Lytton Wilmot Shatford (February 4, 1873 - November 8, 1920) was a politician and businessman in British Columbia, Canada.
Born in Hubbards, Nova Scotia, he moved west during one of the British Columbia gold rushes where he and his brother, Walter Tyrrel Shatford, ran a general store in the gold mining town of Fairview near what is now Oliver.
They proceeded to purchase and subdivide land north of the Canada/US border and installed in irrigation system in the area of Vaseux Lake.
In 1918, they sold 22,000 acres (89 km2) to the government of British Columbia for $300,000 in order to settle demobilized Canadian soldiers following World War I.
He remained in the legislature until 1917 when he was appointed to the Senate of Canada by Prime Minister Sir Robert Borden.