On returning to England Beauchamp was ordained, becoming Vicar of Monkton Combe, Somerset between 1914 and 1918.[4] He was Principal Chaplain of the Mediterranean Expeditionary Force in World War I, serving in Egypt and Greece, and he was mentioned in dispatches in 1916.[4] He was senior chaplain Chaplain to the Forces of the North Russian Expeditionary Force in Murmansk in northern Russia in 1919, and appointed Honorary Chaplain to the Forces in 1921.[4]
Proctor-Beauchamp married Florence, daughter of Robert Barclay, in 1892. They had several children. He succeeded in the Proctor-Beauchamp baronetcy in 1915 when his elder brother Horace was killed in the First World War. He died in Langzhong in October 1939, aged 79, buried in the cemetery of St John's Cathedral, Langzhong.[5][6][7] He was succeeded in his title by his third but eldest surviving son, Ivor. Lady Proctor-Beauchamp died in May 1955.
^ abcAlumni Cantabrigienses, John Venn, Cambridge University Press, 2011
^Gibb, Michael (2021). "A Look Back in Time"(PDF). In Touch. Hong Kong: St John's Cathedral, Hong Kong. p. 9. Retrieved 1 May 2023.
^"2014馬禮遜學園史蹟之旅--華西古道行,成都、閬中、重慶7日遊" [2014 Historical Sites Tour Organised by Morrison School: 7-day Tour of Ancient Roads in West China, Chengdu, Langzhong and Chongqing]. goodnews.org.tw (in Traditional Chinese). 2014. Retrieved 27 May 2021.
^Wei, Wai-yang (2014). "閬中古城名醫多" [Famous Doctors in the City of Langzhong]. ccmm.org.tw (in Traditional Chinese). Retrieved 27 May 2021.
References
Broomhall, Alfred (1985). Hudson Taylor and China's Open Century: Assault on the Nine. London: Hodder and Stoughton.