Who Wrote The Tales?

Wilson himself wrote the tales for the first 49 editions, it was very much a personal publishing endeavour. The final tale was however The Minister's Daughter, which looks to be a novel chopped into 9 parts to fill the last 3 editions, no doubt during a period of illness prior to his death.

Readers were encouraged to continue buying the tales after his death to support his widow. They were told there were “tales as yet untold”. In reality, the family and his printers, John Sutherland in Edinburgh, where his brother John worked, organised the continuation of the tales. The next tale was written by Dr Carr who had just published his history of Coldingham, and he took from this. They soon had to appoint an editor and writers from all over Scotland submitted tales to be published in what was becoming a popular and well known publication both nationally and internationally.

We don’t know the names of many of the original contributors, but from Leighton's latter smaller editions we do know of the following contributors:

Alexander Bethune 4 tales

John Bethune 1 tale

Alexander Campbell 40 tales

Mathew Conolly 5 tales

Prof Thos. Gillespie 47 tales

William Hetherington 1 tale

John Howell 14 tales

Alexander Leighton 79 tales

Walter Logan 4 tales

James Maidment 3 tales

Thoedore Martin 2 tales

Patrick Maxwell 1 tale

Hugh Miller 8 tales

David Moir 1 tale

Alexander Peterkin 1 tale

Oliver Richardson 11 tales

Rev G Thomson 1 tale

After Wilson's death, the tales were seldom out of print for the next 150 or so years. We know of over 40 different editions including American, Australian and even German in both English and German. They became common around the world and were often given to emigrating families. They were still being given as long service and school prizes in the early 1900s and were on the curriculum of some Scottish schools until the mid-20th Century.