Early life Julius Beer was born in 1836 in Frankfurt, Germany.
Career Beer made his fortune in the
London Stock Exchange. He was a member of the
London Banking Association. In 1870, he purchased
The Observer newspaper, which he owned until his death in 1880. They had a son and a daughter: • Frederick Arthur Beer (died 1901; married
Rachel Sassoon (1858–1927)). • Ada Sophia Beer (1867–1875, died aged 8 years old) The main sculpture by
Henry Hugh Armstead inside the Beer Mausoleum at
Highgate Cemetery represents this young girl being protected by an angel. Beer died in 1880. His mausoleum in
Highgate Cemetery has been
listed as Grade II since 14 May 1974. It was designed by the French/Dutch architect William Bouwens van der Boijen (1801–1907). The English architect
John Oldrid Scott (1841–1913) was the executant architect overseeing construction. Scott made some small changes to van der Boijen's design. Scott had, before recent research, been named as the architect in various sources. Interred in it are: • Ada Sophia Beer (his daughter, d.1875) • Julius Beer (d.1880) • Thyrza Beer (his wife, d.1881) • Arnold Beer (his brother, d.1880) • Frederick (his son, d.1901) ==References==