Herbert Fuller-Clark

Herbert Fuller-Clark
Born 1869
London
Died 27 September 1934 (age 65)
Anerley, Surrey
Nationality British
Occupation Architect
Buildings Black Friar

Harold Herbert Fuller-Clark (1869 – 27 September 1934) was a British Arts and Crafts architect.

Career

Fuller-Clark was the architect responsible, in 1905, for the ground floor interior of the Black Friar, a Grade II* listed public house at 174 Queen Victoria Street, Blackfriars, London.[1]

Fuller-Clark also designed Boulting's Offices at Riding House Street, which OUP describe as "a remarkably free composition", as well as 40 and 41a Foley Street, London in about 1908. In 1912, he appeared to have been in Jamaica.[2]

Personal life

Some time before 1913, he married a Miss Tewson. They had a son, Second Lieutenant Herbert Tewson Fuller-Clark.

In 1925, he married Alice Maud Macdonald (1878–1957) in West Ham, London.

He died on 27 September 1934 in Anerley, Surrey.

His death was registered in Bromley, Kent in the July–August quarter, 1934.[3]

References

  1. Jephcote, Geoff Brandwood & Jane (2008). London heritage pubs : an inside story. St. Albans: Campaign for Real Ale. pp. 28–30. ISBN 9781852492472.
  2. "Herbert Fuller-Clark". Oxford Reference. OUP. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  3. England & Wales, Death Index, 1916–2007 http://www.ancestry.co.uk. Retrieved 14 January 2014. Missing or empty |title= (help)
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