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His name was Stewart Paterson and although he seems to have remained a mole-catcher all his life he was also a bit of a property developer.
The family lived on a farm called Cairns of Drimmie. Stewart’s fathers earnings will have been about £12 a year, which according to the local minister at the time was the going rate for a farm labourer at that date in that parish. If Stewart went to school he will have had to pay school fees of 2 shillings and 6 pence a quarter to learn reading and writing (the equivalent of 13p a quarter in decimalisation currency – not a trivial amount for a family with lots of children and the breadwinner earning only £12 a year.).
When Stewart was in his early teens the family moved from Bendochy to Legerwood in the Scottish Borders, about 120 miles away. Legerwood is about 7 miles north of Galashiels.
Stewart left home to go to work sometime before he was 17. He moved about 10 miles east of Legerwood to the farm of Newtonlees in the parish of Edam just north of Kelso. He was employed as a mole-catcher. The farmer he worked for was James Ross and Newtonlees was a 606 acre farm employing 24 people. Stewart lived in the main farmhouse.
By spring of 1851 the family (minus Stewart) were living at Legerwood, but by this time James was a widower. The date of Emily’s death is not known. She may even have died before the family moved from Bendochy to Legerwood. Living with them was James’s 28-year-old unmarried niece Christian as a “House Servant”. So it would seem that the niece had been brought down from Perthshire to keep house for James and the family since Emily was dead. (Although John and Hugh were adults by this time the oldest girl, Isabel, was only 12 and could not be expected to keep house. Of course John and Hugh as males would not have been expected to do house keeping.)
The next we hear of Stewart is the calling of his marriage banns on the 26th November and the 3rd of December 1854. He was described as living in the parish of Legerwood – so he must have moved back there from Newtonlees sometime after April 1851 and before December 1854. He is also described in the banns as a “General labourer” – he may not have liked that since he seems to have taken pride in calling himself a “mole-catcher” all his life. He was marrying Helen Mason who lived at Pyetshaw in the Earlston parish. So the marriage will have taken place in late December or early January. (Helen was the daughter of Alexander Mason and Isabel Dodds.)
Stewart and Helen’s first child was Isabel who was born in 1856. (She was my grandmother’s mother. She married Robert Johnston a Berwick-upon-Tweed tailor and clothier.) Their second child, James, was born in 1859. At the 1861 census they were living at Standingstone, Earlston and with them at that time were Stewart’s unmarried older brother Hugh (also a mole-catcher) and Helen’s mother Isabel who was 63. (Isabel had been a widow for more than 20 years.)
Around 1870 Stewart built a home for himself, and a number of adjoining cottages at the part of Earlston’s main street which was known as East End. It is unclear whether he himself was involved in their building or if he employed others to do this work.
Between 1861 and 1871 three more children were born (Alexander in 1862, Emily in 1867, and John in 1869) and at the time of the 1871 census the family were living at 92 Main Street, Earlston presumably in the house which Stewart had built. Living with them was Stewart’s father James (71).
Helen’s mother Isabella died on the morning of 3rd September 1872 at the age of 73 Stewart registered the death the next day.
At the time of the 1881 census their address is recorded as High Street, East End, and of their children only Emily and John were living with them. They also had Janet Murray (16) living with them as a “General Servant Domestic”.
Helen died sometime after the 1881 census and before the 1891 census. Stewart remarried. His new wife was called Jane, and she was twenty years his junior. They had two children, David who was born in 1892 and Elizabeth (“Lizzie”) born in 1895 – who I remember as “Auntie Lizzie” and I remember visiting the family home, built by Stewart, in Earlston a number of times in the late 1940s or early 1950s, (in fact Auntie Lizzie was my grandmother’s mother’s half-sister, so I suppose that makes her my father’s aunt.)
In the 1901 census their address is given as “115 High” and as well as Stewart and Jane in the house were David and Lizzie, and also Helen Hunter who was Stewart’s grand-daughter.
Stewart Paterson died in 1908 at the age of 75. He seems to have died a comparatively rich man. My Uncle Arnold remembers his father, my grandfather, telling of being called to Earlston on Stewart’s death to collect £300 left to various family members. Presumably he left other sums to his more immediate family and there was also the houses he had built. So it would seem he left wealth equivalent to at least £200,000 today – not bad for someone who started his working life as a sixteen-year-old mole-catcher.
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Afterword - What happened to some of the others mentioned?
David Paterson – son of Stewart and Jane. Went to fight in World War I with the Royal Canadian Regiment and was killed in Flanders in on 3 August 1916 aged 25. He is buried in the Menin Road South Military Cemetery, Belgium. He is commemorated on the war memorial in the centre of Earlston.
Isabel Paterson – Stewart and Helen’s first child. Moved to Berwick around the age of 20 and married Robert Johnston. The extract below is from the 1881 census. Robert Johnston went on to run a very successful tailoring business.
“Auntie Lizzie” – lived the rest of her life in the family home which had been built by Stewart. My parents, in 1932, spent their honeymoon there. With my parents I visited her there a number of times in the late 1940s or early 1950s.
Jane - Jane, Stewart’s second wife, was still living in Earlston at the time David was killed in 1916.