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Charles W. Clark (businessman)

Charles W. Clark
Born November 3, 1871
Deer Lodge, Montana
Died April 3, 1933(1933-04-03) (aged 61)
New York, New York
Cause of death Pneumonia
Resting place Woodlawn Cemetery
Nationality American
Occupation Businessman
Spouse(s) Katherine Quinn Roberts
Celia Tobin
Parent(s) William Andrews Clark, Sr.
Katherine Louise Stauffer
Relatives Huguette Clark (half sister)

For the singer, see Charles W. Clark.

Charles Walker Clark, also known as "C. W. Clark" or "Charlie Clark" (1871–1933), was an American businessman and the eldest son of William Andrews Clark, Sr., one of the Copper Kings.

Clark was born on November 3, 1871 in Deer Lodge, Montana. His father, William A. Clark (1839-1925), was a Montana copper magnate and later a United States Senator for Montana. His mother, Katherine Louise Stauffer (1844-1893), was a socialite.

He served as the manager and later as chairman of the United Verde Copper Company in Jerome, Arizona. Together with his father and his brother, he was also a partner in a bank in Butte, Montana.

In 1896, he married Katherine Quinn Roberts, who died in New York City in January 1904. Later that year, he married Celia Tobin (1874-1965), a member of San Francisco high society who had been trained as a pianist and equestrian. They divorced in 1925 and she later moved into a home in Hillsborough, California, which became known as the Tobin Clark Estate.

He resided at El Palomar, an estate in San Mateo, California he purchased in 1902, which had its own polo field and racetrack. According to Pulitzer winner Bill Dedman, he also had "the longest private railcar ever built, which he sold to Howard Hughes." He was prone to heavy drinking and gambling.

He collected rare books. In 1917, the Book Club of California presented an exhibition of 66 incunabula from his collection at the Hill Tolerton Gallery, San Francisco.


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