Background
He was a son of James Thomas Bolton, of Solihull, Warwickshire and Mary Ratcliffe, daughter of the Review William Boughey Dolling.
He was a son of James Thomas Bolton, of Solihull, Warwickshire and Mary Ratcliffe, daughter of the Review William Boughey Dolling.
He was a solicitor, admitted in 1866. He was a company director of the Rhymney Coal and Iron Company. He served as a Justice of the Peace in Herefordshire.
He sat as Liberal Member of Parliament for Derbyshire North East from the 1886 General Election until his death in December 1906.
Derbyshire North East was a constituency that was dominated by the mining industry. He developed a good working relationship with the Derbyshire Miners Association and arranged, free of charge, for the conveyance of the land for the miners association new building in 1891, and advised them to register under the Trade Union Acting 1871 introduced by Gladstone"s Liberal Government, so that they could legally hold the property.
In April, 1897, he presented to Parliament petitions in favour of the Eight Hours" Bill from the miners of the North-East Derbyshire division. This petition argued for a maximum working day.
As a supporter of the temperance movement, he was a formidable opponent of the Conservative Government"s Licensing Bill.
23rd United Kingdom Parliament. 24th United Kingdom Parliament. 25th United Kingdom Parliament]
Bolton was elected at the 1885 general election as Member of Parliament (Member of Parliament) for Street Pancras North, but lost the seat in the 1886 general election.