Mary Emma Dalton

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Mary Emma Dalton (Cook)

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Indain Territory, Oklahoma, United States
Death: January 06, 1945 (92-93)
Thurnham Hall, Lancashire, United Kingdom
Immediate Family:

Wife of William Henry Augustus Dalton
Mother of Alzira Eloise Dalton

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:
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Immediate Family

About Mary Emma Dalton

MRS. MARY EMMA COOK DALTON

The following is a reprint of a notice entitled 'The late Mrs. Mary Emma Dalton', which was privately printed on the occasion of the death of the said Mrs. Dalton. The reader is referred to page 37 of volume 2 of the D.G.S Journal where her name is shown on the pedigree chart of the Daltons of Thurnham - Ed.

It is with deep regret that we announce the death of Mrs. Mary Emma Dalton on June 6th, 1945, at Thurnham Hall, Lancaster. With her passes a personality of old world charm and interest.

Mrs. Dalton was the widow of William Henry Dalton, Esq., Lord of the Manors of Thurnham, Bulk and Cockersand Abbey, in Lancashire.

Despite her age - she was nearly 94 - she had been active and interested in affairs generally until here illness three months before her end.

Mrs. Dalton was the eldest daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. J.T. Cook, of Navasota, and was born at Cook's Ford, Rusk, Cherokee Country USA.

She had a very eventful and colorful life, her grandparent - and her parents as children - having been among the first settlers of Texas, and she was proud of her pioneer background.

Her father was, until the outbreak of the Civil war a wealthy Plantation Owner and had many slaves.

Mrs. Dalton was a near kinswoman of Jefferson Davis, president of the Confederate States of America, and of General Wade Hampton. Her family was also related to the Swansons and Lees, of Virginia, General Robert E. Lee being a distinguished member.

Mrs. Dalton's Mother was formerly Miss Talutha Anne Mosley, a descendant of the Mosleys who were among the first settlers of Virginia in about 1630. The Mosley home was called Rolleston, in remembrance of their ancestral seat, Rolleston Hall, in Staffordshire, England.

The two families, the Mosleys and the Cooks have left thir mark in American History of pioneers in the Southern States. Cook's Fort, in Cherokee, stands today a treasured relic of those bygone times when protection for the white people was necessary against the Indians.

After the Civil war, which Mrs. Dalton remembered quite well, her family left Texas for Brazil. She met Mr. Dalton in Santos, where they were married. Later they went to live in the Argentine. They were there for about 20 years, and Mrs. Dalton had vivid recollections of her experiences of life on estancias, and also in Bonas Aires.

Mr. and Mrs. Dalton returned to England on Mr. Dalton's succession to his ancestral Estates after they had been willed out of the direct line for several generations, owing to religious scruples, the Daltons always having been staunch Roman Catholics. Mr. Dalton succeeded his cousin, Sir Gerald Richard Dalton-Fitzgerald, 10th Baronet, of Thurnham Hall, and Castle Ishen, County Cork, Ireland.

The Interment took place on June 14th, at the Lancaste Cemetery.

It was a beautiful day as the cortege left the Ancient Manor House. Children from the Village School, in charge of their teachers, lined up, and with bowed heads and their little hands clasped, paid their last respects to the Lady of the Manor. Passing down the drive, through the gateway -shorn of its iron gates, which were taken to make guns against Hitler - the procession moved through a silent village, where every window-blind in every house and cottage was drawn.

There was a service in Christ Church, Glasson, where Mrs. Dalton worshiped in her earlier days. The hymns "Abaide with me" and Nearer my God to Thee" were sung. The Rev. A. Warburton, Vicar of Glasson, officiated.

After the service, the procession turned towards Lancaster. It had been a custom of the family for bearers to descend from their coaches and walk through Dalton Square, but on this occasion, owing to war-time traffic regulations still in force, the practice was not observed.

