Charles Clore
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Sir Charles Clore (24 December 1904 – 26 July 1979) was a British financier, retail and property magnate and philanthropist.
Clore owned the British Shoe Corporation and Selfridges department store, as well as investing heavily in property. He owned Jowett Cars Ltd from 1945-1947 where he was known as "Santa Clore" for his hoped-for financial investment. His philanthropic trust, the Clore Foundation, is a major donor to arts and Jewish community projects in Britain and abroad. The Clore Gallery at Tate Britain in London, which houses the world's largest collection of the works of J.M.W. Turner, was built in 1980-87 with £6 million from Clore and his daughter and £1.8 million from the British government. [1]
Clore's child, Dame Vivien Louise Duffield, is a socialite and philanthropist. He also had a son, Alan Evelyn. Clore Shipping Company had two oil tankers the Vivien Louise and the Alan Evelyn.
On his death, the Inland Revenue sued, claiming he was British domiciled (he had claimed Monaco domicile), in order to collect inheritance taxes. The court upheld the Inland Revenue position.
Clore was mentioned in the song "Sounding Brass", by Flanders and Swann, that satirises social climbing and the acquisition of status symbols:
Hell has just been taken over
By a friend of Charlie Clore's.
We've acquired a private furnace
Bigger, hotter, far than yours.
[edit] Sources
- Richard Davenport-Hines, ‘Clore, Sir Charles (1904–1979)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 2 Sept 2006
[edit] See also
- London Zoo: zoo exhibits funded by Charles Clore.

