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James was a canon of St George's Chapel, Windsor when he was nominated bishop of the Diocese of Hereford on 8 April 1746. [1] [4] His consecration took place on 11 May 1746. [4] He was a Steward of the OA Club in 1745. [5] He died unmarried on 20 October 1787, aged about 78. [1] [4]
This has been supposed to represent a Canon of Windsor. [5] Suspension of canonries ... Lord James Beauclerk 1738–1746; 30. Frederick Cornwallis 1746–1750;
B. Richard Bagot (bishop) Samuel Baker (divine) James Barclay (priest) Anthony Barker (priest) Edward Barnard (provost) Shute Barrington; John Barrow (Canon of Windsor)
Formerly a canon of Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford. Nominated on 27 August 1723 and consecrated on 2 February 1724. Died in office on 1 April 1746. 1746 1787 Lord James Beauclerk: Formerly a canon of Windsor. Nominated on 8 April and consecrated on 11 May 1746. Died in office on 20 October 1787. 1787 1788 John Harley: Formerly Dean of Windsor ...
St George's Chapel, Windsor, in the Late Middle Ages. Colin Richmond, et al. (2001) ISBN 0-9539676-1-1; Volume 18. A History of the Stained Glass of St George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle. Sarah Brown (2006) ISBN 0-9539676-3-8; Volume 19. The Medieval Library of St George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle: Documentary Sources Dr James Willoughby (2015)
The Dean of Windsor is the spiritual head of the canons of St George's Chapel at Windsor Castle, England. The dean chairs meetings of the Chapter of Canons as primus inter pares . The post of Dean of Wolverhampton was assimilated to the deanery of Windsor, around 1480, until 1846.
Lord James Beauclerk (c. 1709 –1787), Anglican clergyman, Bishop of Hereford Jane Beauclerk, pen-name of M. J. Engh (born 1933), American science fiction author and independent Roman scholar Marie Bethell Beauclerc (1845–1897), English pioneer of shorthand, reporter and teacher
Barrington married firstly, on 2 February 1761, the Lady Diana Beauclerk (c. 1735–28 March 1766), daughter of Charles Beauclerk, 2nd Duke of St Albans. His wife died in childbirth, the child stillborn. He married secondly, on 20 June 1770, Jane Guise (d. 8 August 1807), daughter of Sir John Guise, but had no children.