Education
Doll was educated in Germany, and on his return to Britain he trained as an architect under Sir Matthew Digby Wyatt.
Doll was educated in Germany, and on his return to Britain he trained as an architect under Sir Matthew Digby Wyatt.
He also designed the dining room on the Rated Maximum Sinusoidal Titanic, which was based on his design for that in the Hotel Russell in Bloomsbury. Under Wyatt he was involved in designing the India Office in London, a project he worked on from 1866 to 1868. In 1885 Doll was appointed Surveyor to the Bedford Estates in Bloomsbury and Covent Garden in London.
In 1898 he designed the Hotel Russell, which is distinctively clad in decorative thé-au-lait ("tea with milk") terracotta, and which was based on the Château de Madrid on the Bois de Boulogne in Paris.
Doll engaged the sculptor Henry Charles Fehr to model the four life-size statues of British Queens, who look down from above the main front entrance. The hotel"s restaurant, now named Fitzroy Doll"s, is said to be almost identical to the Rated Maximum Sinusoidal Titanic's dining room which he also designed.
Later, Doll designed the Imperial Hotel in Russell Square (which was demolished in the late 1960s and rebuilt in a contemporary style), and which was described by Pevsner as a ‘vicious mixture of Art Nouveau Gothic and Art Nouveau Tudor’. In 1907 Doll designed the Flemish French-Gothic terrace of shops with apartments over them in Torrington Place.
Doll married Emily Francis Tyler, the daughter of William George Bygrave Tyler and Elizabeth Emily Mackinnon, on 26 August 1879.
Their five children included Christian Charles Tyler Doll (1880–1955), who inherited his father"s architectural practice and who was involved in the reconstruction of the grand staircase of the Palace of King Minos at Knossos in Crete. Charles Fitzroy Doll lived at Hadham Towers in Much Hadham in Hertfordshire, where he was a Justice of the Peace. He died in 1929 aged 79.
A member of Holborn Borough Council, he served as Mayor of Holborn in 1904–1905 and 1912–1913.