Difference between revisions of "Alfred Walter Francis ('Walter') Fuller"
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Revision as of 11:22, 20 January 2021
Alfred Walter Francis ('Walter') Fuller
| Capt. Alfred Walter Francis ('Walter') Fuller | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| File:Fuller, Alfred Walter Francis ('Walter').jpg | |||||||
| Born | 1882 | ||||||
| Died | 1961 | ||||||
| Residence |
7 Sydenham Hill, SE 26 50 Kingsmead Road, SW2 [1925] | ||||||
| Occupation |
anthropologist legal armed services | ||||||
| |||||||
Contents
Notes
Office Notes
AI Council 1914 Member
AI Council 1919 Member
AI Council 1920 Member
AI Council 1921 Member
AI Council 1936-37 Member
AI Council 1937-38 Member
AI Council 1938-39 Member
House Notes
1910.01.18 proposed by T.A. Joyce, seconded by H.S. Harrison
solicitor (retired), army (retired)
1962.04.05 death reported
Notes From Elsewhere
Alfred Walter Francis Fuller (29 March 1882 – 13 December 1961) was a British anthropologist and ethnographic collector, best known for his collection of over 6,800 items from the Pacific that is now held in the Field Museum in Chicago.
Fuller was born in 1882 in Sussex to Rev. Alfred Fuller. He was educated at Dulwich College and subsequently became a solicitor. At the outbreak of World War I he joined the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry and rose to the rank of captain while serving on the Salonika Front. He saw action in Bulgaria, but by 1918 had retired on a disability pension due to ill-health. Always a keen anthropologist, Fuller began collecting on a large scale after the war, principally at auctions and from closing local museums. He married Estelle Cleverly in 1924 and with her continued to develop the collection and to build up a library of more than 20,000 volumes. He volunteered at the British Museum for a time and was a Fellow of the Royal Anthropological Institute. He refused throughout his life to deal in objects, and the only sale he made was in 1958, shortly before his death, when he sold more than 6,800 items from the Pacific to the Field Museum in Chicago for £40,000 (the equivalent of £834,600 as of 2016).[1] After his death in 1961 the rest of his collection was dispersed by his wife: the library was eventually purchased by the Bishop Museum in Hawaii.
Publications
External Publications
House Publications
Related Material Details
RAI Material
census
name on benefactors board
Other Material
over 6,800 items from the Pacific that is now held in the Field Museum in Chicago.