Background
He was educated at Harrow School and Magdalen College, Oxford, and trained as a lawyer, being admitted to the bar in 1906 by his father, Edward George Clarke, a prominent lawyer and later Solicitor-General.
He was educated at Harrow School and Magdalen College, Oxford, and trained as a lawyer, being admitted to the bar in 1906 by his father, Edward George Clarke, a prominent lawyer and later Solicitor-General.
Magdalen College; Harrow School.
In 1915, he was commissioned as an assistant paymaster, having failed the eye examination for executive officer He knew German, and in March 1916 joined Room 40. His talent was for information analysis rather than code-breaking.
He was on duty during the Battle of Jutland, and was unimpressed by the inefficient handling and distribution of intelligence.
When Clarke and Francis Birch were chosen in 1919 to write the history of Room 40, their outspoken criticism of the Navy’s mishandling of intelligence led to the history being “suppressed”. In 1919, he joined the Government Code and Cipher School, working for four years on American diplomatic traffic.
In 1924 he was promoted to head of the new naval section in Government College&CS, holding the position to 1941. He was buried at Church of All Saints, Selworthy.