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Thursday, 3 March 2022

(509) Beauchamp (later Beauchamp-Proctor and Proctor-Beauchamp) of Langley Park, baronets

Proctor-Beauchamp of Langley Park 
Edward Beauchamp (1612-82) was the descendant of a family of yeomen farmers at Upton near Burford (Oxon), who can be traced back to the mid sixteenth century, and who were perhaps distantly related to the Henry Beauchamp who acquired the manor of Burford in 1439.  Edward had a large family, and two of his younger sons became carpenters, while his sixth son, Ephraim Beauchamp (1661-1728), with whom the genealogy below begins, became a stone mason. The vicinity of Burford was noted for its stone quarries, many of which were in the hands of the Strong family, a dynasty noted for the construction of some of the most important buildings in Oxford and the Cotswolds in the 17th century. Thomas Strong (c.1634-81) moved to London after the Great Fire of 1666 created unprecedented opportunities for craftsmen in the building trades, and when he died he left his business to his much younger brother, Edward Strong senior (1652-1724), who married into the Beauchamp family and became Ephraim's brother-in-law. Ephraim Beauchamp was almost certainly apprenticed to Edward Strong, and he first appears in London in 1683 receiving a payment for work on Strong's behalf. In 1684 Ephraim was made free of the Masons' Company, and he thereafter set up his own building business, working in brick as well as stone, and continued to trade until about 1707. His most notable project was a 17-year contract to build part of the dome of St. Paul's Cathedral, a job which he undertook in partnership with another (and much older) Burford mason, Christopher Kempster.

Ephraim Beauchamp's career made him a comparatively wealthy man and was reflected in a rise in social status from 'mason' to 'gentleman' and ultimately to 'esquire', and in his acquisition of property at Tottenham (Middx) and Monken Hadley (Herts); in his later years he lived in retirement at Hertford. He married three times, and produced at least ten children, all of whom seem to have predeceased him. His eldest son, Thomas Beauchamp (c.1687-1724) was the only one to live to maturity and marry, and was killed by a fall from his horse while visiting his in-laws at Epsom (Surrey). Thomas' wife was Anne (1693-1745), the daughter of William Proctor, citizen and fishmonger of London, who brought him the handsome portion of £10,000. Their only son was William Beauchamp (1722-73), who succeeded his grandfather in the Tottenham and Monken Hadley property at the age of six and came of age in 1743. Within the next two years he not only married, but inherited the Langley estate in Norfolk from his maternal uncle, George Proctor (d. 1744), and was raised to a baronetcy. He took the additional name Proctor by Act of Parliament as a condition of his uncle's legacy. 

In 1747, Sir William Beauchamp-Proctor, 1st bt., was elected one of the two MPs for Middlesex, and he continued sit for that county until 1768. In the election of that year he no doubt expected to be quietly elected again, but two days before the poll the radical John Wilkes declared himself a candidate. With no property in the county, no money to support an expensive contest, and no time to canvass the constituency, it seemed impossible that he could succeed, but the merchants and shopkeepers rallied in numbers to his cause and he pulled off an unlikely victory. Benjamin Franklin, an acute observer, was puzzled that it had happened: "It is really an extraordinary event to see an outlaw and exile, of bad personal character, not worth a farthing... carrying... the principal county". At a bye-election the following December caused by the death of the second MP for the county, Beauchamp-Proctor stood again, this time against John Glynn, the lawyer who acted for Wilkes and shared his political standpoint. A bitter and long-drawn-out contest, which is said to have cost Beauchamp-Proctor as much as £10,000, resulted in a victory for Glynn, and Beauchamp-Proctor did not stand for Middlesex or any other constituency again. King George III was so grateful for Sir William's valiant efforts to defeat Wilkes, that he intended to raise him to the peerage, but Sir William died before the patent passed the Great Seal, and his son declined the honour.

Sir William was twice married and produced thirteen children, of whom just six survived to adulthood. The baronetcy and Langley Park descended to Sir Thomas Beauchamp-Proctor (1756-1827), 2nd bt., a cultivated man who travelled in Italy after leaving university and who, with his wife, developed the picture collection at Langley Park. His younger brother George Beauchamp-Proctor (1759-1838) inherited the White Hall estate at Tottenham, but sold it to his brother shortly before his marriage. The motives for this sale are unclear, but Sir Thomas offloaded the estate a year later, selling it to a tanner who constructed a tan-yard in the grounds! Sir Thomas' wife bore him nine children, of whom eight survived to maturity. Of his four surviving sons, two went into the army, one the navy, and one the church.  Rather surprisingly it was the eldest son, Sir William Beauchamp-Proctor (1781-1861), 3rd bt., who joined the Navy, going to sea at the age of 13 and rising through the ranks until he retired as a Captain in 1809, although the Navy's tradition of promotion by seniority saw him rise to be an Admiral on the retired list. After retiring, he returned to Norfolk and took his place in local government, serving as High Sheriff in 1833-34.

The Admiral had three sons and six daughters. His eldest son, Sir Thomas William Brograve Beauchamp-Proctor (1815-74), 4th bt., was known as a young man as Thomas B. Proctor, and in 1852, for reasons which are obscure, he reversed the order of his surnames, becoming Sir Thomas Proctor-Beauchamp. Several other members of the family dropped the Proctor part of their surname, at least in daily usage, although as far as I can see none of them did so formally. The 4th baronet must have been keen on the military life, for after serving in the regular army for about eight years as a young man, he held a series of commissions in different militia regiments, culminating in a command as Lt-Col. of the Norfolk Rifle Volunteers. He had five sons and four daughters, all of whom survived until maturity except for the youngest son. Three of his sons succeeded to the baronetcy in turn: Sir Reginald William Proctor-Beauchamp (1853-1912), 5th bt., whose marriage collapsed after his wife had an affair with a former MP, and who had no sons; Sir Horace George Proctor-Beauchamp (1856-1915), 6th bt., a career soldier who was married but had no issue; and the Rev. Sir Montagu Harry Proctor-Beauchamp (1860-1939), 7th bt., a missionary in China, who was the ancestor of the current baronet. Langley Park passed with the baronetcy to Sir Reginald Proctor-Beauchamp, but on his death in 1912 it was left to his elder daughter, Sheila (1881-1953), the wife of Maj. Hermon Barker-Hahlo (1873-1972). She and her husband seem to have separated in about 1930 and Sheila resumed the surname Beauchamp by royal licence in 1934. Langley Park was requisitioned during the Second World War and afterwards was leased to a school. Sheila Beauchamp's only son, Jocelyn George Reginald Barker-Hahlo (1910-58), had taken the surname Beauchamp on coming of age in 1931. Although briefly engaged in 1938, he never married, and he sold the freehold of Langley Park to the incumbent school in 1957, shortly before his death. The family retained the important picture collection begun by George Proctor in the 1730s and augmented by the 2nd baronet and later owners, although one of the most important pictures was sold in the 1950s and more in 1974.

