[8][9] By the 1911 census, all nine siblings, still single, were living together at the 17-room family home of Goddendene in Locksbottom, Farnborough, Kent.
[14][15][16] Elsie and her brothers established three large studios, including a metal foundry, in the seven acre grounds of the family home of Goddendene in Locksbottom, Farnborough after 1901.
[6][7] The studios had walls that could be slid back to allow the siblings to work in natural light and were tall enough that they could be utilised during wartime to hang up parachutes to dry.
The siblings moulded the figures in clay, cast them in plaster, and then created the bronzes at their studio foundry at Goddendene, completing the work by July 1932.
[19] Vernon's design included large bronze statues of Victory and Liberty on top of an arch.
The memorial also features 22 bronze figures under the arch which represent the branches of the Canadian military that existed during the First World War.
Elsie March sculpted a bronze portrait bust of Harry Geoffrey Beasley (1882–1939), British anthropologist and museum curator, and a collector of ethnographic material.
[21] In addition, on 2 August 1982, an auction of pictures and sculpture by six members of the March family took place at Sotheby's in London.
[21] Early in her career, Elsie focused more on portrait painting and metalwork, producing items in a variety of metals, often silver, sometimes ornamented with enamels.
One of the first monuments on which the March family collaborated was the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers South African War Memorial.
All of the March artists had a hand in the creation of the memorial that was dedicated to the Inniskilling Fusiliers who died in the Boer War.
[22] The monument was originally located on High Street in Omagh, County Tyrone and unveiled by the Duchess of Abercorn on 25 November 1904.
[26][27] The war memorial includes a central obelisk of Portland stone topped by a globe upon which a bronze winged Victory stands, her arms held aloft, a laurel wreath in one hand.
Most of the members of the March family, including parents George and Elizabeth, are buried at Saint Giles the Abbot Churchyard in Farnborough.
[31] The Chelsfield Village Voice in April 2011 detailed the substance of a lecture that historian Paul Rason gave the previous month to the local history group.
[21] Also, a black and white, silent movie filmed in 1924 reveals the March artists at work in their studios at Goddendene, and has been reproduced by British Pathé.