The Orys and Cook Family Tree » Nathanial Poulton (1864-1933)

Personal data Nathanial Poulton 

  • He was born on 1ST Q 1864 in Monks Risborough, Buckinghamshire. England.Source 1
    Name: Nat Poulton Year of Registration: 1864 Quarter of Registration: Jan-Feb-Mar District: Wycombe County: Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire Volume: 3a Page: 454

    First name(s) NAT
    Last name POULTON
    Birth year 1864
    Birth quarter 1
    Registration month -
    Mother's last name -
    District Wycombe
    County Buckinghamshire
    Country England
    Volume 3A
    Page 454
  • He was baptized on July 9, 1865 in Monks Risborough, Buckinghamshire. England.
    First name(s) Nathanael
    Last name Poulton
    Gender Male
    Birth year -
    Birth place -
    Baptism year 1865
    Baptism date 09 Jul 1865
    Place Monks Risborough
    County Buckinghamshire
    Country England
    Father's first name(s) Job
    Father's last name Poulton
    Mother's first name(s) Caroline
  • Profession: from 1901 till 1911 Shop Keeper (Off Licence).Sources 2, 3
  • Resident:
    • in the year 1871: Askett, Monks Risborough, Buckinghamshire.Source 1
      RG10; Piece: 1408; Folio: 133; Page: 34; GSU roll: 828766.

      1871 England, Wales & Scotland Census Transcription
      Askett, Monks Risborough, Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, England

      First name(s) Last name Relationship Marital status Gender Age Birth year Occupation Birth place
      Job Poulten Head - Male 47 1824 - Buckinghamshire, England
      Caroline Poulten Wife - Female 45 1826 - Buckinghamshire, England
      John Poulten Son - Male 21 1850 - Buckinghamshire, England
      Joseph Poulten Son - Male 19 1852 - Buckinghamshire, England
      William Poulten Son - Male 12 1859 - Buckinghamshire, England
      Fredrick Poulten Son - Male 9 1862 - Buckinghamshire, England
      Nathaniel Poulten Son - Male 7 1864 - Buckinghamshire, England
      Fanny Poulten Daughter - Female 4 1867 - Buckinghamshire, England
      Rosa Poulten Daughter - Female 0 1871 - Buckinghamshire, England
    • in the year 1881: 12 Lawn Terrace, High Road, Chiswick, Brentford, Middlesex.
      1881 England, Wales & Scotland Census Transcription
      12, Lawn Terrace, Chiswick, Brentford, Middlesex, England

      First name(s) Last name Relationship Marital status Gender Age Birth year Occupation Birth place
      Henry Edward Eydman Head Married Male 33 1848 Hair Dresser Turnham Green, Middlesex, England
      Mary Ann Eydman Wife Married Female 34 1847 - Askett, Buckinghamshire, England
      Nathaniel Noulton Brother In Law Single Male 17 1864 Hair Dressers Assistant Askett, Buckinghamshire, England
      Thomas Matthews Lodger Single Male 29 1852 Joiner Bridgnorth, Shropshire, England
      Frederick John Fairlaw Apprentice Single Male 14 1867 Hair Dressers Apprentice Kensington, Middlesex, England
    • in the year 1891: 53a Bolton Gardens, Chiswick, Middlesex.Source 4
      Source Citation: Class: RG12; Piece: 1033; Folio 182; Page 11; GSU roll: 6096143.

      1891 England, Wales & Scotland Census Transcription
      Bolton Gardens, Chiswick, Brentford, Middlesex, England

      First name(s) Last name Relationship Marital status Gender Age Birth year Occupation Birth place
      Nathanial Poulton Head Married Male 27 1864 Hairdresser Askett, Buckinghamshire, England
      Fanny Poulton Wife Married Female 24 1867 - Keston, Middlesex, England
      Perry William Poulton Son - Male - - - Chiswick, Middlesex, England
      Harry William Alfred Hawlett - Single Male 13 1878 Hair Apprentice -
    • in the year 1901: 48 Duke Road, Chiswick, London.Sources 2, 3
      RG13; Piece: 1198; Folio: 113; Page: 28.

