Alexander Scott Carter

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Carter, c.1930.

Alexander Scott Carter (7 April 1881 – 30 December 1968) was an English-born Canadian artist and architect, specializing in architectural decoration and heraldic ornament.

Carter was born on 7 April 1881 in Harrow, Middlesex.[1]

He attended the Bournemouth School of Art. He articled with J. S. C. McEwan-Brown, an architect local to Bournemouth. In 1902, he moved to London and was employed in the offices of architects William Hunt and later Alan G. James. From 1905 to 1908, he attended the Royal Academy of Arts, where his instructors included Sir Thomas Graham Jackson, Sir Reginald Blomfield and Sir Aston Webb. He was awarded two silver medals for his designs at school.[2]

Career

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