Person    | Male  Born 1846  Died 17/9/1921

Mark Dalton

Mark Dalton

Chairman of Bow vestry in 1900. In this instance, 'vestry' refers to a committee for secular and church government for a parish which met in the vestry of the parish church.

Our colleague Andrew Behan has researched this man and found the photo on Ancestry.co.uk: Mark Dalton was born in Coggeshall, Essex, the fifth of the nine children of Jacob Dalton and Rachel Dalton née Willet. His father was an Inn Keeper & Smith. The 1851 census shows the family living in Stoneham Street, Coggeshall, but the 1861 shows him living with his one of his brother's family at Springfield Hill, Chelmsford and his occupation was given as an Apprentice to a Printer. On 19 September 1869 he married Emma Eliza Hitchens at St John of Jerusalem Church, South Hackney and they went on to have four children. His occupation was recorded as Compositor. The 1871 census lists the family as living at 15 Norman Road, North Bow, his occupation being a Printers Compositor and the 1875 Electoral Register confirms that he was occupying four rooms on the first floor of the house.

By 1879 he had moved to 311 Old Ford Road, Bow and the 1881 census shows he was now a Master Printer employing one apprentice. The 1884 Electoral Register shows that he was now living at 520B Old Ford Road, Bow and in 1887 he moved to 340 Old Ford Road, Bethnal Green where he was to remain for the rest of his life. In 1904 as an Alderman of Poplar Borough Council he was elected as the Mayor and in 1907 he was appointed by the Lord Chancellor as a Justice of the Peace. At the 1918 general election he stood as a candidate for the break-away Independent Liberal Party for the Poplar, Bow and Bromley constituency running against the war-formed coalition government. The coalition won a very large majority and Dalton was badly defeated, losing his deposit. His wife died in early 1921 and he died at home later that year on 17 September, aged 75 years. Probate was granted and his estate totalled £865-1s-10d.

Credit for this entry to: Alan Patient of www.plaquesoflondon.co.uk

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:
Mark Dalton

Creations i

Bow Library

{On the central plaque:} This stone was laid by J. Passmore Edwards Esq 19 Oc...

Read More

Other Subjects

Charles Mann

Charles Mann

Co-church warden of St Botolph Without Aldersgate in 1868.

Person, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
Sir Charles Higham

Sir Charles Higham

Advertising mogul, Conservative politician and local philanthropist. Born Walthamstow. His father died when Charles was 9 and his mother emigrated with her two sons to the States. Aged 13 he left h...

Person, Politics & Administration, USA

2 memorials
Sir Henry Robson

Sir Henry Robson

Mayor of the Royal Borough of Kensington twice: 1905-6 and 1906-7. An active Methodist.  We believe he had a daughter who married in 1902: "Jessie Murdoch Robson, daughter of Sir Henry Robson and L...

Person, Politics & Administration, Scotland

1 memorial
Frank Bethell

Frank Bethell

Worked for the Royal Arsenal Co-operative Society. Was Architect and Surveyor for the the Bostall Estate construction 1900.

Person, Commerce, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
William Parrot

William Parrot

Co-Warden of the Worshipful Company of Fishmongers in 1724.

Person, Politics & Administration

1 memorial

Previously viewed

Anna Pavlova

Anna Pavlova

NW11, North End Way, Ivy House

In 2018 a high fence removed the Pavlova plaque from view. But at about the time the Bowman plaque was erected in 2019 the height of the ...

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator