John Ker (planter)

John Ker
BornJune 27, 1789
DiedJanuary 4, 1850
EducationUniversity of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
Occupation(s)Surgeon, planter, politician
TitleDoctor
Board member ofAmerican Colonization Society
SpouseMary (Baker) Ker
Children6
Parent(s)David Ker
Mary Ker
RelativesJoshua Baker (father-in-law)

John Ker (1789–1850) 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 (MCS), promoting the removal of free people of color to a colony in West Africa (which later became part of Liberia). The MCS modeled itself after the American Colonization Society, the national organization for which 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. A surgeon in the War of 1812 and Creek War, Ker was also a slaveowner and owned a cotton plantation in Louisiana. As a planter, he likewise served in the Louisiana state house.