White Hall, Tottenham, Middlesex

The story of this property begins with  a large house belonging to the Barkham family on the east side of High Cross Green, which is thought to have been converted into an inn (the Ship Inn) after Sir Edward Barkham's death in 1634. It was apparently superseded by a house known as Crokes Farm on White Hart Lane, which occupied a plot on the west side of the High Road from White Hart Lane south to the later Church Road; Love Lane may have marked its rear boundary. The tiny sketch of it on the Earl of Dorset's survey of Tottenham in 1619 suggests it may have been constructed around a courtyard, and by 1664, when the house may have been enlarged or rebuilt, it was assessed on 21 hearths, indicating a building as large as many country houses. The house was rebuilt again in the mid 1750s by Sir William Beauchamp-Proctor, 1st bt., who renamed it White Hall. 

White Hall, Tottenham: the mid 18th century mansion, here attributed to John Sanderson, built for Sir William Beauchamp-Proctor in the 1750s.
White Hall was a seven bay, three storey house with the central three bays broken forward and carrying a pediment, and projecting three-bay, single-storey wings. No architect is recorded for the building, but it is much in the style of the London-based second generation Palladian, John Sanderson, who made alterations to Langley Park in 1757. In 1790 a new owner of the house built a tan-yard in the grounds, and even though this was removed by his successor, the character of the area was probably already changing from a landscape dominated by the suburban villas of the gentry to an area of more mixed development. In the 1830s, when the house was still screened by trees from the High Road and faced south across a lake, a new entrance was made to the property from the High Road, and by the 1860s the house and lake had been removed and the site was being developed for terraced housing.

Descent: John Croke (d. 1477); to son, John Croke... William Dalby; to son, Lionel Dalby, who sold c.1610 to Sir Edward Barkham (c.1551-1634), kt.; to younger son, Sir Robert Barkham (c.1598-1661), kt.; sold after his death to his brother, Sir Edward Barkham (c.1595-1667), 1st bt.; to younger son, Sir William Barkham (1639-94), 3rd bt; to daughters, who sold to Ephraim Beauchamp (d. 1728); to grandson, William Beauchamp (from 1744 Sir William Beauchamp-Proctor (1722-73), 1st bt.); to son, George Beauchamp-Proctor (1759-1838), who sold 1789 to his brother, Sir Thomas Beauchamp-Proctor (1756-1827), 2nd bt.; sold 1790 to Mr. Abrahams, tanner; sold c.1810 to Mr. Andrews; sold to Henry Hunt; sold to William May Simmonds; sold 1827 to Charles Soames (fl. 1843); demolished by 1863.

Langley Park, Norfolk

Langley Hall is one of the most charming and richly decorated country houses in the county, and it is a great pity that its complex evolution is not more clearly understood. The estate belonged to the Berney family from the Dissolution of the Monasteries until 1739, but nothing seems to be known about the house they had here in the 16th and 17th centuries. The present building began as a two-storey red brick house built on a greenfield site for Robert Berney (d. 1738) in about 1730 or perhaps a little earlier; it had a five-bay entrance front and seven closely-spaced bays on the garden front. In 1736 the new house was said to be so bad that it ought to be pulled down, but when offered for sale in 1739 it was 'lately built in the newest manner'. The purchaser was George Proctor of Epsom (Surrey), who had recently been living in Venice. He probably added the attic storey and the pavilion wings (originally of seven by three bays), joined to the main block of the house by curved links, to the design of Matthew Brettingham, c.1742-44. 

Langley Park: detail of a painting by John Wootton dated 1749 showing the house and pavilion wings before the addition of the towers.
Image: Norwich Castle Museum.
Proctor died in 1744 and left the house to his nephew, William Beauchamp (1722-73), on condition that he took the additional name of Proctor, which he did the same year. John Wootton's painting of 1749 of the Beauchamp-Proctor family and their friends in the grounds of the house makes clear that at that date Sir William Beauchamp-Proctor had not begun to build the corner towers with pyramidal caps which are the most distinctive feature of the house today. 

Langley Park: view of the house by an anonymous artist, c.1770, showing the house after the addition of the towers
and the commencement of landscaping works. Image: Roger Last.
The corner towers have usually been attributed to Matthew Brettingham, but they are remarkably similar to the corner towers added to Kimberley Hall (Norfk) in 1754 by the amateur architect Thomas Prowse. Prowse and Proctor-Beauchamp were both MPs at this time, and would have known one another through Parliament. There is another link, for John Sanderson, the London-based second generation Palladian whom Prowse used as executant architect at both Kimberley and elsewhere, made drawings for Langley that include alternative designs for the form of the towers, one of which is essentially as built, and a letter of December 1757 shows Sanderson did actually carry out work at Langley. So it seems probable that either Prowse designed and Sanderson erected the towers; or that Sanderson, having erected the corner towers at Kimberley to Prowse's design, made similar alterations to Langley without Prowse's involvement. 

Langley Park: drawing by John Sanderson for suggested improvements to the entrance front.
The tower design on the right-hand side of the sheet is close to what was built. Image: Yale Center for British Art Public Domain image.
The four-column Greek Doric entrance porch was added in c.1829-30 and the reconstruction of the pavilion wings as four-by-four bay blocks may have been done at the same time. The latter change had been completed by 1830, when the wings in their current form are shown on a ground plan of the house. They cannot, therefore, be the unidentified work which Anthony Salvin carried out in 1849-50, and indeed his estimate of £520 would not have covered such a major remodelling. Further work was done by Edward Boardman (1833-1910) in about 1867, which included the re-roofing of the main block and minor alterations to the towers, and a conservatory was added to the rear of the east wing at much the same time. By the early 20th century the condition of the house was deteriorating and repairs, including the re-roofing of the east wing, were undertaken in the 1920s; the Victorian conservatory was largely demolished about 1930. The house was requisitioned for military use in the Second World War and let as a school afterwards. The school bought the freehold in 1957 and continues to occupy the building.

Langley Park: entrance front in 1995. Image: Nick Kingsley. Some rights reserved.

The result of this complex evolution is a house which is Palladian in overall feel, although the proportions and details feel earlier on closer inspection. The banded Doric pilasters carrying an entablature that is only complete over the pilaster capitals, the proportions of the main elevations, which have ground and first floors of equal height, and the attic storey above the entablature, all derive from the early 18th century idiom epitomized by Buckingham House, London. 

Langley Hall: garden front in 1927. Image: Country Life.
The stone doorcase on the north (garden) front, with engaged Ionic columns set against a rusticated background and carrying a broken pediment belongs to the same style and is presumably a survival from the original house of c.1730. The plain parapet and understated central pediments on the north and south fronts contribute to the Palladian feel and seem to have been added at the same time as the corner towers: Sanderson's surviving drawings show that he toyed with the idea of a much more baroque treatment with a swan-neck pediment against the parapet and life-sized baroque sculptures against the attic storey.

