What is the personality type of Bob Dalton? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Bob Dalton from Criminals and what is the personality traits.
Bob Dalton personality type is ISTP, and I am, too. I have a very strong ISTP personality.
I am a very persistent and determined person. I will do things with a great degree of excellence, but I also have a strong tendency to become quite impatient with others. I have a very high level of dedication to my hobbies and interests. I am a very organized person and have a strong attention to detail.
I am a very loyal person. I am a very loyal person and will stick with my friends and family through thick and thin, no matter what happens. However, I can be a little bit stubborn at times.
I am a very driven person. I am a very driven person and will accomplish anything that I put my mind to. I have a very strong will to succeed and do not want to fail. I am also a very driven person and will easily get frustrated if something is taking too long.
I am a very creative person. I am a very creative person and enjoy doing things on my own without having to follow others' directions. I also have a strong creativity in the arts as well as in music.
My Family Life
Robert Rennick Dalton (May 13, 1869 – October 5, 1892), better known as Bob Dalton, was an American outlaw in the American Old West. He led the ill-fated Dalton Gang raid on two banks in Coffeyville, Kansas. Ambushed by town citizens, Bob, Bill Power, Grat Dalton and Richard L. "Dick" Broadwell were all killed. Bob's father was Lewis Dalton from Jackson County, Missouri. He was a saloon keeper in Kansas City, Missouri, when he married Adeline Younger. She became an aunt of Cole and Jim Younger. Those of the family who were members of the Dalton Gang were: Bob, Emmett, Grat, and Bill. Lewis Dalton spent much of his time unsuccessfully betting on his own race horses. As early as 1870 he began traveling to California to enter in the circuits. Starting with the oldest, he would eventually bring all his boys, including Bob, with him. In 1877 while their father was running horses in Visalia, California the oldest boys were offered steady work but refused at the time.