Thomas H. Nelson
Thomas Henry Nelson (1820–1896) was a U.S. diplomat and politician from Indiana.[1]
Nelson was born in Minerva, Mason County, Kentucky on October 24, 1821 to Dr. Thomas W. Nelson and Frances Doniphan Nelson. In 1844, Thomas married Elizabeth "Lizzie" Key, the daughter of Marshall Key and Harriet Sellman Key. She was a student of Harriet Beecher Stowe.
The Nelsons moved to Rockville, Indiana, where he set up a law practice. A few years later, the couple moved to Terre Haute, Indiana. In 1852 he was on the Board of Commissioners for the construction of the Springfield and Terre Haute Railroad. During the 1850s, he was tasked with organizing the Republican Party in Indiana. In 1860, he unsuccessfully ran for the United States Congress. He was appointed U.S. Envoy to Chile in 1861 by Abraham Lincoln. On December 8, 1863, he organized rescue operations during the catastrophic Church of the Company Fire in Santiago and was called "a true hero of Chile" for doing so.
He was made U.S. Envoy to Mexico from 1869 to 1873 by Ulysses S. Grant. Nelson died in Terre Haute, on March 14, 1896, and is buried there in Woodlawn Cemetery.[2]
Notes
Diplomatic posts | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by John Bigler |
United States Envoy to Chile 4 October 1861 – 12 March 1866 |
Succeeded by Hugh Judson Kilpatrick |
Preceded by William S. Rosecrans |
United States Envoy to Mexico June 26, 1869 – June 16, 1873 |
Succeeded by John W. Foster |