Langley Park: ground floor plan of the house dated 1830, showing that the wings had then already been rebuilt in their current four-bay form.
The internal plan is complex and a little awkward, no doubt largely because of the progressive expansion of the house, but one's impression is dominated by the exceptionally rich Rococo plasterwork. It is regrettable that there is so little dating evidence to suggest what was done when, although it seems probably that several different craftsmen contributed to it, perhaps over ten or fifteen years. 

Langley Park: detail of entrance hall ceiling. Image: Nick Kingsley. Some rights reserved.
The large entrance hall has a domed circular centre with four allegorical figures and four medallions with heads in profile.  The principal staircase to the right has rises in a single flight, but divides in two as it approaches the first-floor landing, which has plaster wall and ceiling decoration, again with large medallions bearing profile busts. The stair itself has three twisted balusters to each tread and carved tread-ends, a ramped and wreathed handrail and dado panelling. 

Langley Park: first floor landing and corridor in 1927. Image: Country Life.
Behind the entrance hall and occupying the centre of the north front is the modestly proportion saloon, which has two large high-relief stucco panels of outstanding quality, attributed since the early 19th century to the rather obscure Charles Stanley, a Dane born to English parents who was in England between 1727 and 1746. 

Langley Park: saloon, 1995. Image: Nick Kingsley. Some rights reserved.

Langley Park: panel of the battle between the Lapiths and the Centaurs over the saloon chimneypiece. Image: Nick Kingsley. Some rights reserved.
The panel over the chimneypiece represents the battle between the Lapiths and the Centaurs, and the one opposite the Departure of Helen (after Guido Reni). There are smaller mythological reliefs above the doors to either side of these big panels, and two large putti lying on the sides of the pediment above the door into the hall. Between the windows are oval mirrors flanked by four standing female nudes. The saloon is flanked by the Breakfast Room and the Red Room. The former has two arches creating a rather awkward serving space which represents the base of one of the corner towers and a space next to it added to the house at the same time. The Red Room has further Rococo stuccowork. 

Langley Park: the breakfast room in 1927. Image: Country Life.
The ground floor of the east wing is largely occupied by the library, ballroom and billiard room, all of which are entered through a smaller ante room, reached from the main house through one of the curving linking passages. The Library, which has a Venetian window in the east end wall of the Library and canted bay to the north, has a ceiling with Rococo tendril trails composed around an oval relief of Diana and Actaeon, which may also be by Charles Stanley, although the style is rather different to the panels in the saloon. The Ballroom was redecorated in the early Victorian period (perhaps as early as c.1829-30) in a rich and rather French style.

Langley Park: stucco panel of Diana and Actaeon on the library ceiling. Image: Nick Kingsley. Some rights reserved.
Langley Park: the ballroom ceiling. Image: Nick Kingsley. Some rights reserved.
To the west of the Breakfast Room, and connecting with it, is the Dining Room. This stands outside the line of the corner towers and is clearly a later addition. However, the interior seems to be original Georgian work in a much more restrained style than any of the other rooms. It looks like a surviving fragment of the Matthew Brettingham interior of the 1740s, and Pevsner speculated that it originally stood in the west wing and was re-erected here when that wing was rebuilt as the kitchen and other domestic offices. The centre has a domed circle in the ceiling, with a big star in the shallow dome, which looks early 19th century. A screen of fluted Ionic columns defines the serving space at the inner end of the room.

Langley Park: ceiling of first-floor room with singerie decoration by Adrien de Clermont. Image: Nick Kingsley. Some rights reserved.
Upstairs, the room above the entrance hall has a delightful ceiling by Adrien de Clermont, in which his usual singerie decoration is varied by the addition of dogs and owls. It must have been painted before the artist returned to France in 1755. The house was noted in the 19th and early 20th century for its collection of pictures, although the most famous of these, Poussin's Nativity, was sold at Sothebys in 1956.

The Wootton view of the house shows it set in a formal landscape with big blocks of woodland defining geometrical shapes. In 1765, in another parallel with Kimberley Hall, Sir William Beauchamp-Proctor asked Capability Brown to design a new informal layout, and his plan remains in the house, though major elements of it, including the lake, were apparently never executed. The later bird's eye view reproduced above shows a more informal landscape, with a classical temple to the west of the house, evidence that the new drives, and woodland clearance and planting were carried out. Much of the parkland landscape was returned to agriculture during and after the Second World War. 

Langley Park: landscaping scheme by Capability Brown, 1765, which was only partially executed. Image: Langley School.
There are a number of subsidiary buildings in the grounds which are of note, including the nine-bay square stable block (now converted into teaching accommodation), probably designed by Matthew Brettingham for George Proctor in the early 1740s. South-west of the house is the 15th century village cross, which was presumably moved here (where it marks the junction of four parishes) when the village was cleared away. 

Langley Park: Chedgrave Road lodge, by Sir John Soane, 1790. Image: Evelyn Simak. Some rights reserved.

Langley Park: Thurton lodges by Sir John Soane, 1784.
There are also two sets of lodges on the Norwich and Chedgrave roads which are early works of Sir John Soane, designed in 1784 for Sir Thomas Beauchamp-Proctor, 2nd bt. The Chedgrave lodges (not erected until 1790) take the form of a triumphal screen of gault brick with Portland stone dressings, with the lodge accommodation either side of the single tall archway. The oval paterae either side of the archway and the extraordinary chimneypots on the shoulders of the arch are made of Coade stone. The lodge blocks have two handsome stone greyhounds carved by James Nelson as supporters for oval panels of the family coat of arms. The Thurton Lodges on the Norwich road (acquired and restored by the Norfolk Historic Buildings Trust in 1985) are more conventional square single-storey blocks with pedimented gable-ends above a central recess flanked by unfluted Doric columns; perfectly formed little buildings with the calculated economy of design that was to be a hallmark of Soane's mature style. They are linked by a simple but equally elegant cast iron screen.

Descent: built for Robert Berney (d. 1738); sold 1739 to George Proctor (d. 1744); to nephew, Sir William Beauchamp-Proctor (1722-73), 1st bt.; to son, Sir Thomas Beauchamp-Proctor (1756-1827), 2nd bt.; to son, Admiral Sir William Beauchamp-Proctor (1781-1861), 3rd bt.; to son, Sir Thomas William Brograve Beauchamp-Proctor (later Proctor-Beauchamp) (1815-74), 4th bt.; to son, Sir Reginald William Proctor-Beauchamp (1853-1912), 5th bt.; to daughter, Sheila Ginevra Hilda Mary Proctor-Beauchamp (1881-1953), wife of Maj. Hermon Barker-Hahlo (1873-1972), who resumed the name Beauchamp 1934; to son, Jocelyn George Reginald Barker-Hahlo (later Beauchamp) (1910-58); sold 1957 to Langley School.

