Baltimore Sun

Hamilton C. Davis Jr., businessma­n

- — Frederick N. Rasmussen — The Washington Post

Hamilton C. “Chace” Davis Jr., a partner in the Baltimore investment firm of Chapin Davis Inc., died March 1 at the Broadmead retirement community in Cockeysvil­le from complicati­ons of Alzheimer’s disease. He was 90.

He was born in Baltimore and raised on 40th Street in Roland Park, the son of Hamilton C. Davis, president of F.A. Davis & Sons Inc., a wholesale tobacco distributi­ng business, and Georgia L. Dove Davis, a homemaker.

Mr. Davis, who was known as “Chace,” graduated from Friends School in 1945. He served in the Navy for a year before entering Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pa. He obtained a bachelor’s degree in 1950.

He worked briefly as an admissions assistant at Dickinson, then returned to Baltimore and joined the F.A. Davis familyowne­d business.

In 1965 he joined Bedford Chapin, who had founded a Baltimore investment firm in 1952, and later became a partner. The company became known as Chapin Davis Inc. He retired in 1997. In 1956, the longtime Guilford resident was co-founder with Norman Scribner of what became known as the Baltimore Choral Arts Society. Family members said one of the society’s earliest concerts featured famed African-American lyric soprano Adele Addision.

Mr. Davis served on the board of Dickinson College and chaired the board of Baltimore’s City Life Museums. He had also been director of the Baltimore Better Air Coalition and a member of the board of the Baltimore City Jail.

He was interested in the restoratio­n and revitaliza­tion of Bolton Hill, where he lived from 1957 to 1969. He also maintained an interest in Baltimore gardens, city architectu­re and local art museums and galleries. He was also an avid gardener.

Mr. Davis later lived at Cross Keys before moving to Broadmead eight years ago. Services are private. Mr. Davis is survived by his wife of 61 years, the former Helen Shaw; a son, Hamilton C. Davis III of Charlotte, N.C.; three daughters, Katherine D. Hope of Parkton, Martha Socolar of Guilford and Lisa D. Correll of New York City; a brother, John L. Davis of Luthervill­e, a sister, Suzanne D. Emory of Glen Arm; and 12 grandchild­ren. of Cambridge when she married Diana’s elder son, Prince William.

He was a milliner for 75 years, eventually based out of a basement shop in London’s Beauchamp Place shopping district. Although Mr. Boyd would visit the royals in their palaces when summoned, many of his clients arrived at 16 Beauchamp Place incognito, slipping down the basement stairs while paparazzi lurked outside the nearby restaurant San Lorenzo, looking for celebritie­s.

John Richardson Boyd, a printer’s son, was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1925. After leaving school at 15, he worked briefly for the North British Rubber Co. in Edinburgh, and later served in the Royal Navy and was aboard a minesweepe­r during the Normandy invasion.

One of his first milliner clients was Frances Shand Kydd, Lady Diana’s mother.

In 2014, the queen awarded Mr. Boyd an MBE— Member of the British Empire — for his services to fashion. He died at his home in Brighton, England, said Ms. Marshall, who did not provide a cause. He never married and had no immediate survivors.

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