Edward Nelson, 17931855 (aged 61 years)

Name
Edward /Nelson/
Surname
Nelson
Given names
Edward
Birth August 15, 1793 0 28
Christening August 15, 1793 0 28 (aged 0 days)
Birth of a daughterMary Nelson
about 1806 (aged 12 years)
MarriageCatherine BanksView this family
June 10, 1812 (aged 18 years)
Birth of a daughterJane Mc Gill Nelson
February 2, 1815 (aged 21 years)
Birth of a sonJohn Nelson
June 6, 1819 (aged 25 years)
Birth of a sonNinian Douglas Nelson
August 21, 1821 (aged 28 years)
Birth of a daughterMarian Doyle Nelson
August 21, 1821 (aged 28 years)
Birth of a sonRamsay Nelson
May 6, 1823 (aged 29 years)
Death of a sonRamsay Nelson
May 6, 1823 (aged 29 years)

Christening of a daughterMarian Doyle Nelson
May 30, 1823 (aged 29 years)
Birth of a daughterMatilda Martha McGill Nelson
November 19, 1824 (aged 31 years)
Birth of a sonHogg Nelson
March 21, 1827 (aged 33 years)
Birth of a sonEdward Banks Nelson
July 18, 1830 (aged 36 years)
Marriage of a childWilliam MorganMatilda Martha McGill NelsonView this family
April 23, 1841 (aged 47 years)

Text:

Martha OR Matilda Magill Nelson; Female; Birth: 19 NOV 1824 Midlden, Inveresk, Midlothian, Scotland; Death: 26 DEC 1906 Levan, Juab, Utah; Father: Edward Nelson; Mother: Catherine Banks; Spouse: William Morgan; Sealing to Spouse: 04 SEP 1855; Marriage: 23 APR 1841; Film Number: 456758 Page Number: Reference number:

Note: Record submitted by a member of the LDS Church

Record submitted by a member of the LDS Church Search performed using PAF Insight on 4/21/2008

Marriage of a childAndrew PattersonJane Mc Gill NelsonView this family
1851 (aged 57 years)

Birth of a grandsonEdward Patterson
May 16, 1852 (aged 58 years)
Birth of a granddaughterCatherine Banks Patterson
August 30, 1853 (aged 60 years)
Birth of a granddaughterAlexzandra Patterson
about 1854 (aged 60 years)
Death of a granddaughterAlexzandra Patterson
about 1854 (aged 60 years)
Birth of a grandsonAndrew Patterson
about 1855 (aged 61 years)
Death of a grandsonAndrew Patterson
about 1855 (aged 61 years)
Death about 1855 (aged 61 years)

LDS baptism November 8, 1881 (26 years after death)

LDS endowment November 9, 1881 (26 years after death)

LDS spouse sealingCatherine BanksView this family
November 9, 1881 (26 years after death)

LDS child sealing January 10, 1968 (113 years after death)

LDS temple: Idaho Falls, Idaho, United States

Family with parents
father
1793
Birth: August 4, 1793Liberton, Midlothian, Scotland
mother
1765
Birth: April 16, 1765 31 27Laswade, Midlothian, Scotland, Scotland
himself
17931855
Birth: August 15, 1793 0 28Liberton, Midlothian, Scotland, Scotland
Death: about 1855
Mother’s family with Hamilton Nelson
step-father
1765
Birth: about 1765 35 31
mother
1765
Birth: April 16, 1765 31 27Laswade, Midlothian, Scotland, Scotland
Marriage
Marriage: October 15, 1785Duddingston, Midlothian, Scotland, Scotland
3 years
half-brother
1789
Christening: March 1, 1789 24 23Duddingston, Midlothian, Scotland
2 years
half-brother
1791
Birth: February 13, 1791 26 25Duddingston, Midlothian, Scotland, Scotland
Family with Catherine Banks
himself
17931855
Birth: August 15, 1793 0 28Liberton, Midlothian, Scotland, Scotland
Death: about 1855
wife
1793
Birth: 1793Inveresk, Midlothian, Scotland, Scotland
Marriage
Marriage: June 10, 1812Scotland, Scotland
-6 years
daughter
1806
Birth: about 1806 12 13Inveresk, Midlothian, Scotland, Scotland
9 years
daughter
Jean %22Jane%22 Nelson Morgan Patterson.jpeg
18151878
Birth: February 2, 1815 21 22Dediston, Midlothian, Scotland, Scotland
Death: August 28, 1878Beaver, Beaver, Utah, USA
4 years
son
18191894
Birth: June 6, 1819 25 26Walliford, Inveresk, Midlothian, Scotland
Death: September 19, 1894
2 years
son
18211898
Birth: August 21, 1821 28 28Inveresk, Midlothian, Scotland, Scotland
Death: June 30, 1898
0 months
daughter
1821
Birth: August 21, 1821 28 28Walliford, Inveresk, Midlothian, Scotland
21 months
son
18231823
Birth: May 6, 1823 29 30Inveresk, Midlothian, Scotland, Scotland
Death: May 6, 1823
19 months
daughter
18241907
Birth: November 19, 1824 31 31Inveresk, Mid, Scotland, Scotland
Death: December 24, 1907Levan, Juab, Utah
2 years
son
18271900
Birth: March 21, 1827 33 34Inveresk, Midlothian, Scotland, Scotland
Death: about 1900
3 years
son
Edward banks Nelson.jpg
18301902
Birth: July 18, 1830 36 37Inveresk, Midlothian, Scotland, Scotland
Death: October 13, 1902
Note