Beauchamp (later Beauchamp-Proctor and Proctor-Beauchamp) of Langley Park, baronets


Beauchamp, Ephraim (1661-1728). Sixth son of Edward Beauchamp (1612-82) of Upton near Burford (Oxon), yeoman, and his wife Margery Haines, born 1661. A citizen and stone mason of London, he was probably apprenticed to his brother-in-law, Edward Strong of Burford, who became one of the men principally responsible for the rebuilding of the city of London after the Great Fire of 1666. He first appears in London in 1683 receiving a payment for Strong, and he was made free of the Masons Company in London, 1684. His works included building the east wing of the College of Arms, 1687, the church of St Dunstan-in-the-East, London, 1695, and part of the dome of St Paul's Cathedral (with Christopher Kempster), 1690-1707. His accumulating wealth was reflected in an increase in social status: he first styled himself as a 'gentleman' in 1708 and was an 'esquire' just a few years' later in 1712, and he evidently retired from business in about 1707. He was a Governor of Bethlem and Bridewell Royal Hospitals from c.1701 (the latter used chiefly as a prison by this date), a Trustee of the Tottenham Free Grammar School, a Governor of Christ's Hospital, and a Commissioner of Sewers for Tower Hamlets. He married 1st, 28 October 1686 at Godstone (Surrey), Mary (1666-98), daughter of Edward Warden of London; 2nd, 28 February 1698/9 at St Giles, Camberwell (Surrey), Mary Brooks (d. 1704); and 3rd, 19 May 1704 at Edmonton (Middx), Letitia (c.1668-1740), daughter of John Coppin of Pulloxhill (Beds), and had issue:
(1.1) Thomas Beauchamp (c.1687-1724) (q.v.);
(1.2) Edward Beauchamp (b. 1689), baptised at St Mary Magdalene, Old Fish St.. London, 12 June 1689; probably died young;
(1.3) Ephraim Beauchamp (1691-92), baptised at St Mary Magdalene, Old Fish St., London, 17 March 1690/1; died in infancy and was buried at the same church, 12 September 1692; 
(1.4) Ephraim Beauchamp (1692-1704), baptised at St Mary Magdalene, Old Fish St., London, 8 September 1692; died young and was buried at Tottenham, 27 April 1704;
(1.5) Ann Beauchamp (b. 1693), baptised at St Mary Magdalene, Old Fish St., London, 11 October 1693; probably died young;
(1.6) Thomas Beauchamp (b. 1695), baptised at St Mary Magdalene, Old Fish St., London, 1 January 1685/6; probably died young;
(1.7) Elizabeth Beauchamp (b. & d. 1697), baptised 2 December 1697; died in infancy, 5 December 1697;
(2.1) Mary Beauchamp (b. 1701), baptised at St Mary Magdalene, Old Fish St., London, 10 April 1701; died young and is said to have been buried at Tottenham;
(2.2) Elizabeth Beauchamp (b. 1702), baptised at St Mary Magdalene, Old Fish St., London, 3 January 1702/3; probably died young;
(3.1) Letitia Beauchamp (1708-13), baptised at Tottenham, 30 October 1708; died young and was buried at Tottenham, 21 March 1712/3.
He purchased Crookes Farm (later White Hall), Tottenham in 1694. He lived latterly at Hertford.
He died 16 September 1728; his will was proved 26 October 1728. His first wife was buried at St Mary Magdalene, Old Fish St., London, 26 April 1698. His second wife was buried at St Mary Magdalene, Old Fish St., London or at Tottenham (Middx)*, 11 January 1703/4. His widow died 16 March 1739/40 and was buried at Tottenham, 27 March 1740; her will was proved in the PCC, 18 March 1739/40.
* Her burial is entered in the registers of both churches.

Beauchamp, Thomas (c.1687-1724). Son of Ephraim Beauchamp (c.1660-1728) and his first wife Mary Warden, born about 1687. He married, 3 February 1718/9 in the chapel of St James' Palace, Westminster (Middx), with a portion of £10,000, Anne (1693-1745), daughter of William Proctor (d. 1726) of Epsom (Surrey), citizen and fishmonger of London, and had issue:
(1) Letitia Beauchamp (b. 1720), baptised at Tottenham, 18 March 1719/20;
(2) Sir William Beauchamp (later Beauchamp-Proctor) (1722-73), 1st bt. (q.v.);
(3) Mary Beauchamp (1723-34), baptised at Tottenham, 29 May 1723; died young and was buried at Tottenham, 20 July 1734;
(4) Anne/Jane Beauchamp (d. 1740), buried at Tottenham, 24 September 1740.
He was killed by a fall from his horse at Epsom on 15 June and was buried at Tottenham (Middx), 23 June 1724 in the lifetime of his father; he died intestate. His widow was buried at Tottenham, 20 April 1745.

