91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Person    | Female  Born 10/8/1906  Died 26/3/1987

Mrs Iris Mary Caroline Bonham

Mrs Iris Mary Caroline Bonham

She was born as Iris Mary Caroline Dean on 10 August 1906 in Birmingham, Warwickshire, the daughter of Herbert Stanley Dean (b.1873) and Ethel Mary Dean née Lovegrove (b.1878). She was baptised on 13 October 1906 in St Thomas's Church, Godolphin Road, Hammersmith, where in the baptismal register the family is shown as residing at The Lodge, Suffolk Street, Birmingham and her father was described as a manager.

The 1911 census shows her living in a five roomed house called The Lodge, 131 Suffolk Street, Birmingham, with her parents and a female domestic servant. Her father described his occupation as a manager of a furniture depository.

In she is shown as having been appointed as a Post Office telephonist on 17 September 1930 in London. Postal Service Appointment Books confirm that she was a telephonist at the London Trunk Exchange. Electoral registers in 1931 show her listed at 2 Mecklenburgh Street, St Pancras.

On 29 September 1934 she married John Bonham Pigg (1907-1978) at St Peter's Church, Regent Square, Camden where the marriage register shows her as a spinster of 44 Gordon Square, Camden. Her husband was described as a journalist of 11 Mecklenburgh Street, Camden. Electoral registers in 1935 and 1936 show her and her husband listed at 41 Mecklenburgh Square, St Pancras and they were still listed there on the 1939 England and Wales Register in which her occupation was recorded as a teacher of languages.

Electoral Registers from 1945 to 1959 show her both a Business Premises Voter for a property at 23 Oakley Square, London, NW1 and also as Residential Voter, together with her husband, at 30 Torrington Square, London, WC1. From 1960 onwards she is only recorded at 30 Torrington Square with her husband. In March 1946 she made her first attempt to enter local politics as a Labour Party candidate for Holborn at the London County Council elections, but was not elected. shows that by deed poll dated 18 December 1946 her husband renounced and abandoned the surname Pigg and in lieu therefore assumed the surname of Bonham and so she became Mrs Iris Mary Caroline Bonham. His home address was recorded as 30 Torrington Square, London, WC1. 

She was successfully elected as a Labour party member of the London County Council for St Pancras South East for 1948-1949 and for St Pancras North from 1949 to 1959. She was also a member of St Pancras Borough Council where she served as Mayoress for the mayoral year 1955-1956. She was also a Labour Party member of the Greater London Council for Hammersmith and Fulham from 18 June 1964-1967 and 1970-1973. She also served as the Hammersmith North representative from 1973 to 1977.

She died, aged 80 years, on 26 March 1987 and her body was cremated on 9 April 1987 in the West London Crematorium, Harrow Road, London, NW10 5JS. Probate records confirm her date of death and that her address had been 30 Torrington Square, WC1. Probate was granted on 4 September 1987 and her effects totalled £134,984. Her death was not registered until the 4th quarter of 1987 in the Hackney registration district.

Credit for this entry to: Andrew Behan.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in to see them

This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
Mrs Iris Mary Caroline Bonham

Creations i

Duke of Edinburgh visit

Our researches show that when a Mrs I.M.C. Pigg stood for election as a Labou...

91³Ô¹ÏÍø

Other Subjects

Sir Stephen Henry Molyneux Killik

Sir Stephen Henry Molyneux Killik

Lord Mayor of London 1934-5.  From the Fanmakers: "elected Lord Mayor in 1934 (George V’s Silver Jubilee year), having previously been Master of the Fan Makers in 1917, and Sheriff in 1922; in 1927...

Person, Lord Mayor, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
Don Cook

Don Cook

St Pancras Rent strike: In 1960 the Tory council of the old borough of St Pancras (now part of Camden) attempted to impose large rent increases. The tenants, the generation who had fought in WW2, ...

Person, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
George Drew

George Drew

A member of the Executive Committee for the Great Exhibition 1851.

Person, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
Lord Thomas Babington Macaulay

Lord Thomas Babington Macaulay

Historian, essayist, poet.  Born Leicestershire but brought up in the Clapham home.  Spent four years (1834 - 8) as an administrator in India, during which he showed little interest in Indian cultu...

Person, History, Poetry, Politics & Administration, India

4 memorials
Ba Jin

Ba Jin

Author and political activist. Born China as Li Yaotang.  Ba Jin was his pen name.  Learnt and advocated Esperanto. Spent 1927-8 in France. Returned to Shanghai. From 1983 suffered with Parkinson's...

Person, Politics & Administration, China/Hong Kong

1 memorial