      RG14PN6936 RG78PN344 RD128 SD5 ED9 SN324

      1901 England, Wales & Scotland Census Transcription
      48, Duke Road, Chiswick, Brentford, Middlesex, England

      First name(s) Last name Relationship Marital status Gender Age Birth year Occupation Birth place
      Nathaniel Poulton Head Married Male 37 1864 Shop Keeper Off License Askett, Buckinghamshire, England
      Fanny Poulton Wife Married Female 34 1867 - Heston, Middlesex, England
      Percy Wm Poulton Son Single Male 11 1890 - Chiswick, Middlesex, England
      Stanley Clifford Poulton Son Single Male 4 1897 - Chiswick, Middlesex, England
      William Poulton Brother Married Male 42 1859 Hair Dresser Askett, Buckinghamshire, England
    • in the year 1911: 48 Duke Road, Chiswick, London.
      1911 England, Wales & Scotland Census Transcription
      48 Duke Road Chiswick, Chiswick, Middlesex, England

      First name(s) Last name Relationship Marital status Sex Occupation Age Birth year Birth place
      Nathaniel Poulton Head - Male Shop Keeper 47 1864 Askelt Bucks
      Fanny Poulton Wife - Female - 44 1867 Heston Middlsx
      Percy Williams Poulton Son Single Male Invoice Clerk Grocers 21 1890 Chiswick
      Stanley Clifford Poulton Son - Male Hairdressers Aprentice 14 1897 Chiswick
    • in the year 1933: 31 Silver Crescent, Gunnersbury, Middlesex.
  • He died on December 20, 1933 in Chiswick, London. England, he was 69 years old.
    First name(s) Fanny
    Last name Poulton
    Age 94
    Birth year 1865
    Death year 1959
    Place Chiswick, St Nicholas
    County Middlesex
    Inscription South kerb: ALICE MAUD POULTON, died Jan. 1. 1932, aged 42 years / PERCY WILLIAM POULTON, died Jan. 14. 1941, aged 50 years.

    North kerb: NATHANIEL POULTON, died Dec. 20. 1935, aged 70 years.

    East kerb: FANNY POULTON / died 27th July 1959 / aged 94.

    Urn: Sweet memories.
    Monument type Kerb and two urns
    Memorial reference J260
    Position reference Cemetery Section J
    Document link http://www.west-middlesex-fhs.org.uk/MIlinks/Chiswick.pdf
    Record set Middlesex Monumental Inscriptions 1485-2014

    First name(s) NATHANIEL Last name POULTON Gender Male Birth day - Birth month - Birth year 1864
    Age 69 Death quarter 4 Death year 1933 District Brentford County Middlesex Volume 3A Page 303
    Country England
  • Probate on January 17, 1934 naar London, England.
    To Herbert Thomas White, Taxi cab driver ¹712-2-10d
    Name: Nathaniel Poulton
    Death Date: 20 Dec 1933
    Death Place: Middlesex, England
    Probate Date: 17 Jan 1934
    Probate Registry: London, England
  • A child of Job Poulton and Caroline Floyd
  • This information was last updated on July 7, 2021.

Household of Nathanial Poulton

He is married to Fanny White.

They got married on 2ND Q 1889 at Brentford, Middlesex. England, he was 25 years old.

Name: Nathaniel Poulton Year of Registration: 1889 Quarter of Registration: Apr-May-Jun District: Brentford County: Middlesex Volume: 3a Page: 149

First name(s) NATHANIEL
Last name POULTON
Marriage quarter 2
Marriage year 1889
Registration month -
MarriageFinder™ NATHANIEL POULTON married one of these people
Fanny White, Elizabeth Mary Argent
District Brentford
District number -
County Middlesex
Country England
Volume 3A
Page 149

Notes about Nathanial Poulton

On 1911 census it shows 2 children at home Percy Williams Poulton age 21 an Invoice Clerk (Grocers) b. Chiswick and Stanley Clifford Poulton age 14 a Hairdressers Apprentice also b. Chiswick.

