a state. President Thomas Jefferson appointed the father David Ker to the Supreme Court of Mississippi.
John Ker had been educated privately, as was common among the southern upper class. He went North to medical school, earning a Doctor of Medicine degree from the Medical School at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1822.

Career

Ker worked as a medical doctor. He served as a surgeon for the US Army in the War of 1812 and the Creek War of 1813-1814.
Ker also became a planter, owning the Good Hope Plantation in Concordia Parish, Louisiana, which produced cotton as a commodity crop, based on slave labor. He was a patron of Oakland College in Lorman, Mississippi, a college founded by Reverend Jeremiah Chamberlain ; it closed during the Civil War.
In the 1830s, Ker was elected and served in the Louisiana State Senate. That same decade, together with major slave owners Isaac Ross, Edward McGehee, Stephen Duncan, and educator Chamberlain, all of Mississippi, he co-founded the Mississippi Colonization Society. Its goal was to send free people of color to a colony they founded that was called Mississippi-in-Africa, in order to remove them from southern slave societies. The MCS purchased its own land for resettlement of American blacks. Ker served as the vice-president of the society. The organization was modeled after the American Colonization Society, but it addressed the issue of free blacks in Mississippi, where slaves outnumbered whites by about three to one.
Additionally, Ker later served as one of the vice presidents of the American Colonization Society. Mississippi-in-Africa, the MCS property, was ultimately combined with the rest of what became Liberia.

Personal life

He married Mary Kenard Baker, the daughter of Joshua Baker, who later served as the 22nd Governor of Louisiana in 1868. They had four sons and two daughters:
Ker and his family summered at Linden, a mansion on the bluffs above the river in Natchez, Mississippi. It is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The property was formerly owned by Thomas Buck Reed, a United States Senator from Mississippi and son-in-law of Isaac Ross, whom Ker knew through the Mississippi Colonization Society.
Ker was a Presbyterian, the Protestant church strongly associated with Scotland and its emigrants.

Death

He died on January 4, 1850.