Sir William Beauchamp-Proctor, 1st bt.  
Beauchamp (later Beauchamp-Proctor), Sir William (1722-73), 1st bt.
Only son of Thomas Beauchamp (d. 1724) and his wife Anne, daughter of William Proctor of Epsom (Surrey), baptised at All Hallows, Tottenham (Middx), 11 May 1722. Educated at Magdalen College, Oxford (matriculated 1738; created MA 1742). Colonel of the East Middlesex Militia, 1759-70. He was MP for Middlesex, 1747-68, and while nominally a Whig retained considerable independence, being regarded as a supporter by both sides at different times. He was defeated at the 1768 election by the turbulent radical, John Wilkes, in an election which is said to have cost him £10,000*, and did not stand for Parliament again. He was created a baronet, 20 February 1744/5, made a Knight of the Bath, 23 March 1761, and took the name Beauchamp-Proctor by Act of Parliament, 1745, under the terms of the will of his uncle George Proctor of Langley Park (Norfk). He married 1st, 29 January 1744/5 at the Chapel Royal, Whitehall, his cousin, Jane (1724-61), daughter of Christopher Tower of Huntsmoor Park (Bucks) and 2nd, 13 May 1762 at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster (Middx), Letitia (1737-98), eldest daughter and coheir of Henry Johnson of Great Berkhamsted (Herts), and had issue:
(1.1) Christopher Beauchamp-Proctor (b. 1746), born 11 August and baptised at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster, 26 August 1746; died young;
(1.2) Jane Beauchamp-Proctor (1747-52), born 28 September and was baptised at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster, 26 October 1747; died young and was buried at the same church, 10 May 1752;
(1.3) Anne Beauchamp-Proctor (1749-1813), born 8 August and baptised at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster, 5 September 1749; married, 29 January 1778 at St Marylebone (Middx), Sir Edmund Bacon (1749-1820), 8th & 9th bt., and had issue three sons and two daughters; died 26 August 1813 and was buried at Raveningham (Norfk), 3 September 1813;
(1.4) Mary Beauchamp-Proctor (b. 1750), born 17 January and baptised at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster, 22 February 1750; died young;
(1.5) Sir Thomas Beauchamp-Proctor (1756-1827), 2nd bt. (q.v.);
(1.6) Frances Beauchamp-Proctor (1757-1836), baptised at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster, 19 December 1757; married, 25 January 1778 at St Marylebone (Middx), John Custance (1749-1822) of Weston House (Norfk), and had issue seven sons and four daughters; died 10 April and was buried at Weston Longville (Norfk), 21 April 1836;
(1.7) George Beauchamp-Proctor (1759-1838), born 27 January and baptised at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster, 24 February 1759; inherited White Hall, Tottenham, from his father in 1773 but sold it to his elder brother in 1789; married, 20 October 1789 at Hurst (Berks), Charlotte (1758-1832), eldest daughter of Robert Palmer of Holme Park, Sonning (Berks); buried at Langley, 18 May 1838; will proved in the PCC, 23 June 1838;
(1.8) Mary Beauchamp-Proctor (1760-76), born 24 March and baptised at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster, 21 April 1760; died in London, 17 June, and was buried at Tottenham (Middx), 24 June 1776;
(2.1) Letitia Beauchamp-Proctor (1763-80), baptised at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster, 20 March 1763; died unmarried and was buried at the same church, 25 March 1780;
(2.2) Henrietta Beauchamp-Proctor (b. & d. 1764), baptised at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster, 19 December 1764; died in infancy and was buried at the same church, 21 December 1764;
(2.3) William Henry Beauchamp-Proctor (1769-1806), of Forthampton (Glos), born 9 April and baptised at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster, 8 May 1769; married, 21 June 1790 at Cumnor (Berks), Frances Mary (c.1771-1844), daughter and co-heir of Rev. William Davie, and had issue six sons and three daughters; died unmarried, 9 May 1806; 
(2.4) Christopher Beauchamp(-Proctor) (1771-1844), born 13 September and baptised at Langley, 6 October 1771; educated at Queens' College, Cambridge (matriculated 1790; BCL 1798); an officer in the Cambridgeshire Militia (Capt., 1807); did not use the second part of his surname; died unmarried at Ely, 21 February 1844;
(2.5) Sidney Thomas Beauchamp-Proctor (b. 1774), born posthumously and baptised at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster, 18 February 1774; probably died in infancy and in any case before 1798.
He inherited White Hall, Tottenham from his grandfather in 1728, came of age in 1743, and rebuilt the house in the 1750s. He inherited Langley Hall from his uncle George Proctor in about 1744, and altered that house, also in the 1750s.
He died 13 September 1773 and was buried at Tottenham (Middx); he is commemorated by a monument at Langley; his will was proved in the PCC, 7 December 1773. His first wife died 10 May 1761. His widow died 12 January 1798; her will was proved in the PCC, 15 March 1798.
* King George III took a personal interest in his contest with Wilkes (the King's bête noire), and after it was over, visited Sir William at his house in Bruton Street. He is said to have offered to cover Sir William's election expenses and, when this was declined, offered him a peerage which was accepted. The title (Baron Langley) is said to have been chosen, but Sir William died before the patent could pass the Great Seal, and his son and successor begged permission to decline the honour. 

Sir Thomas Beauchamp-Proctor, 2nd bt. 
Beauchamp-Proctor, Sir Thomas (1756-1827), 2nd bt.
Eldest son of Sir William Beauchamp (later Beauchamp-Proctor) (1722-73), 1st bt., and his first wife Jane, daughter of Christopher Tower of Huntsmoor Park (Bucks), born 29 September 1756. Educated at Harrow and Christ's College, Cambridge (matriculated 1773; created MA 1777) and then travelled in Europe: he is recorded in Venice in 1777. High Sheriff of Norfolk, 1780-81. He married, 5 March 1778 at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster (Middx), Mary (1759-1847), second daughter of Robert Palmer of Sonning (Berks), chief agent to the Bedford Estate in London, and had issue:
(1) Mary Beauchamp-Proctor (1779-1854), born 21 October and baptised at St James, Piccadilly, Westminster (Middx), 19 November 1779; married, 12 May 1800 at Langley, Rev. Henry Charles Hobart (1773-1844), rector of Bere Ferrers (Devon), 1798-1823, vicar of Kempley (Glos), 1821-38 and Canon of Hereford Cathedral, 1819-44, son of Hon. Henry Hobart (1738-99), and had issue two sons; buried at Langley, 11 May 1854;
(2) Admiral Sir William Beauchamp-Proctor (1781-1861), 3rd bt. (q.v.);
(3) Harriet Beauchamp-Proctor (1782-1868), born 22 October and baptised at Langley, 17 November 1782; married, 25 June 1803 at St Marylebone (Middx), Christopher Thomas Tower (1775-1867) of Weald Hall (Essex) and had issue four sons and four daughters; died 19 February 1868; administration of goods granted 7 April 1868 (effects under £2,000);
(4) Thomas Beauchamp-Proctor (1784-89), baptised at Langley, 8 February 1784; died young and was buried at Langley, 21 June 1789;
(5) George Edward Beauchamp-Proctor (1785-1868), born 23 July and baptised at Langley, 14 August 1785; JP for Berkshire; he lived at The Priory, Beech Hill (Berks) and later at Thetford (Norfk); married 1st, 2 August 1808 at Stratfield Saye, Louisa Ellen (1790-1848), only daughter of Robert William Halhed (d. 1836) of The Priory, Beech Hill, and had issue two sons and three daughters; married 2nd, 25 April 1855 at St John, Paddington (Middx), Elizabeth (1825-1918), daughter of Frederick Chapman esq.; died 21 December and was buried at Langley, 29 December 1868; will proved 6 March 1869 (estate under £30,000);
(6) Capt. Robert Beauchamp-Proctor (1787-1813), born 1 April and baptised at Langley, 4 May 1787; an officer in the Madras Horse Artillery (Cadet, 1801; Lt., 1804; Capt. 1810); died unmarried at Bangalore (India), 23 May 1813;
(7) Rev. Thomas William Henry Beauchamp(-Proctor) (1790-1863), baptised at Langley, 21 June 1790; educated at Christ's College, Cambridge (matriculated 1809; BA 1813; MA 1820); ordained deacon, 1813 and priest, 1814; rector of Buckenham with Hassingham (Norfk), 1814-63 and of Chedgrave with Langley, 1817-38; and Carlton St. Peter with Ashby (Norfk), 1838-63; dropped the additional name Proctor in later life; died unmarried, 9 May and was buried at Buckenham, 14 May 1863; will proved 9 July 1863 (effects under £7,000);
(8) Amelia Beauchamp-Proctor (1791-1874), born 28 August and baptised at Langley, 5 September 1791; married, 23 December 1815 at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster (Middx), the Hon. & Rev. Armine Wodehouse (1776-1853), son of John Wodehouse, 1st Baron Wodehouse of Kimberley Hall (Norfk), but had no issue; lived latterly in Bath (Som.); died 24 November and was buried at Bathwick (Som.), 1 December 1874;
(9) Col. Richard Beauchamp(-Proctor) (1793-1850), born 30 January 1793 and baptised at Langley, 7 March 1793; an officer in the army (Cornet, 1811; Lt. 1812; Capt. 1820; Maj., 1825; Lt-Col. 1828; Col., 1841; retired on half-pay, 1832); like his elder brother, in 1811 he dropped the additional name Proctor; married, 4 October 1828 at Horsham (Sussex), Sophia Dorothea (c.1796-1878), youngest daughter of Benjamin Ball esq. of Dublin, and had issue two sons and one daughter; committed suicide in Dublin, 11 April 1850; will proved in the PCC, 7 May 1851.
He inherited Langley Hall from his father in 1773, and came of age in 1777. He purchased White Hall, Tottenham, from his younger brother in 1789 but sold it in 1790.
He died 29 March 1827 and was buried at Langley, where he is commemorated by a monument; his will was proved in the PCC, 31 July 1827. His widow died 25 December 1847; her will was proved in the PCC, 28 January 1848.

