Edward Davies F.S.A.I.A. (12 April 1852 – 2 April 1927) was an architect and arts administrator in South Australia.
Davies was born in Newport, Wales and emigrated to Melbourne with his parents when quite young. His father Edward was a tanner, and immediately started a tanning business at Richmond on the banks of the Yarra. He was to follow in his father's business, but was persuaded by Joseph Lambeth to study drawing.
He served a five-year apprenticeship with Albert Purchas, a Melbourne architect, then after a few years experience in the building trade joined the Victorian Education Department as a draftsman. In 1876 he joined the South Australian Education Department as a senior draftsman under J. E. Woods. He left the Public Service to work with architect James Cummings, and after winning design competitions for Clayton Congregational Church, Kensington and East Adelaide Congregational Church was admitted as a partner. He left Cummings & Davies in 1884 to work on his own, winning contracts for the Commercial Bank and National Mutual Life Association buildings in King William Street and the Savings Bank building in Currie Street. In September 1887 he took Hedley Dunn as partner in Flinders Street, partnership dissolved 1888. In 1906 he took his student C. W. Rutt into partnership as Edward Davies & Rutt. He was for six years president of the South Australian Association of Architects.
He was a keen and accomplished artist in oils and watercolor, and was a member of the ephemeral Adelaide Art Circle (H. P. Gill was its president), then the Adelaide Easel Club and its successor, the South Australian Society of Arts, of which he served as president from 1921 to 1923. He was vice-president of the South Australian School of Arts. One of his landscapes is held by the Art Gallery of South Australia. Two particular friends were noted artists – James Ashton, with whom he spent a painting holiday every year, and Paris Nesbit, who died just a few days before him.