St. Nicholas, Chiswick, Middlesex

Introduction to this Church and Layouts document This short document contains some information on the church history of St. Nicholas, Chiswick, the survey of monumental inscriptions that was carried out in 2015/16, and in particular layouts which can help the reader to locate a particular memorial should that be of interest. To locate St. Nicholas it is recommended to access the church’s own website at www.stnicholaschiswick.org/home. This write-up continues with a brief history of the church and its churchyard, and a short section on the survey itself. It is then followed by a recent photograph of the church, and by a set of layouts which will enable the reader to find the actual location of any memorial using the reference number assigned to each inscription.
Church History
These notes have been taken from the Visitor’s Guide pamphlet available at the church, and from Wikipedia. The church stands in Church Street on the banks of the River Thames near the former ferry, which was the only means of crossing the river for many years. There is
reason to believe that during the time of Mellitus, Bishop of London in the 7th century, a pagan shrine on this site was converted to Christian worship. Certainly it existed in the reign of Edward the Confessor. The current church dates from 1882–84, when it was rebuilt to a design by the architect John Loughborough Pearson, except for the west tower which was built for William Bordall (vicar 1416–1435). Because of the small distance between the tower and the road at Church Street, Pearson made the nave short but wide, so it is nearly square in plan. The Duke of Devonshire gave ¹1,000 for the rebuilding, but most of the cost was paid for by Henry Smith of the nearby Lamb Brewery company, Fuller, Smith & Turner. The church is built of courses of squared Kentish ragstone masonry in the Perpendicular style. It has a stone coping with a copper roof. Inside the church, surviving 15th-century features include the tall archway to the west
tower and the hoodmold over the window above the west door. The Churchyard and Memorials The churchyard immediately surrounding the church was Chiswick’s only burial ground for many centuries. It was closed in 1854 because of lack of space, except for limited burials in existing vaults. However, in 1838 and again in 1871 the Duke of Devonshire gave to the parish gifts of land adjoining the churchyard for enlarging the burial ground. Theseextensions are now known as Chiswick Old Burial Ground, and continue a long way to the west of the church.
t. Nicholas, Chiswick The first two extensions to the churchyard were known as the Extension, and Old Ground, but over time the extended churchyard was opened up as Sections A to Z, using a very regular grid pattern for the graves. The south end of Section A is called Section Ai and was reserved for the burial of infants. The graves in the Churchyard and its Extension were never officially numbered, and hence have been assigned new numbers for the purpose of this document. Graves in the remaining sections are all numbered according to a grid system, and the numbers shown in this document match those used in the Burial Registers and Register of Graves. The only
exception to this relates to the many smaller memorials, small scrolls, small wedge-shaped stones and some urns, which have been placed next to the walls of the cemetery, particularly in sections R, U and X. These have been assigned numbers like Rw1, where w is
used to signify that the location is next to a wall. Layout charts are included which will help the reader to find a grave should they wish to do so. For the majority of graves a simple number of the grave is placed where the grave will be found. For any larger grave, such as the double-width graves, the grave number is framed in a box, which helps to locate these graves more precisely. Raised tombs which
dominate the surrounding area have also been framed with a box. The graveyard has the distinction of including two Grade II listed structures. One listed structure is the wall to the southern edge of ‘The Extension’. The second listed structure is the memorial to Sir Percy Harris, politician, numbered I171/2. There are many notable graves. The ones usually mentioned are for Richard Wright, bricklayer (69), William Hogarth, painter (105), Charles Holland, actor (133), Ugo Foscolo, Italian writer (Ext42), Philip James de Loutherbourg, landscape painter (Ext64), George, Earl of Macartney, diplomat (Ext100), Henry Joy, trumpeter (C52), James McNeill Whistler,
