A look at the 1910 Census image shows that Dalton was mis indexed as Halton. The person completing the form had a couple different ways of writing "D"s, but if you look at the entry for Dunning, a few rows above the Vinson/Dalton household, you will see the similarity in the letter D. They scribe also crossed their t's with very long strokes. In this case, the long stroke crossing the "t" went through the letter "D", which made it look like an "H". It would be nice if you could correct the indexing of this record. Nice to know that Ancestry was able to find enough similarity in the record to offer it as a hint. Great video.
That is a great comment. I went back to do this and it turns out that FamilySearch hasn't added the feature that allows you to edit the name for the 1910 census. It did have that "edit" button for the 1920 and 1940 census records for Percy.
A look at the 1910 Census image shows that Dalton was mis indexed as Halton. The person completing the form had a couple different ways of writing "D"s, but if you look at the entry for Dunning, a few rows above the Vinson/Dalton household, you will see the similarity in the letter D. They scribe also crossed their t's with very long strokes. In this case, the long stroke crossing the "t" went through the letter "D", which made it look like an "H". It would be nice if you could correct the indexing of this record. Nice to know that Ancestry was able to find enough similarity in the record to offer it as a hint. Great video.
That is a great comment. I went back to do this and it turns out that FamilySearch hasn't added the feature that allows you to edit the name for the 1910 census. It did have that "edit" button for the 1920 and 1940 census records for Percy.