The family of which William Phipson Beale was a member was a well-established merchant family in
Birmingham by the late 18th century. They produced lawyers, businessmen and politicians. They had commercial interests in banking, railways and ironworks and were associated through business, marriage or politics to many other well-known Birmingham figures. His younger brother
Charles, was uncle to
Neville Chamberlain and another brother, James, commissioned
Philip Webb to design
Standen, West Sussex, now in the ownership of the
National Trust. Beale was the eldest son of William John Beale from Birmingham. His grandfather William Beale lived at
Camp Hill. His mother was Martha Phipson. She too came from a Birmingham family, with a home in
Edgbaston. Beale was born in Edgbaston and first educated at the
Birmingham and Edgbaston Proprietary School. He later pursued his education at
Heidelberg University and in
Paris. In 1857, he became member of the
Corps Rhenania Heidelberg. In 1869, he married Mary Thompson from
Sydney,
New South Wales. They never had children. ==Career==