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Gentleman's Magazine 1844 part 2 p.432
[depo]sited in the entrance hall of the Royal Manchester
Institution.
The University of Oxford did itself high honour in
conferring on the septuagenarian philosopher the degree of
Doctor of Civil Law. During Dr. Dalton's visit to London,
about 1833, it was thought by his friends that it would be
proper (if not consistent with his private feelings,) that
he should be presented to the King, and in that case the
robes to which his academic degree entitled him would be the
fittest costume for him at the levee. The Lord Chancellor
(Brougham) being made acquainted with these feelings, not
only immediately approved of them, but offered himself to
present Dr. Dalton to the King. Dr. Dalton having been made
acquainted with the usual forms, agreed in the propriety of
the view taken by his friends, and attended the levee. King
William received the philosopher very graciously, and kindly
relieved the little embarrassment of such an unusual
position, by addressing to him several questions respecting
the interests of the town of Manchester.
The mortal remains of this highly-esteemed individual were
interred on the 12th August in a vault in Ardwick Cemetery,
about a mile and a half distant from Manchester. The body
lay in state at the Town Hall, on Saturday, Aug. 10, and the
public were allowed to pass through the room during the
greater part of the day. At 11 o'clock on Monday the
procession moved from the Town Hall in the following order:-
About 500 members of various societies, 22 carriages, 330
gentlemen, 10 carriages, 100 members of the various
institutions, 36 carriages, the last of which contained the
Mayor of Manchester. The hearse, drawn by six horses. Six
mourning coaches, drawn by four horses each, containing the
relatives and friends of the deceased, followed by the
members of the Philosophical Society. The procession moved
through the principal streets of the town, and was joined
near the cemetery by a large body of the Society of Friends.
Most of the mills and workshops were closed, as were also
the whole of the shops in the principal streets of the town.
The vault in which the body was laid was allowed to remain
open until five o'clock in the evening, during which period
many thousand persons viewed the coffin.
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