Person    | Male  Born 11/2/1900  Died 22/11/1990

Francis John Forty OBE

Categories: Engineering

Francis John Forty OBE

City Engineer (B Sc, MICE, FSA) City of London in 1959 and '63.

Andrew Behan has researched this man: Francis John Forty was born on 11 February 1900 in Hull, Yorkshire, the youngest of the four children of James Francis Forty (1861-1937) and Maud Caroline Forty née Foot (1863-1956). His father was a school master at Hull Grammar School. The 1901 census shows him living with his parents and two siblings, James Edward Harold Forty (1891-1965) and Edith Maud Forty (1892-1971), together with a female domestic servant and a nurse at 2 Arlington Street, Hull. An elder sister, Bessie Forty (1897-1899) had died in infancy before he was born. The 1911 census shows them all at the same address apart from the nurse.

He attended Hymers College, Hull, from 1908 to 1917 and then served in the Royal Naval Air Service before transferring as a 2nd Lieutenant to the Royal Air Force, upon its creation on 1 April 1918, until 1919. His Royal Aero Club Aviators' Certificate, No.7708, issued on 18 October 1918, shows that his home address had changed to The School House, Leicester Street, Hull. From 1919 to 1923 he attended Glasgow University studying scientific engineering, graduating with a B.Sc. He was an engineering assistant from 1 January 1924 in the Corporation of Hull and from 1 April 1925 he worked for the City of York. On 31 March 1926 he was proposed for Associate Membership of the Institution of Civil Engineers (AMICE) and a ballot was held in his favour on 14 December 1926.

Meanwhile, on 2 October 1926 he married Doris Marcon Francis at St Pancras Parish Church, Camden. The marriage register shows his occupation as a Civil Engineer and his home address as 6 Bootham Terrace, York, whilst his wife's address was shown as 49 Flaxman Terrace, London, W.C.1. They had three children, Frances A. Forty who was born in 1928 and whose birth was registered in Willesden and twins Jane Janette Forty and Jeremy John Forty who were born in 1932 and whose births were registered in Brentford.

From 1927 to 1929 he was the Chief Engineering Assistant at Willesden Urban District Council and from 1929 to 1934 was the Assistant and Deputy Borough Engineer and Surveyor in the Borough of Ealing. In 1934 he became the Borough Engineer and Surveyor of Ealing. Telephone directories from 1935 to 1959 show him listed at 9 Kent Avenue, West Ealing.

On 12 July 1938 he became a full Member of the Institution of Civil Engineers (MICE). On 1 August 1938 he was appointed as the Engineer to the Corporation of the City of London and the 1939 England and Wales Register lists him at The Guildhall, City of London, where he is shown at the City Engineer, Corporation of London, with responsibilities within the ARP Control. In the 1952 New Year Honours List he is shown as being created as an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (Civil Division) for services described as 'lately a member of the Festival of Britain Council for Architecture, Town Planning and Building Research'.

His wife died, aged 59, at home in Kent Avenue, West Ealing, on 23 June 1958. Telephone directories from 1961 to 1964 show him at two addresses, 69 Queens Gate, London, S.W.7 and Little Oakley, Wilmington, Polegate, Sussex, but from 1965 to 1978 only at the Wilmington address.

In 1965 he married Elizabeth Joyce Totfield in Hailsham, Sussex. He was a liveryman in the Worshipful Company of Painters and Stainers and a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London (FSA). He died, aged 90 years on 22 November 1990 and his death was registered in the Windsor and Maidenhead District, Berkshire. Probate records show that his last home address was Flat 8 Emanuel House, 18 Rochester Row, London, SW1P 1BS and that his estate totalled £54,096.

Andrew also found this 1918 photo, in the Royal Aero Club Aviators' Certificates Album No.22 that is in the care of the Royal Air Force Museum, Hendon.

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
Francis John Forty OBE

Creations i

city boundary dragons

A second 1849 cast-iron heraldic dragon rears up on the other side of the bus...

Read More

London Wall road

Should we collect this type of memorial? Too dull? Duller than this one: Nort...

Read More

Other Subjects

Great Conduit

Great Conduit

In 1236/7 the City of London was granted permission to tap the Tyburn Springs, at about where Stratford Place now is. Work to build the conduit began in 1245. it went via Piccadilly, Charing Cross,...

Building, Engineering, Food & Drink

2 memorials
George Wimpey Ltd

George Wimpey Ltd

Based in Hammersmith initially so an early job was very local - the Hammersmith Town Hall.  Also: the first electric tramway in London and the White City exhibition buildings including the 1908 Oly...

Group, Engineering, Property

1 memorial
First residential roof-top wind turbines

First residential roof-top wind turbines

The published benefits of domestic wind turbines vary enormously. Taking a very rough average, each one saves about five tonnes of carbon dioxide being released into the atmosphere each year, and p...

Group, Engineering

1 memorial
Norman E. Harrison, A.M.I.Mech.E.

Norman E. Harrison, A.M.I.Mech.E.

Junior 2rd Engineer on the RMS Titanic. A full résumé of his life can be found on the Encyclopedia Titanica website.  He is also commemorated on the Engineers Memorial, Andrews East Park, Above Ba...

Person, Engineering, Tragedy

1 memorial
Sir Henry Bessemer

Sir Henry Bessemer

Engineer known for inventing the Bessemer process for producing steel. Born Charlton, Hertfordshire. Moved to London aged 17. From 1833 he lived at 15 Northampton Square, the EC1 site now occupied ...

Person, Engineering

2 memorials

Previously viewed

Brady Settlement

Brady Settlement

From the picture source website: The Brady Boys' Club was the first Jewish boys' club in Great Britain and it was founded in 1896 by Lady Charlotte Rothschild, Mrs Arthur Franklin and Mrs N S Josep...

Place, Children, Community / Clubs

3 memorials
Henry Shrubsole

Henry Shrubsole

Banker, draper and former mayor of Kingston upon Thames: 1877, 1878 and 1879. At an annual dinner given for the poor, he had just finished his speech and was in the act of presenting a small packet...

Person, Commerce, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
William Lambard

William Lambard

Antiquarian, lawyer, politician and writer. His name was also spelt Lambarde. Born London, he studied law at Lincoln's Inn, wrote the 'Perambulation of Kent', (the first English county history) and...

Person, History, Law, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
John Keats

John Keats

Born 24 Moorfields Pavement Row, Finsbury. This was the Swan and Hoop pub, where his father worked as a stableman and later managed the inn. Baptised at St Botolphs. 1815-16 trained at Guy’s Hospit...

Person, Poetry, Seriously Famous, Italy

8 memorials
Henry Hugh Armstead

Henry Hugh Armstead

Sculptor and illustrator. Born Bloomsbury. Executed a large number of public statues and funerary works, and worked closely with George Gilbert Scott on the Albert Memorial. Died at home 52 Circus ...

Person, Art

68 memorials