American artist (B87a/8), William Blake Richmond, portrait painter (P1), Frederick Hitch VC
(P17), and Arthur Howell Burdon, assistant purser on the Lusitania (P18/9).
Among further interesting graves I would single out the large Viking style grave to Johan
Richard Schram, engineer and designer of rock drills, whose inscription is written in Swedish
on a serpent-like scroll (F3/4). He was born in Sweden, and died in Switzerland. Another
grave of some interest is the grave to Sir Charles Tilston Bright, engineer, who oversaw the
laying of the first transatlantic cable. His grave (OG136) consists of a body stone containing
his coat of arms with inscription in a surrounding frame, which was completely earthed over
in 1980, and hence the entire memorial to him was missed in that survey.
The church includes a number of memorials written in Latin. These inscriptions have been
translated, as also any more obscure Latin phrases found on gravestones throughout the
churchyard. Further translations have been provided for text in Greek, Italian, Spanish,
Swedish, Welsh and Croatian.
Whereas the vast majority of memorials clearly identify the deceased, there are always a
few which do not, and for these it was necessary to see the corresponding entries in the
Register of Graves. One example is a grave to three Sisters from the local St. Mary’s
t. Nicholas, Chiswick
Convent. The gravestone (P171) identifies the Sisters as Sister Juliana, Sister Felicitas and
Sister Margaret Ruth. The Register of Graves shows them to be Mary Ann Holmes, Louisa
Hodgson and Margaret Janetta Baker. As a second example, from the infants section, the
grave at (Ai319) is a simple kerb with just three words “Duerme, Nene, Duerme”. The words
are Spanish for “Sleep, baby, sleep”, but the Register of Graves identifies the infant as Sylva
Mary Vincent, and provides her burial date and age.
The survey of memorials
In this latest survey of memorials use has been made of previous surveys when considered
appropriate. The main preceding survey was undertaken in 1979/80 jointly by a large team
of volunteers from the Society of Genealogists and West Middlesex Family History Society.
The aim at the time was to capture as complete a record as possible of memorial
inscriptions currently in the church, or known to have been in the church, and all
inscriptions from the extended churchyard relating to deaths before 1900. They took a
complete record of the graves, progressing down the burial ground, but stopped their
recording in the middle of Section F, somewhat short of the half-way mark of the full
churchyard and cemetery.
In this survey of 1979/80 the work of Thomas Faulkner titled ‘The History and Antiquities of
Brentford, Ealing and Chiswick’, which was published in 1845, was used to provide detail of
memorials that had been in the old church prior to the rebuild of 1882, and to provide some
of the no longer readable text from inscriptions on memorials in the churchyard. The survey
also used transcriptions recorded by H. W. Hailstone and Miss G. Owen-Jones of the
churchyard memorials.
In the current survey, the memorials in the church are recorded just as they were found in
2015. For memorials in the churchyard, rather than undertake difficult reading of
gravestones which had been read before, the 1979/80 readings have been used freely.
Where the 1979/80 recording itself acknowledged use of either Faulkner’s work or more
frequently Hailstone and Owen-Jones’s work this has been duly acknowledged by means of
a note to the inscription.
Acknowledgements
The Society thanks Roland Bostock for undertaking the completion of this project, including the recording, transcription and indexing of the full set of records. Our thanks are also to Father Simon Brandes, vicar of St. Nicholas, for providing access to the church and its
churchyard; to Alan Rice of Carillion Services for providing access to the Register of Graves; and to church archivists Wendy Cundy, Ann Rix, Peter and Carolyn Hammond; all of them for their respective support for the project. West Middlesex Family History Society
2015-2016

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Timeline Nathanial Poulton

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Ancestors (and descendant) of Nathanial Poulton

