Bartholomew BealeBartholomew Beale (died 8 May 1674) was an English bureaucrat of the Commonwealth and Restoration periods. Beale was the third son of Bartholomew Beale, of Walton, Buckinghamshire. His elder brother, Charles,[1] was the husband of the portrait painter Mary Beale. Educated at Peterhouse, Cambridge, Beale was admitted to Gray's Inn on 18 June 1639.[2] He obtained the reversion of the office of auditor of the imprests for life on 17 August 1641, and took up the post in 1650. A relative of Samuel Pepys by marriage, Beale appears several times in Pepys' diaries, and his methods seem to have met with approval:
The office of auditor, which required Beale to examine the books of various officials who spent government money "on account", was a fairly lucrative one. With the emoluments from his employment, Beale was able to purchase Hopton Castle, Shropshire, which remained in the family for several generations. He also owned a house in Hatton Garden, London. On 8 May 1674, Beale died by suicide, "throwing himself downe in his frantick fitt" from the upper window of this house, much to the puzzlement of his contemporaries.[4] His wife, the former Miss Hunt, survived him, as did two children, the eldest also named Bartholomew.[1] He left them a large estate, and was in no financial difficulties at the time of his death. References
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