Beauchamp-Proctor, Admiral Sir William (1781-1861), 3rd bt. Eldest son of Sir Thomas Beauchamp-Proctor (1756-1827), 2nd bt., and his wife Mary, second daughter of Robert Palmer of Sonning (Berks), born 11/14 October 1781. Entered the Royal Navy in 1794 (Lt., 1800; Cdr., 1802; Capt., 1806; retired 1809; Rear-Adm., 1846; Vice-Adm., 1850; Adm., 1857). JP and DL (from 1820) for Norfolk; High Sheriff of Norfolk, 1833-34. He married, 19 May 1812 at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster (Middx), Anne (1792-1859), daughter of Thomas Gregory of Springfield (Essex), and had issue:
(1) Mary Anne Beauchamp-Proctor (1813-83), baptised at Springfield (Essex), 17 April 1813; married, 18 October 1843 at Langley, John Jocelyn Ffoulkes (1813-98), of Eriviatt (Denbighs.), son of Lt-Col. John Powell Ffoulkes, and had issue seven daughters; died in Switzerland, 27 April 1883;
(2) Harriet Elizabeth Beauchamp-Proctor (1814-93), born 23 April and baptised at Brome, 24 April 1814; married, 3 November 1840 at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster (Middx), Prideaux Selby (1810-72), barrister-at-law, of Swansfield and Paston, Kirk Newton (Northbld), son of Prideaux Selby, and had issue four sons and five daughters; admitted to Wyke House Private Lunatic Asylum, Isleworth (Middx), 1890; died 23 April and was buried at Brompton Cemetery (Middx), 26 April 1893;
(3) Sir Thomas William Brograve Beauchamp-Proctor (later Proctor-Beauchamp) (1815-74), 4th bt. (q.v.);
(4) Julia Beauchamp-Proctor (1816-28), baptised at Brome, 25 September 1816; died young and was buried at Langley, 9 October 1828;
(5) Rev. William Henry Beauchamp-Proctor (later Beauchamp) (1818-53), born 16 March and baptised at Brome (Norfk), 20 March 1818; educated at Eton and Christ's College, Cambridge (matriculated 1837; BA 1841; MA 1844); ordained priest, 1842; rector of Chedgrave and perpetual curate of Langley (Norfk), 1843-53; married, 31 December 1845 at St Martin, Stamford Baron (Lincs), Augusta (1815-87), daughter of Dr. Thomas Graham Arnold MD of Stamford (Lincs) and had issue three sons (of whom the second was created a baronet as Sir Edward Beauchamp, 1st bt. of Grosvenor Place) and two daughters; accidentally killed by a fall from his carriage, 19 March 1853; will proved in the PCC, 22 July 1853;
(6) Robert Beauchamp-Proctor (1819-89), born 16 October and baptised at Brome, 17 October 1819; said to have been briefly an officer in the Royal Navy (Lt.); emigrated to New Zealand about 1839 and is credited with introducing Merino sheep to that country; failing to prosper he twice returned to England and was shipwrecked on both voyages; he then established a cattle ranch at Whittlesea, Victoria (Australia) before moving to Tasmania in the 1850s, where he established a fruit farm at Launceston in about 1861; he was a noted amateur artist, known for his depictions of rural scenes in the Antipodes; married, 14 June 1854 at St Peter, Wellington (NZ), Elizabeth Beatrice (1837-1918), daughter of Henry Symons MD and had issue eight sons and two daughters; died at Rosevears, Tasmania (Australia), 12 October and was buried at Charles St. Cemetery, Launceston, 15 October 1889;
(7) Emma Beauchamp-Proctor (1821-27), baptised at Brome (Norfk), 2 September 1821; died young and was buried in Paris (France), 8 February 1827;
(8) Caroline Beauchamp-Proctor (1824-1911), born 2 January and baptised at Sprowston (Norfk), 4 January 1824; married, 18 March 1852 at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster, Capt. Henry Spencer Waddington (1816-95), eldest son of Henry Spencer Waddington MP of Cavenham (Suffk), and had issue five sons and seven daughters; died 25 June 1911 and was buried at Cavenham; will proved 9 August 1911 (estate £5,703);
(9) Jane Frances Beauchamp-Proctor (1825-1910), born 24 April and baptised at Sprowston (Norfk), 26 April 1825; married, 31 May 1854 at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster, Rev. Henry Alfred Barrett (1813-95), rector of Chedgrave (Norfk) 1853-95, and had issue four sons and one daughter; died 31 January 1910 and was buried at Chedgrave; will proved 24 March 1910 (estate £16,212).
He inherited Langley Hall from his father in 1827.
He died 14 March and was buried at Langley, 22 March 1861; his will was proved 1 October 1861 (effects under £45,000). His wife died 6 February and was buried at Langley, 12 February 1859.

