Sir Edgar Chatfeild-Clarke (17 February 1863 – 16 April 1925) was an English Liberal Party politician.
Thomas Chatfeild-Clarke was the Liberal candidate for Poole in Dorset[1] and later for Hammersmith,[2] which he contested unsuccessfully at the 1885 general election.
[5] 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.
[6] Edgar Chatfeild-Clarke was educated at King's College School and privately in Dresden in the German state of Saxony.
[11] 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.
Although there was a Labour candidate standing in 1922, dividing the progressive vote, he lost his deposit gaining 11.2% of the poll.