The grave was beautifully lined with marguerites and delphiniums as well as woodland flowers and ferns from Thurnham. Mrs. Dalton was laid to rest beside her eldest and youngest daughters.

The chief mourners were Mr. William A. Dalton (son), Miss Dalton, Miss E.F. Dalton and Miss A.E. Dalton (daughters). Mr. Sidney Charlton (nephew). There were many friends and neighbors, and tenants from the three estates. America was represented by Sergt. Joe Traughber, Corporal Robert Breem, and Corporal Ralph Wood, from the U.S.A. Camp, at Warrington, who had endeared themselves to Mrs. Dalton. The soldiers wearing, for the first time, the latest "Eisenhower" jackets, followed immediately behind the family.

The bearers were chosen from the estate workman. There were many beautiful floral tributes from the family friends. A cross of arum lilies, white roses and fern and which rested on the coffin was from Mrs. Dalton's four surviving children.

Mrs. Dalton was always of a cheerful and active disposition and she had a vast capacity for amusing herself. So it was not surprising that at the age of 80 she began to write her memoirs, which embraced her experiences from covered wagon days, with its many vicissitudes, to here quiet and peaceful life at here home, Thurnham Hall, near the purple mountains of Cumberland. She recalled that in about 1855, when still a child, her parents left Cook's Fort on a covered wagon trail as far as the Brazos, and later settled in Hillsboro, where she went to school. Mrs. Dalton said that Hillsboro at that time was a small country town near a beautiful spring, and that there was not a single pavement in the streets. The Court House was a wooden building, a part of which served as the school.

After a while she attended Dr. and Mrs. Church's Seminary for Young Ladies, in fashionable Waco. It was a finishing school "of High and Moral Culture." She lived with Mrs. Gourley, who boarded some of the pupils. Col. Gourley was serving in the Confederate Army.

At the end of the devastating Civil War, Mrs. Dalton's people with many other southerners left for Brazil, under the leadership of Mr. MacMullen. They embarked at Galveston, in a ship commanded by Capt. Costa.

Mrs. Dalton mentioned many of the families on board, including the Dyers, O'Dells, smiths, Nettles, Garners, Jesse Wrights. Others were William Tilley, Zeno Fielder, james penn, the brothers Cortez, Mr. Quillan (her former schoolmaster), Mr. Cobb, Nr. Barnsley and his gallant brother Capt. Barnsley, Mrs. Fatheree, a doctor's widow, and the two MacKnight families.

The loss of their ship caused the brave band of adventurers to remain in Havana many weeks, but eventually they bade their kind protectors and friends a long fare-well, and they were taken to New York on the "Mariposa"

Again the party set sail for South America, and in her notes Mrs. Dalton gives a vivid description of their arrival at Rio de Janiero and how very soon after their landing Dom Pedro II., the wise and cultured Emperor of Brazil, came down personally to receive and to give a welcome to the new comers, who were to become his subjects. A few of the Americans stayed in Rio permanently, but the majority decided to journey on as far as Iguape, where they settled on the banks of a river near there. Eventually the Cook family alone journeyed over the mountains on foot to Santos, where they ad made their home. But after many years of trials and tribulations returned to their beloved Texas and lived in Corpus Christi.

Mrs. Dalton, however, always recalled with pleasure and affection the friends she made in Brazil and of the many kindnesses shown to her family by the tender-hearted Brazilians.

In after years Mrs. Dalton, traveling through Portugal, visited the tomb of Dom Pedro II., at Lisbon, and was much touched by remembrances, and she was enchanted by the magnificent wreaths on his grave made of tropical birds' feathers, as brilliant and colorful as precious stones. She thought of how she had spent her leisure moments herself making feathers into bouquets in far away Brazil.

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Mary Emma Dalton's Timeline

1852
1852
Indain Territory, Oklahoma, United States
1945
January 6, 1945
Age 93
Thurnham Hall, Lancashire, United Kingdom
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