Joseph-Ignace Aumond (March 21, 1810 – November 9, 1879) was a lumber merchant in Ontario, Canada.
[1] The son of Ignace Aumon and Euphrosine Robichaud, he was born in L'Assomption, Lower Canada and went to work as a store clerk in Montreal after completing his schooling.
He later suffered a major financial setback but continued on in the timber trade at a reduced level.
He was a partner with John Egan in the operation of two steamships on the Ottawa River and also partnered with Egan and Ruggles Wright in constructing a horse-drawn railway to provide an overland connection around rapids to link the two steamship routes.
In 1874, he ran unsuccessfully as a Conservative for the Ottawa City seat in the House of Commons of Canada.