Clifton Cappie Towle (1888–1946), founding member of The Anthropological Society of New South Wales in 1928 with William Walford Thorpe.
He obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree at University of Sydney in 1919[2] but spent much of his working life with the New South Wales Government Railways and followed his interest in anthropology as a very active amateur, gaining knowledge from his own private reading and field observations, and donated many wood and stone Aboriginal artefacts and photographs to Hornshaw’s collection.
His personal collection of Aboriginal artefacts was donated to the Australian Museum on his death in 1946.
[1] Perhaps his greatest body of work involved hundreds of photographs of carved trees or "dendroglyphs", which he collected around New South Wales and Queensland.
[3] Towle died on 22 March 1946 at Eastwood, New South Wales, Australia.