Beauchamp-Proctor (later Proctor-Beauchamp), Sir Thomas William Brograve (1815-74), 4th bt. Eldest son of Admiral Sir William Beauchamp-Proctor (1781-1861), 3rd bt., and his wife Anne, daughter of Thomas Gregory of Springfield (Essex), born 2 July and baptised at Langley, 3 July 1815. An officer in the Royal Horse Guards (Cornet, 1835; Lt., 1838; retired c.1843), Norfolk Yeomanry Cavalry (Capt., 1844), East Suffolk Militia (Maj., 1854) and Norfolk Rifle Volunteers (Lt., 1859; Capt., 1860; Lt-Col., 1861; retired 1872). JP and DL for Norfolk; High Sheriff of Norfolk, 1869-70. As a young man he was generally known as Thomas B. Proctor, and he reversed the order of his surnames by royal licence, 9 July 1852. He married, 15 June 1852 at All Souls, Langham Place, Marylebone (Middx), the Hon. Caroline Esther (1826-98), youngest daughter of Granville George Waldegrave, 2nd Baron Radstock, and had issue:
(1) Sir Reginald William Proctor-Beauchamp (1853-1912), 5th bt. (q.v.);
(2) Ida Caroline Proctor-Beauchamp (1854-1951), born 11 May and baptised at All Souls, Langham Place, 7 August 1854; married, 6 October 1891 at St Paul, Onslow Sq., South Kensington (Middx), as his second wife, Col. Robert Henry Curzon Holden (later Drury-Lowe) (1831-1907), third son of William Drury Holden (later Lowe) of Denby and Locko Park (Derbys); died aged 97 on 12 December 1951; will proved 16 February 1952 (estate £7,209);
(3) Granville Pelham Proctor-Beauchamp (1855-89), born 20 August and baptised at Holy Trinity, Marylebone (Middx), 5 November 1855; acted as land agent to his elder brother until he emigrated to California in the 1880s; died unmarried at Santa Monica, California (USA), 9 December 1889; will proved 29 April 1890 (effects £321);
(4) Sir Horace George Proctor-Beauchamp (1856-1915), 6th bt., born 3 November and baptised at St Marylebone (Middx), 31 December 1856; an officer in the 5th battalion, Norfolk Regiment (Sub-Lt., 1876; Lt., 1878; Capt., 1884; Maj., 1893; Lt-Col. and Br. Col., 1899) who served in the Sudan Campaign (mentioned in despatches), the Boer War (CB, 1902; mentioned in despatches) and the First World War; succeeded his elder brother as 6th baronet, 10 November 1912; married, 15 November 1892 at Burton (Hants) (div. 1915 on the grounds of her adultery with Capt. Harry Francis Darell (1872-1934), son of Edward Darell of Fretherne (Glos), whom she subsequently married), Florence (1873-1931), daughter of H.M. Leavitt of New York (USA), but had no issue; killed in action at the Battle of Suvla Bay, 12 August 1915, the day after his divorce was made absolute in London; will proved 18 September 1915 (estate £7,904);
(5) twin, Hilda Proctor-Beauchamp (1858-1921), born 15 November 1858 and baptised at St Marylebone, 14 January 1859; married, 10 December 1884 at Holy Trinity, Brompton (Middx), Sir (John Edward) Kynaston Studd (1858-1944), 1st bt., a well-known amateur cricketer who became Lord Mayor of London in 1928-29 (and who m2, 18 June 1924, Princess Alexandra (1879-1974), daughter of Prince Paul Hermann von Lieven (1821-81)), and had issue four sons and one daughter; died 22 April 1921; will proved 18 October 1921 (estate £3,307);
(6) twin, Constance Proctor-Beauchamp (1858-1941), born 15 November 1858 and baptised at St Marylebone, 14 January 1859; married 1st, 30 July 1889 at Holy Trinity, Brompton (Middx), as his second wife, William Douglas Robinson-Douglas (c.1851-1921) of Orchardton House, Castle Douglas (Kirkcudbrights.), son of Rev. George Robinson-Douglas, and 2nd, 13 May 1926 at Auchencairn (Kirkcudbrights.), William Jardine Herries Maxwell OBE (1852-1933) of Munches, son of Wellwood Herries Maxwell, but had no issue; died 4 June 1941;
(7) Rev. Sir Montagu Harry Proctor-Beauchamp (1860-1939), 7th bt., born 19 April and baptised at Holy Trinity, St. Marylebone, 1860; educated at Repton and Trinity College, Cambridge (MA); missionary in Western China, 1885-1910; vicar of Monkton Combe, 1914-18; Principal Chaplain to Mediterranean Expeditionary Force, 1916 and Chaplain to North Russian Expeditionary Force, 1919; Hon. Chaplain to the Forces, 1921; deputation secretary for China Inland Mission, 1919-39; Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and Royal Empire Society; succeeded his elder brother as 7th bt., 12 August 1915; an enthusiastic cyclist; he lived latterly (when in England) at Ebley Court, Stroud (Glos); married, 20 April 1892, Florence (1869-1955), daughter of Robert Barclay of Reigate (Surrey) and had issue four sons (from whom descend the subsequent and current baronets) and one daughter; died at Paoning, Szechuan (China), 26 October 1939; will proved 20 June 1940 (estate £11,792);
(8) Maud Proctor-Beauchamp (1864-1956), born 19 January and baptised at Langley, 1 May 1864; married, 7 May 1889 at St Mary Abbotts, Kensington (Middx), Rev. William Thomas Baring Hayter (1858-1935), Dean of Gibraltar, 1913-20 and Master of the Charterhouse and Chaplain to the Order of St. John, 1927-35, third son of Harrison Hayter (1825-98), President of the Institution of Civil Engineers, and had issue three daughters; died 18 February 1956; will proved 11 June 1956 (estate £3,792);
(9) Algernon Proctor-Beauchamp (1867-79), born 2 April 1867; died young, 6 March 1879.
He inherited Langley Hall from his father in 1861.
He died 7 October 1874; his will was proved 5 January 1875 (effects under £100,000). His widow died at Le Havre (France), 3 July 1898; her will was proved 26 October 1898 (effects £5,309).

Proctor-Beauchamp, Sir Reginald William (1853-1912), 5th bt. Eldest son of Sir Thomas William Brograve Beauchamp-Proctor (later Proctor-Beauchamp) and his wife the Hon. Caroline Esther, youngest daughter of Granville George Waldegrave, 2nd Baron Radstock, born 23 April and baptised at Langley, 31 July 1853. Educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge (matriculated 1871). He succeeded his father as 5th baronet, 7 October 1874. An officer in the East Norfolk Artillery (Sub-Lt., 1875; Lt., 1875; Capt., after 1881; Maj., 1886; retired 1898); JP and DL for Norfolk. He travelled in China and Japan, 1879, and Burma and India, 1890. He married, 7 June 1880 at St James, Piccadilly (div. 1901 on the grounds of her adultery with Hugh Watt MP), Lady Violet Charlotte Julia Maria (1858-1925), only child of Lt-Col. John Strange Jocelyn, 5th Earl of Roden, and had issue:
(1) Sheila Ginevre Hilda Mary Proctor-Beauchamp (1881-1953) (q.v.);
(2) Nadine Sophia Charlotte Proctor-Beauchamp (1886-1949), born 10 February and baptised at Langley, 21 March 1886; regarded as a great beauty; married 1st, 23 April 1910 at St George, Hanover Sq., Westminster (Middx) (div. 1914), Edward Graves Brinkley (1885-1928), second son of John Lloyd Brinkley of Fortland (Co. Sligo); married 2nd, 15 September 1915 at the Chapel Royal, Savoy, London (div. 1921 on grounds of her adultery with her next husband), Sir George Bettesworth Pigott KBE (1867-1952), a judge, son of Fraser Pigott of Fitzhall, Midhurst (Sussex); married 3rd, 10 September 1923 (div. 1927), Maj. Nigel Desmond Stewart (1882-1962), son of Capt. Neil P. Stewart of Plas Lodwin, Bangor (Caernarvons.); married 4th, 11 May 1928, Capt. Edward Ralph Holme Woodcock (1877-1966), eldest son of Edward Holme-Woodcock of Wigan (Lancs), but had no issue; died at her home at St Jean, Cap Ferrat (France), 20 September 1949; her will was proved 7 March 1950 (estate in England, £6,086).
He inherited Langley Hall from his father in 1874. At his death it passed to his elder daughter.
He died 10 November 1912, when his baronetcy passed to his elder surviving brother; his will was proved 16 June 1913 (estate £221,882). His ex-wife married 2nd, 18 September 1903 at Brighton, Hugh Watt (1848-1921), MP for Glasgow Camlachie, 1885-92, son of John Watt of Maryfield, and died 22 October 1925; her will was proved 19 November 1925 (estate £19,418).

