Born 16 July 1893 at The Folly, Lakes Creek, central Queensland, Beatrice May Hutton was the second of seven children of a grazier and surveyor Falconer West Hutton and Clara Susannah, née Holt. Her early life was spent on the family property at Comet Down. Drought forced the family off the land in 1902 and they moved to
Rockhampton in 1906 She became the firm's chief draftsperson during Hockings' war service. Hutton became the first woman admitted to an architectural institute in Australia, when she was accepted as a member of the
Queensland Institute of Architects on 30 October 1916. The
Sydney architectural journal
The Salon announced: It is not yet clear what constituted her contribution to the work of
Hockings and Palmer, however, several wide verandahed houses in Rockhampton have been attributed to Hutton's early career, such as the now heritage-listed
Rudd Residence. Houses were Hutton's particular interest and like other early women architects, she felt that women had a significant role in designing houses that were suitable for the climate and that utilised labour saving features. Her career progressed following her move to Sydney in late 1916, where her work focussed mainly on residential projects, as well as the New South Wales
Masonic Club building (1927) and
Sirius House in Macquarie Place. From April 1917 she worked for expatriate Queensland architect,
Claude William Chambers, becoming a junior partner from 1931 to 1933. The firm was listed for those years as "Chambers and Hutton" in Sands New South Wales Directory, and it may be that Hutton was the only woman practising as a principal in Sydney at the time. She returned to Rockhampton in 1934 to care for her elderly parents, effectively ending her architectural career. Hutton believed that women had a valuable contribution to make in the design of the residential realm, "in the design of homes suited to climate and equipped for modern living", and she is best known for her residential work, in Rockhampton and Sydney. ==Later life==