Person    | Male  Born 25/12/1847  Died 11/8/1907

Henry James Felton

Henry James Felton

Chairman of Cripplegate Institute in 1894.

Henry James Felton is listed as a churchwarden at St Giles Cripplegate in 1885 and as a vestryman in 1887. His son, Charles Page Felton, attended City of London School, and Warwick Road, Upper Clapton (now Warwick Grove E5) is given as the Felton address.

Our colleague, Andrew Behan, states that Henry James Felton was born on 25 December 1847 in Spitalfields, Middlesex (now Greater London), a son of Matthew George Felton (1812-1872) and Sarah Felton née Clarke (1811-1892). His birth was registered in the 1st quarter of 1848 in the Whitechapel Registration District, Middlesex (now Greater London).

On 23 March 1856 he, together with his nephew, George Matthew Saweard Felton (1855-1857), were baptised in St Leonard's Church, Shoreditch, Middlesex (now Greater London) where in the baptismal register his family are shown to be living 16 Pearson Street, Shoreditch and that his father was an umbrella maker. The register also shows his date of birth as 25 December 1848, but it is believed the curate who conducted the baptism erroneously recorded the year of his birth and it should have been 1847.

In the 1871 census he is shown as Henry Felton, aged 23 years and an umbrella maker, living at 5 Gore Terrace, Bethnal Green, Middlesex (now Greater London), with his parents together with a female domestic servant. His father continued to be described as an umbrella maker.

On 15 August 1874 he married Mary Jane Page (1854-1936) at St Matthew's Church, Bethnal Green, where in the marriage register he is shown as of full age, a bachelor and a warehouseman residing 4 Tynemouth Terrace, Bethnal Green, whilst his wife was described as a minor and a spinster living at 18 St James Road, Bethnal Green, the daughter of Charles Page, a merchant.

When the 1881 census was undertaken he was shown as Henry J. Felton, aged 33 years and an umbrella manufacturer, residing at 27 Warwick Road, Stamford Hill, Hackney, Middlesex (now Greater London) with his wife and their three children: Charles Page Felton (1876-1917) - a scholar; Ethel Mary Felton (1878-1926) and Hilda Maud Felton (1879-1976), his brother George Matthew Felton (1833-1883) - a shirt and collar manufacturer, two nieces: Isabel Sarah Felton (1860-1927) and Laura Felton (1861-1942), together with a cook, a housemaid and a nurse.

On 3 September 1883 he applied to be admitted into the Freedom of the City of London by redemption, claiming that he carrying out the business of a manufacturer at 6 Aldermanbury Postern.

He was described in the 1891 census as Henry J. Fulton, aged 43 years and an umbrella manufacturer, living in a property in Oaklands Road, Bromley, Kent (now Greater London), with his wife, five of their children: Ethel Mary Felton; Hilda Maud Felton; Kathleen Gleeson Felton (1881-1957); Reginald Horace Felton (1883-1970) and Duncan George William Felton (1887-1974), his niece Laura Felton, together with a cook, a housemaid and a nurse.

He was described in the 1901 census as aged 53 years and a retired manufacturer of umbrellas living at Nos.3 and 4 Beach Mansions, Southsea, Hampshire, with his wife, who was shown a boarding house proprietress, five of their children: Ethel Mary Felton; Hilda Maud Felton; Kathleen Gleeson Felton; Reginald Horace Felton and Duncan George William Felton, his great niece Isabella Mary Wreford (1892-1958), 10 female and 3 male boarders, 2 housekeepers, a cook, a kitchen maid, a parlour maid, a pantry maid and a male waiter.

His death, aged 59 years, was registered in the 3rd quarter of 1907 in the Portsmouth Registration District, Hampshire. Probate records confirm that his address had been 4 Beach Mansions, Southsea and that he died on 11 August 1907 at the Rothbury Nursing Home, Clarendon Road, Southsea. Probate was granted on 7 October 1907 jointly to his widow and to his son Charles Page Felton, a manufacturer's agent. His effects totalled £15,264-15s-10d.

He is commemorated as 'H. J. FELTON Chairman.' on the Cripplegate Institute foundation stone at Cripplegate House, 1 Golden Lane, London, EC1Y 0RR.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
Henry James Felton

Creations i

Cripplegate Institute

Prince George (later King George V) was made Duke of York in 1892 when he bec...

Read More

Other Subjects

Gordon Usmar

Gordon Usmar

Gordon Usmar was born on 26 October 1881 in Chiswick, Middlesex (now Greater London), one of the six children of John Henry Usman (1847-1929) and Agnes Ness Usman née Grant (1851-1946). His birth w...

Person, Industry

1 memorial
BPEC

BPEC

BPEC is the leading provider of training and certification for the Building Services Engineering sector, which covers the gas, oil, plumbing, electrotechnical, heating, ventilating, air conditionin...

Group, Education, Industry

1 memorial
First Baron Aberconway

First Baron Aberconway

Politician. Born Charles Benjamin Bright McLaren in Edinburgh. He began his career in journalism before turning to the law. Elected as an M.P. in 1880. Member of the Privy Council. Became Baron Abe...

Person, Industry, Journalism / Publishing, Law, Politics & Administration, Scotland, Wales

1 memorial
Barnett I. Barnato

Barnett I. Barnato

South African financier, b. London as Barnett Isaacs. Competitor of Cecil Rhodes in the South African diamond world. Entered politics in the Cape. His son Woolf became a successful racing driver an...

Person, Industry, South Africa

1 memorial
Tea Trade in London

Tea Trade in London

The following text is taken from the Shoreditch plaque: This plaque commemorates 350 years of the tea industry in the City of London. The industry was spread over Plantation House (now Plantation ...

Group, Commerce, Food & Drink, Industry

3 memorials

Previously viewed

Jenner statue

Jenner statue

W2, Kensington Gardens, Italian Garden

This statue was unveiled by Prince Albert in 1858 in Trafalgar Square. It was moved to Kensington Gardens (the first statue erected here)...

1 subject commemorated, 2 creators
P. H. Hitch
War dead, WW1
1 memorial
Dante Gabriel Rossetti

Dante Gabriel Rossetti

Poet & painter. Born 38 Charlotte Street, son of an Italian political refugee and Professor of Italian (with a bit of a thing about Dante). Brother to Christina. Their mother was brother to Dr ...

Person, Art, Poetry

4 memorials
Oliver Cromwell

Oliver Cromwell

Born Huntingdon, the great-grandson of Richard Cromwell who was Thomas Cromwell's nephew. The picture source website also provides these words: "Following the traumatic upheavals of civil war and r...

Person, Politics & Administration

7 memorials
James  Fegan

James Fegan

Philanthropist. Born James William Condell Fegan in Southampton. He moved to London in 1865 and eventually joined a firm of colonial brokers. He soon became aware of the plight of many young boys l...

Person, Children, Philanthropy, Social Welfare

1 memorial