Fenton was commissioned into the Engineer and Railway Staff Volunteer Corps, in which he rose to the rank of lieutenant-colonel, and was appointed as a Justice of the Peace for the county of his birth, Westmorland.[1]
Fenton died at home, Redstone Hall, Redhill, in March 1918, aged 87, after two years of ill health.[6] In 1923, his widow, still living at Redstone Hall, married thirdly Alderman J. H. Ellis, of Rhyl, when the Daily Chronicle reported that she was a smiling bride at the age of seventy.[7]
Notes
^ abcde"Sir Myles Fenton" in Leading Men of London (London: British Biographical Company, 1895), p. 153
^"From Office Boy to General Manager", Chums, 20 April 1898, p. 550
^"Sir Myles Fenton" (obituary) in The Times, 15 March 1918, p. 12
^"Sir Myles Fenton (General Manager of the South Eastern Railway): conferring his knighthood", in Railway News, January 1889