Job Poulton
1824-1904

Nathanial Poulton
1864-1933

1889

Fanny White
1867-1959


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Sources

  1. 1871 Census England 2nd April 1871
  2. 1901 Census England
  3. 1911 Census England, 2nd April 1911
  4. 1891 Census England, 5th April 1891

Historical events

  • The temperature on July 9, 1865 was about 22.1 °C. The air pressure was 14 kgf/m2 and came mainly from the west-southwest. The airpressure was 76 cm mercury. The atmospheric humidity was 53%. Source: KNMI
  • Koning Willem III (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was from 1849 till 1890 sovereign of the Netherlands (also known as Koninkrijk der Nederlanden)
  • In The Netherlands , there was from February 1, 1862 to February 10, 1866 the cabinet Thorbecke II, with Mr. J.R. Thorbecke (liberaal) as prime minister.
  • In the year 1865: Source: Wikipedia
    • The Netherlands had about 3.6 million citizens.
    • March 29 » American Civil War: Federal forces under Major General Philip Sheridan move to flank Confederate forces under Robert E. Lee as the Appomattox Campaign begins.
    • April 26 » American Civil War: Confederate General Joseph E. Johnston surrenders his army to General William Tecumseh Sherman at the Bennett Place near Durham, North Carolina. Also the date of Confederate Memorial Day for two states.
    • April 26 » Union cavalry troopers corner and shoot dead John Wilkes Booth, assassin of President Abraham Lincoln, in Virginia.
    • May 9 » American Civil War: Nathan Bedford Forrest surrenders his forces at Gainesville, Alabama.
    • May 12 » American Civil War: The Battle of Palmito Ranch: The first day of the last major land action to take place during the Civil War, resulting in a Confederate victory.
    • August 12 » Joseph Lister, British surgeon and scientist, performs 1st antiseptic surgery.
  • The temperature on December 20, 1933 was between -1.8 °C and 5.1 °C and averaged 1.7 °C. There was 0.2 mm of rain during 0.3 hours. There was -0.1 hours of sunshine (0%). The average windspeed was 3 Bft (moderate breeze) and was prevailing from the northwest. Source: KNMI
  • Koningin Wilhelmina (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was from 1890 till 1948 sovereign of the Netherlands (also known as Koninkrijk der Nederlanden)
  • In The Netherlands , there was from August 10, 1929 to May 26, 1933 the cabinet Ruys de Beerenbrouck III, with Jonkheer mr. Ch.J.M. Ruys de Beerenbrouck (RKSP) as prime minister.
  • In The Netherlands , there was from May 26, 1933 to July 31, 1935 the cabinet Colijn II, with Dr. H. Colijn (ARP) as prime minister.
  • In the year 1933: Source: Wikipedia
    • The Netherlands had about 8.2 million citizens.
    • February 20 » The U.S. Congress approves the Blaine Act to repeal federal Prohibition in the United States, sending the Twenty-first Amendment to the United States Constitution to state ratifying conventions for approval.
    • March 2 » The film King Kong opens at New York's Radio City Music Hall.
    • March 20 » Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler ordered the creation of Dachau concentration camp as Chief of Police of Munich and appointed Theodor Eicke as the camp commandant.
    • March 28 » The Imperial Airways biplane City of Liverpool is believed to be the first airliner lost to sabotage when a passenger sets a fire on board.
    • May 6 » The Deutsche Studentenschaft attacked Magnus Hirschfeld's Institut für Sexualwissenschaft, later burning many of its books.
    • December 6 » U.S. federal judge John M. Woolsey rules that James Joyce's novel Ulysses is not obscene.


Same birth/death day

Source: Wikipedia


About the surname Poulton

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When copying data from this family tree, please include a reference to the origin:
Brian Peter Orys, "The Orys and Cook Family Tree", database, Genealogy Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/the-orys-and-cook-family-tree/I3485.php : accessed May 12, 2025), "Nathanial Poulton (1864-1933)".