Frank Mayle (1866 - 12 December 1940) was a businessman and local politician. Born in Kimbolton, Huntingdonshire, he was the son of William Mayle, a groom and gardener and Eliza née Rizeley. He moved to London and married Kate Bishop in Marylebone in 1887, when he was working as a clerk. By 1891 the couple were living in Hammersmith and he was working as a "dealer in paper hangings". By 1901 he was a wallpaper merchant and employed a number of people. Widowed in 1904, he had moved to Ealing by 1911, and was a builders' merchant. Reference here [1]
| Attributes | Values |
|---|
| rdfs:label
| |
| rdfs:comment
| - Frank Mayle (1866 - 12 December 1940) was a businessman and local politician. Born in Kimbolton, Huntingdonshire, he was the son of William Mayle, a groom and gardener and Eliza née Rizeley. He moved to London and married Kate Bishop in Marylebone in 1887, when he was working as a clerk. By 1891 the couple were living in Hammersmith and he was working as a "dealer in paper hangings". By 1901 he was a wallpaper merchant and employed a number of people. Widowed in 1904, he had moved to Ealing by 1911, and was a builders' merchant. Reference here [1]
|
| dcterms:subject
| |
| abstract
| - Frank Mayle (1866 - 12 December 1940) was a businessman and local politician. Born in Kimbolton, Huntingdonshire, he was the son of William Mayle, a groom and gardener and Eliza née Rizeley. He moved to London and married Kate Bishop in Marylebone in 1887, when he was working as a clerk. By 1891 the couple were living in Hammersmith and he was working as a "dealer in paper hangings". By 1901 he was a wallpaper merchant and employed a number of people. Widowed in 1904, he had moved to Ealing by 1911, and was a builders' merchant. He became involved in local government in Hammersmith, and was elected to Hammersmith Borough Council as a Residents' Association councillor. He served as Mayor of Hammersmith for 1911-12. He also served a single three-year term as a Municipal Reform Party member of the London County Council representing Hammersmith North in 1919-22. Reference here [1]
|