William Bruce Almon (25 October 1787 – 12 July 1840) was a medical doctor and politician in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
He was involved in caring for inmates of the jail and the poor house with his father.
In the aftermath of the war of 1812, he petitioned the government for assistance for the 185 Black refugees who came to the poor house from the ship Chesapeake.
As health officer in 1840, he boarded a ship to treat passengers suffering from typhus.
[3] At the base of his monument in St. Paul's Church is the parable of the Good Samaritan, in which a traveller is stripped of clothing, beaten, and left half dead alongside the road.