! sources: Fam Rec of Par. Reg. Inveresk, Mid. Sctl Rec 23 Sept 1949 Endowment House Rec Gen Soc CLMH

Presents the story of: Edward Neilson

Edward Neilson was born the 4th of August 1793 in the parish of Liberton, Midlothian, Scotland, the son of Hamilton Neilson and Jean McGill. The family resided at Huntershall.

The Neilson family had resided in Duddingston parish, probably in the little village of Easter Duddingston for many generations. They were colliers (the ancient term is coalhewer or the American term is coal miner). We can be certain that they remained in that place because colliers in Scotland were thirled to the land on which they worked. Thirled is an old legal term that means essentially "staked" or "pierced through". Being thirled was a type of slavery in which the law allowed that they could be arrested and punished for removing themselves from the property or mine in which they worked. For all practical purposes they were slaves. The law thirling the colliers was passed by the Scottish Parliament because of the difficulty of attracting workers into the dangerous and dreary business of coal hewing. We believe the Neilsons had been in Duddingston parish even longer than the records reveal.

Both Duddingston and Liberton are parishes, which lie just to the east and southeast of Edinburgh respectively, and are contiguous to the parishes that comprise the central part of the city. From the ancient main street (The Royal Mile) of Edinburgh, where the government buildings and Edinburgh Castle stand, it is about two miles to Duddingston and not more than three to Liberton. These two parishes are adjacent to one another.

All that leads us to the circumstance of our Edward's birth in Liberton. Coal has been worked in this area from time beyond memory, but it began to be worked on an increasing scale as the industrial revolution raised the demand for coal. Thirteen seams of coal have been found and worked in the parish of Duddingston, and these lie between layers of rock, clay and schist. All these geological layers lie beneath the surface and decline at an angle of 45 degrees from the horizon towards the west. This declination making the mining of coal very difficult at best. With the proximity of the ocean, and the fact that these parishes are in the valley of the Esk river, the challenge in removing the coal was underground water.

In 1763, the proprietor, James Hamilton, The Earl of Abercorn, began building a steam pump for that very purpose. Before that time the Earl had let a contract with Mr. Biggar Woolmet to open a level (drainage tunnel or canal) with the sea and this level was eventually extended some 3 miles and connected to several other coal works. In the past a chain and buckets device had been rigged for the elevation of the water from the coal pits. But after the completion of the above steam powered pump the mining effort was extended to a depth of 312 ft. This pump was a steam driven, piston affair with the steam piston having a diameter of 66 inches and a stroke of 9 feet and could raise upwards of 500 gallons of water per minute when running at ten strokes per minute.

Under these conditions the Neilsons worked along with about 270 other colliers at the Duddingston colliery. Until, the 20th of March 1790, when the whole of it was flooded with water from the level, which entirely overcame the pump and rendered the entire operation useless. The sudden increase in water was the result of pumping at the other collieries that used the same level as a drain. The effect was a plethora of legal pleas, which, no doubt, sent the family of Hamilton Neilson and Jean McGill to Liberton. Remember they were legally thirled colliers. They went where the Landlord agreed to send them.

Thus, in 1793, the birth of Edward Neilson was recorded in the parish of Liberton, not Duddingston, as had been the case for his ancestors for at least two centuries. But, this change was simply a harbinger of what would happen to the Neilson family in the 19th century as Edward grew up and entered the pits.

My Collier Laddie Robert Burns

"Whare live ye, my bonie lass? And tell me what they ca' ye;" "My name," she says, "is Mistress Jean, And I follow the Collier Laddie." "My name," she says, "is Mistress Jean, And I follow the Collier Laddie."

"See you not yon hills and dales The sun shines on sae brawlie; They a' are mine, and they shall be thine, Gin ye'll leave your Collier Laddie They a' are mine, and they shall be thine, Gin ye'll leave your Collier Laddie

"Ye shall gang in gay attire, Weel buskit up sae gaudy; And ane to wait on every hand, Gin ye'll leave your Collier Laddie." And ane to wait on every hand, Gin ye'll leave your Collier Laddie."

"I can win five pennies in a day, An' spen't at night fu' brawlie: And make my bed in the collier's neuk, And lie down wi' my Collier Laddie. And make my bed in the collier's neuk, And lie down wi' my Collier Laddie."

"Love for love is the bargain for me, Tho' the wee cot-house should haud me; And the warld before me to win my bread, And fair fa' my Collier Laddie! And the warld before me to win my bread, And fair fa' my Collier Laddie!"