Disappearance of F. Lewis Clark
Francis Lewis Clark was a prominent American industrialist. He disappeared after dropping off his wife at the train station in Santa Barbara, California.
Career
In 1885, F. Lewis Clark established the C. & C. Mill and Elevator, the largest flouring mill in the Pacific Northwest. Mr. Clark was a founder of the America's Cup race, and sold the land and carried the contract for Louis Davenport to build his famed Davenport Hotel.In 1898, F. Lewis Clark and his wife, Winifred Clark, hired the noted architect Kirtland Cutter to design a mansion on 7th Avenue in Spokane, Washington. This mansion is currently used for offices, and retains its natural woodwork and original features. In 1910, Clark constructed a second mansion on Hayden Lake, Idaho, as a summer home. The "Honeysuckle Lodge" was the most expensive home in Idaho at the time. This home currently is a country inn known as The Clark House. The house was designed by George Canning Wales of Boston.
On May 10, 1904, Clark was a defendant in the case of "Chemung Mining Co vs Hanley."
In 1906, Clark was vice-president of Spokane's Inland Railway Island Co.