Sir Henry Homewood Crawford CVO (12 June 1850 – 17 November 1936) was a British solicitor, prominent in the livery companies of the City of London and the National Association of Local Government Officers (NALGO).
Crawford was educated at Thanet College and in France before qualifying as a solicitor in 1872.
He also served as Under-Sheriff of London and Middlesex, in which role he declared Queen Victoria to be Empress of India, and as the city's Land Tax Commissioner.
[1] In 1885, Crawford left private practice to become the Solicitor to the Corporation of the City of London, a position he held until 1924.
[2] A founding member of the Municipal Officers' Association, Crawford served as its president.