Fulcher's sisters chose more conventional paths; neither earned their own financial independence. Margaret, the oldest (known as Daisy), married Harry Siegler, an Anglo-Jewish businessman and factory owner from Manchester. She was 34, he was 9 years younger. They had a son, Eric Harry, in 1901, but Margaret died in 1914. Eric changed his surname to Sinclair, and emigrated to Western Australia in 1922, listing his occupation as a farm worker. He married Marjorie Haines in 1936. Katharine, the younger sister, never married and continued living at home in Chingford until her father died in 1912. She was a devoted church attender, and continued to be so when she moved to Wiveliscombe in Somerset. The youngest child and Norah's only brother, Frank Sydney Fulcher, emigrated to Hong Kong around 1899, where he worked as an assistant in the China Traders Insurance Company. He made (at least) two return visits to the UK in 1906 and 1908, returning via New York and Shanghai. He died in Shanghai five months after returning from his final visit home, aged 38. Fulcher died on 24 June 1945. She left her jewellery (giving detailed descriptions of the pieces) to a wide circle of women friends including Mollie Thorne (née Stearns), who Norah had painted in 1913. She also left legacies to her nephew, Eric Harry Sinclair and his wife, and to Edith Emily Mocatta, a friend who was a witness at her sister Margaret's wedding in 1900, 45 years earlier. She originally made bequests to Edward Liddall Armitage and his family who she had known for many years, but revoked them on the same day giving the reason that they were conscientious objectors. She was politically conservative but non-conformist in belief; a long-standing member of The Ethical Church, in Bayswater. A forerunner to the Humanist movement, it espoused social reform and a sense of community rather than theological religious worship. It was about Goodness rather than Godliness, and was outside the mainstream. Archived correspondence shows Fulcher stating her disapproval with what she saw as unethical behaviour by the Church Committee. She asked for
Harold Blackham, leader of the Ethical Church from 1933, to preside at her funeral. The person closest to her was Dora Mary Saxton, a loving friend for decades. Dora was described by her cousin Sidney Waring Saxton in a 1947 letter to his cousin, Keitha as: "sweet natured and a friend to everyone". They spent winters in
Bordighera in Italy together for many years, always staying in one of the best hotels, the Hotel Angst. In 1928, the year fulcher painted Sir Arthur Mayo-Robson's portrait, he was staying there with his family at the same time.
Mary Brodrick also spent much time in Bordighera; it was very popular with the affluent British. Dora Saxton was also a long-standing member of The Ethical Church, and lived within a short walk of Blenheim Crescent. In their last years they both moved to
Wimbledon, living separately but in the same road. Dora died on the 17 June 1938, and Norah was the first to be named in her Will, as "my dear friend". Fulcher asked for her own cremation to be at
Golders Green, with her ashes scattered at the same spot where Dora's had been placed in 1938. ==Works==