Herbert Jackson FRIBA FRTPI (25 June 1909 – 1989), known as "Jacko",[2] was a British architect and town planner, active in Birmingham and the Black Country, England, during and after World War II.
He worked in the practice of Jackson & Edmonds,[3] and sometimes partnership with Thomas Alwyn Lloyd.
[1] He was awarded the Saxon Snell Prize in 1931, the same year he went into private practise.
[4][5] He was President of the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists (RBSA) from 1960–1962.
[3] His portrait was sketched in 1947 by the artist Bernard Fleetwood-Walker, an earlier RBSA President, whose son, Guy, worked for Jackson & Edmonds.