Edward Ingall (c.1774-1850) was apparently related to George Ingall, who had married Hannah, the daughter of Joseph Oldale. The latter was a partner in Oldale & Ellin (see Thomas Ellin). Apparently, Ingall became a partner in Ellin’s during the 1820s, when his personal address was Ellin’s Table Knife Works, Arundel Street. In the Census (1841), he was a merchant in Arundel Street, living with his wife, Ann, and two sons, Henry and Samuel. Edward Ingall withdrew from Ellin’s in 1842 and then partnered his sons as a steel converter/refiner. This was dissolved in 1849. Edward Ingall died on 22 April 1850, aged 76. He was a man of ‘remarkably industrious habits; and his charities, though extensive, were without ostentation’ (Sheffield Independent, 22 June 1850). He was a consistent member of the Church of England. His eldest son, Henry, died only weeks later on 13 June 1850 (aged 24): a ‘young man of retired habits’. The family was buried in St Mary’s churchyard, Bramall Lane.