Bellew was born in
Prescot, Lancashire, the son of Rev.
John Chippendall Montesquieu Bellew and Eva Maria Bellew (née Money). His mother was a widow at the time of his parents' marriage on 27 March 1847. She was the youngest daughter of Vice-Admiral Rowland Money,
C.B.,
R.N., and Mary Ann Tombs. She married her first husband Henry Edmund Michell Palmer, a soldier in the Indian Army, on 8 February 1843. However, Palmer died of "
hill fever" in
Madras, India on 9 November 1846. His father was born John Chippendall Higgin in
Lancashire on 3 August 1823 to Robert Higgin and Anne Maria Higgin (née Bellew). His lineage was called into question by the Reverend Samuel Gambier, who believed him to be a
natural son of his friend and actor,
William Macready, whom John Bellew did resemble and correspond with regularly until 1850. In 1844, he changed his name to his mother's maiden name while still a student at
St Mary Hall, and he was ordained an Anglican priest in 1848. He was first appointed curate of St Andrew's in Worcester in 1848, and was transferred to Prescot, Lancashire, in 1850. On 17 November 1851, the Bellew family travelled to India on board the
Hotspur and moved into a large house on Harrington Street in Calcutta.'''' John Bellew had been appointed as an assistant chaplain to St John's Cathedral in Calcutta, India. John Bellew sued for divorce from Eva on 6 March 1855 on grounds of adultery. Eva counter-sued, claiming ill-treatment. John Bellew named Eden as his wife's lover and was granted a divorce on unequivocal grounds. On 13 August 1861, Kyrle's mother married for a third time, to Ashley Eden and she lived in India until her death on 10 January 1877. who emigrated to the United States in the late 1860s, married Anita Killen and died childless on 1 December 1900. An older sister Eva Sibyl Bellew (b. October 1848 in
Worcester). She married civil engineer John Hooper Wait in March 1873 and lived in Bhownuggur, India until her husband's suicide on 27 June 1876. At the time of the 1891 Census, she was living as a nun in the Poor Clares convent on Cornwall Street,
Kensington; she died childless in 1927. His youngest sister, Ida Percy Clare (b. 17 June 1852 in
Calcutta, India). She married Joseph Boulderson, of the 68th Regiment, in 1874 and had two children, Ida Sybil Mary and Shadwell Joseph Boulderson, before dying in the first quarter of 1902., before 1890 Kyrle Bellew was educated at the
Lancaster Royal Grammar School and received lessons from private tutors, notably learning Latin along with
Leslie Ward. However his home life was not happy because Kyrle Bellew did not get along with his new stepmother or stepsister, Maud Wilkinson. Kyrle Bellew described this tumultuous time in his life in his posthumous work
Short Stories. In the early 1860s he attempted to run away from home to the East India docks to start a life at sea, but he was ultimately returned home to his worried father. While John Bellew thought he should enter the ministry, the elder Bellew agreed to allow Kyrle Bellew to have a naval career. In 1866, Bellew was sent to train on , a famous training ship.
Conway was one of four training ships moored on the
Mersey River that taught young boys how to be adept sailors, and it was specifically catered to developing officers for the
Merchant Marines. Bellew spent two years on board the ship. ==Career==