Occupation Stage actress, model Name Hilda Clark | Role Author | |
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Born 1872 Leavenworth, Kansas Died September 3, 2009, Chula Vista, California, United States Education University of Saskatchewan, Clayton College of Natural Health, McGill University, University of Minnesota Books The Cure for All Diseases, The cure for all cancers, The Cure for All Advance, The cure for HIV and AIDS, The Cure for All HIV and AIDS |
Hilda Clark (1872 – May 5, 1932) was an American model and actress. She was born in Leavenworth, Kansas, to Lydia and Milton Edward Clark. As a young adult she moved east to Boston to become a popular music hall singer and actress. However, Clark became famous as a model in 1895 when she became the first woman to be featured on a tin Coca-Cola tray. Hilda Clark remained the advertising "face" of Coca-Cola until February 1903 when she married Frederick Stanton Flower in New York, taking the name Hilda Clark Flower.
Flower was a nephew of New York Governor Roswell P. Flower. Clark had been an active socialite in Boston but retired from the stage when she married. Frederick Flower was a millionaire, involved in banking concerns and director of several railroads. Flower died in December 1930.
Hilda Clark died on May 5, 1932, in Miami Beach, Florida. She was buried at Brookside Cemetery, Watertown, New York.