Proctor-Beauchamp, Sheila Ginevre Hilda Mary (1881-1953). Elder daughter of Sir Reginald William Proctor-Beauchamp (1853-1912), 5th bt. and his wife Lady Violet Charlotte Julia Maria, only child of John Strange Jocelyn, 5th Earl of Roden, born 4 April and baptised at Langley, 8 May 1881. She took the name Beauchamp by royal licence in 1934. She married, 22 June 1909 at Langley, Maj. Hermon Barker-Hahlo (1873-1972), barrister-at-law and later planter, of Foxlease Park, Lyndhurst (Hants) and later of Muirton, Manchioneal (Jamaica), only son of George Hahlo of Manchester, and had issue:
(1) Jocelyn George Reginald Barker-Hahlo (later Beauchamp) (1910-58) (q.v.);
(2) Sophie Patricia Fanny Barker-Hahlo (1911-50), born 12 January 1911; married, 16 March 1935, Paymaster Commander Hume Andrew Gibbons RN (1893-1940*), but had no issue; died 13 February 1950; will proved 31 March 1950 (estate £506).
She inherited Langley Hall from her father in 1912. It was requisitioned by the Government for military use during the Second World War and afterwards let for use as a school.
She died 20 January 1953; her will was proved 8 July 1953 and 29 September 1954 (estate £229,229). Her husband died in St Peter Port (Guernsey), 3 July 1972; his will was proved 5 June 1973 (estate in England & Wales, £31,851).
* He was killed in the sinking of HMS Glorious.

Barker-Hahlo (later Beauchamp), Jocelyn George Reginald (1910-58). Only child of Hermon Barker-Hahlo of Foxlease Park, Lyndhurst (Hants) and his wife Sheila Ginevre Hilda Mary, elder daughter of Sir Reginald William Proctor-Beauchamp, 5th bt., of Langley Park (Norfk), born and baptised at Langley, 15 February 1910. Educated at Eton. He took the name Beauchamp in lieu of Barker-Hahlo on coming of age in 1931. He qualified as a pilot in 1936 and served as an officer in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve in the Second World War (2nd Lt., 1939; Lt., 1940; Lt-Cdr.). He was engaged to be married in July 1938 to Ann Haswell Coats, but the engagement was broken off two months later, and he died unmarried and without issue.
He inherited Langley Park from his mother in 1953, and sold the freehold to the tenant school in 1957. He lived latterly at Bergh Apton House (Norfk).
He died 13 March 1958; his will was proved 21 August 1958 and 9 July 1959 (estate £38,925).

Principal sources

Burke's Peerage and Baronetage, 2003, pp. 3225-28; O. Brackett, 'Langley Park, Norfolk', Country Life, 2 July 1927; Sir N. Pevsner & B. Wilson, The buildings of England: Norfolk 2 - West and South, 2nd edn, 1999, pp. 510-14; M. Mobus, 'The Burford Masons', Open Univ. PhD thesis, 2012; M. Mobus, 'The Burford School of Masons', Oxoniensia, 2013, pp. 99-114.

Location of archives

Beauchamp, Beauchamp-Proctor and Proctor-Beauchamp family of Langley: deeds and papers, 13th-19th cents. [Norfolk Record Office, BEA, MS21593, MC1708, MC1322].

Coat of arms

Quarterly, 1st and 4th, argent, a chevron sable between three martlets gules; 2nd and 3rd, gules, a fess between six billets, three and three, barwise or, a canton ermine.

Can you help?

  • I would be very interested to hear from anyone who can throw further light on the architects and craftspeople involved at White Hall or Langley Hall in the 18th century, or on the dating of the building sequence for Langley Hall.
  • Does anyone know why the 4th baronet reversed the order of his surnames?
  • Can anyone provide photographs or portraits of the people whose names appear in bold above, for whom no image is currently shown?
  • If anyone can offer further information or corrections to any part of this article I should be most grateful. I am always particularly pleased to hear from current owners or the descendants of families associated with a property who can supply information from their own research or personal knowledge for inclusion.

Revision and acknowledgements

This post was first published 3 March 2022 and updated 4 March 2022.

3 comments:

  1. Josiah Beauchamp21 July 2023 at 23:00

    Hello, my name is Josiah Beauchamp. My grandfather is Christopher Beauchamp, the current (9th) baronet. Firstly thank you this is very impressive, you've found lots of things we didn't know about our family!

    If you're looking for portraits he has several of the ones you're missing that I can send you pictures of, including all the baronets (except for the 5th Baronet) and some other family members.

    I can also help with any other information that you'd like, such as the baronets you haven't mentioned (6th, 7th, 8th, and 9th). Although it looks like you've got a lot of the history already covered :)

    Oh and we're not sure why the 4th Baronet reversed the order of the surname, but we think it's just because it sounded better.

    Thanks :)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks for getting in touch. I would be most grateful for images of the portraits you mention that I can add to the account above. If you use the contact form at the top of the right-hand side bar to send me a private message I will let you have my email address.

      I have not pursued the later baronets as they were not relevant to the story of Langley Park and as far as I am aware they didn't acquire another country house, but if I am wrong about that please let me know.

      The family are pretty well-documented, but in the introduction to my project (https://landedfamilies.blogspot.com/p/about-this-blog-and-future-posts.html) I give a specification for the genealogical information I would ideally record, and if the family are able to add any details that I have missed that meet these criteria I should be very pleased to have them.

      Best wishes
      Nick Kingsley

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    2. Dear Josiah, I have now been contacted by a member of the Loddon History Group who would like me to pass on her email address to you. Can you send me an email through the contact form so that I have an email address I can forward her email to? Nick Kingsley

      Delete

Please leave a comment if you have any additional information or corrections to offer, or if you are able to help with additional images of the people or buildings in this post.