Nelson was commander of the O. M. Mitchel post of the
Grand Army of the Republic. He was a deacon of the Central Congregational Church. He lived on the
Boulevard in Atlanta. His home included of land. The house was in today's
Old Fourth Ward, then an elegant avenue of mansions, burned down in the
Great Atlanta fire of 1917. In 1921, the site was acquired by
Atlanta Medical Center for its present location. Nelson married Eliza M. Hendry of New York state in 1866. They had five children, Levi D., Edith, George, Adelaide, and Franckie. His sister married Iowa judge
George R. Struble. Nelson died on August 28, 1903, at his home in Atlanta. He was buried at Woodlawn Cemetery in Toledo, Iowa. ==References==