Seth Iredell Nelson

Seth Iredell Nelson, Sr. (1809 in Penns Valley, Union County, Pennsylvania - 1905, Round Island, Clinton County) was an early resident and a prominent pioneer hunter in the Keating Mountain vicinity of Clinton County, Pennsylvania.[1][2][3][4][5][6]

Biography

Seth Iredell Nelson was born about 1809 in Penns Valley, Union County, Pennsylvania. Seth was the oldest son of David Nelson and Mary Elizabeth née Lashbough Nelson.[1][7]

In 1834, Nelson married Elizabeth (née Keeler), daughter of Dr. Thaddeus M. Keeler & Elizbeth née Burchard Nelson.[8] They had six daughters and three sons together.[7][1]

Nelson developed a cant hook style that was used to roll logs in Clinton and Berks Counties in Pennsylvania during the 19th Century.[9][10]

In 1853, it was approved by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania that general and township elections for Keating Township would take place at the home of Seth Nelson.[11]

In Keating Township, Clinton County, Pennsylvania, there is a small town called Nelsonville. This was a small community on Keating Mountain founded by Seth Nelson.[12]

Nelson died on his farm at Round Island, Clinton County in 1905. He was buried in Nelsonville Cemetery in Keating, Clinton County, Pennsylvania.[7][13][14][15]

Hunting achievements

Nelson has often been regarded as one of Central Pennsylvania’s most successful and resourceful big game hunters and armorers. As a hunter, Seth was so renowned that he was dubbed “The King Hunter of the Sinnemahoning” by the Seneca Indians.[1][3][4][5][6]

Nelson kept a game book and documented hundreds of panthers, wolves, elk, thousands of deer, bears, wildcats, and other animals that he killed during his long career in the Pennsylvania big game fields. Nelson also said to have killed the last known wolverine in Pennsylvania.

While Nelson is renowned and well respected as a hunter, there are many legends surrounding his incredible strength and athleticism. Nelson made claims that he had recovered from blindness and having the ability to paddle himself across the Susquehanna River without a boat among many other claims.[16]

One account stated that Nelson once threw a mountain lion out of his cabin.[17]

References

  1. Mike Sajna (1990). Buck Fever: The Deer Hunting Tradition in Pennsylvania. University of Pittsburgh Press. pp. 136–. ISBN 978-0-8229-5436-1.
  2. Henry W. Shoemaker (1917). The Panther and the Wolf. Altoona Tribune Publishing Company. pp. 84–.
  3. Henry W. Shoemaker (1 November 2010). Pennsylvania Lion Or Panther and Felis Catus in Pennsylvania?. Penn State Press. pp. 44–. ISBN 978-0-271-04502-3.
  4. Henry W. Shoemaker (1920). North Mountain Mementos: Legends and Traditions Gathered in Northern Pennsylvania. Times Tribune Publishing Company. pp. 229–.
  5. Robert Wegner (1 October 1987). Deer & deer hunting. Stackpole Books. ISBN 978-0-8117-0525-7.
  6. "ExplorePAHistory.com - Image". explorepahistory.com.
  7. "Seth Iredell Nelson, Sr (1810-1905) - Find A Grave-gedenkplek". Find a Grave.
  8. "Elizabeth Keeler Nelson (1817-1905) - Find A". Find a Grave.
  9. Henry C. Mercer (15 April 2013). Ancient Carpenters' Tools: Illustrated and Explained, Together with the Implements of the Lumberman, Joiner and Cabinet-Maker i. Courier Corporation. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-486-32021-2.
  10. Henry Chapman Mercer (1975). Ancient Carpenters' Tools: Together with Lumbermen's, Joiners' and Cabinet Makers' Tools in Use in the Eighteenth Century. Horizon Press, published for the Bucks County Historical Society. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-8180-0818-4.
  11. Pennsylvania (1853). Laws of the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. pp. 24–.
  12. "Lives intersect: The disappearance of John Rohn | News, Sports, Jobs - The Express".
  13. "MUNICIPALITY". www.clintoncogensociety.org.
  14. Wilds, The Pennsylvania (November 21, 2019). "Explore the historic ruins of the Pennsylvania Wilds".
  15. http://files.usgwarchives.net/pa/clinton/cemeteries/nelsonville01.txt
  16. "Seth Nelson and the rain of fire | News, Sports, Jobs - The Express".
  17. "Keating - Intriguing Past". www.ncpenn.com.
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