Edgar Chatfeild-Clarke
Sir Edgar Chatfeild-Clarke was an English Liberal Party politician.
Family and education
Edgar Chatfeild-Clarke was the son of Thomas Chatfeild-Clarke, who was a Fellow of both the Royal Institute of British Architects and of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, and his wife Ellen from Birmingham. Thomas Chatfeild-Clarke was the Liberal candidate for Poole in Dorset and later for Hammersmith, which he contested unsuccessfully at the 1885 general election. He was also a member of the London School Board and was closely connected to Liberal political causes such as The Society for the Liberation of Religion from State Patronage and Control and franchise reform. He was connected with the Unitarians, as was his wife's family, and built the 1886 headquarters for the denomination on the site of the original Essex Street Chapel.Edgar Chatfeild-Clarke was educated at King's College School and privately in Dresden in the German state of Saxony. He was a cousin of Joseph Chamberlain. He never married.
Career
Chatfeild-Clarke seems to have been a man with a private income, presumably derived from his father's success as an architect, surveyor and estate agent and his father's directorships of companies, investments or shareholdings. The family also owned land and property in the Isle of Wight. Edgar does not appear to have engaged in any trade or profession in addition to his public and political career. His elder brother, Howard Chatfeild-Clarke, was an architect and surveyor like his father and was in partnership with his father in the firm of T Chatfeild-Clarke & Son but Edgar does not seem to have been associated with the company. He did however introduce a Private Members' Bill into the House of Commons on behalf of the Surveyors' Institution, for the registration of the profession and to protect the public from employing unqualified personnel as surveyors, land agents or auctioneers. However the Bill failed to pass as Chatfeild-Clarke did not achieve a sufficiently high placing in the Private Members' Ballot but the seed of future regulation of the profession had been sown.Politics
Local politics
Chatfeild-Clarke did however inherit his father's political inclinations. He was first elected to the Isle of Wight County Council in 1900 and remained a member up until the time of his death in 1925. He also served as a justice of the peace, a member of the Isle of Wight Education Committee and as a member of the IoW Advisory Committee re the appointment of magistrates.He was an officer of the Island Liberal Federation, being its president in 1920.