H. Chalton Bradshaw

Harold Chalton Bradshaw CBE FRIBA (15 February 1893 – 15 October 1943)[1] was a Liverpool-born architect, recipient of the first Rome scholarship in Architecture (1913) & first Secretary of The Royal Fine Art Commission.

His design work included the British School at Rome's Common Room (1924, as projected by Edwin Lutyens)[2] and several Commonwealth War Graves Commission First World War cemeteries and memorials, including the Cambrai Memorial in France[3] and the Ploegsteert Memorial to the Missing and its surrounding cemetery.

[4] He also designed the Guards' Division Memorial in St. James's Park in London.

[6] Bradshaw married Mary Taylor, an archaeologist, in 1918.

They had three children: Christopher, a graphic designer; Julian, a physicist; and Anthony, a professor of botany.