Elizabeth McLeod
Elizabeth McLeod, the third child of John and Christina was born in
1826. The birth record of Elizabeth has not been located but she was almost
certainly born at Altnabreck and likely baptised at Achreny. The
main Halkirk parish church was about 24 miles away from Altnabreck with the Thurso River often being uncrossable
and very few bridges across the river, but there was a closer outpost church at
Achreny known as a ‘missionary church’ that was supported by a travelling
minister. Elizabeth may have been named after her mother’s
cousin Elizabeth in whose house at Badbea young Christina spent a lot of time
following the death of her mother Katherine.
Betsy
Although named Elizabeth in several documents, when she married she
used the name Betsy which I think indicates that was her preferred name so I
will default to Betsy.
Sphagnum Moss
To Rumsdale
About 1829, when she was only three, Betsy moved with her family from
Aultnabreck to Rumsdale and grew up there. With the family being known for
educating their children it is likely that Betsy went to school at some stage.
The south dyke of the Rumsdale Park
with the
remains of the shepherd's house on the
eminence behind it.
|
Busy Family
It would have been a busy family with a new baby every two years or so.
Father John was away a lot droving the sheep to market or managing the big
Rumsdale farm. Children all had to help with chores like:
- churning butter or
- getting water from the well. Old maps show a well on the middle of the stone enclosure at Rumsdale.
- helping stack or bring peat in for the fire was another chore everyone had to help with.
Census 1841
Betsy McLeod was not
located in the 1841 census - she may have left home for work by then possibly
as a ‘Female Servant’ – a common occupation for young women at the time.
An abandoned farm at Backlass
|
Census 1851
The
first record located of Betsy is the 1851 census where she is shown as
Elizabeth McLeod age 25 living at Backlass with her two brothers, Willliam aged
20 who is a shepherd and Farquhar at 11 is at school. Betsy is most likely running the house and
looking after her brothers. The census also shows a family at the nearby settlement
of Achscoraclate with a young school teacher boarding with them so probably
there was a school there that Farquhar
attended. Backlass was a walk
across the moors south of Achscoraclate.
Betsy & William Married
In 1859 Betsy married
William Williamson of Tormsdale. Tormsdale was a settlement just a mile
south of Westerdale. They were married in the Westerdale Free Church by the Rev
David Ferguson. It was a family occasion with the witnesses Farquhar McLeod and Donald Ross (Betsy’s
brother-in-law) and her parents John and Christina there. If David Ferguson was true to
character the wedding was a genial occasion.
The next minister of the Westerdale-Achreny charge, David Ferguson (1815-1887), was inducted on 5 April 1849. He was a native of Forse, Latheron, and had graduated at King’s College, Aberdeen, in March 1843. “He was a man of genial disposition, upright and straightforward in word and deed. He had a strong and well-built frame, indispensable for his work, which extended over an area of many miles of hill and moor.
/ / / / / The Achreny Mission – Part 3 – After the Disruption
Census 1861
The 1861 census shows William and Elizabeth living at East Tormsdale where William is a farmer of 10 acres. Betsy is running a busy household and, as before, having family residing with her. Her brother Alexander McLeod (my great grandfather) was living with the Williamsons and rather surprisingly at 18 he was shown as still a scholar. Betsy has also taken in a baby. Judging by his name, this little boy William was probably connected via the Williamsons.
The next few years were busy for Betsy and William with
the birth of their own children and a move to Rangag where they both lived for
the rest of their lives. I will continue the story in the next blog.
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