Beauclerk joined the Board of Admiralty under the Whig government in March 1738[4] but had to step down when the Government fell in March 1742.[4] He returned to the Board again when the Broad Bottom ministry came to power in December 1744 and was promoted to rear admiral on 23 April 1745.[3] He was advanced to Senior Naval Lord on the Board in February 1746[5] and promoted to vice admiral on 14 July 1746 and to full admiral on 12 May 1748 before retiring in November 1749.[4]
Beauclerk was elected one of the first Vice Presidents of London's charitable Foundling Hospital for abandoned children, an unpaid position. He served in that capacity from the institution's first year of 1739 until 1756, but then again from 1758 until 1767.[6] From 1726 to 1741 Beauclerk was Member of Parliament (MP) for Windsor and for Plymouth (succeeding his brother Henry) from 1741 to 1750.[1] On his retirement from politics in 1750, he was created Baron Vere, of Hanworth in the County of Middlesex.[1] he was also Lord Lieutenant of Berkshire from 1761 to 1771.[1] It is said that he died at his home, 16 St James's Square in London, on 21 October 1781,[1] although this date would appear at odds with the burial register of St James's Church, Piccadilly, which has him being buried on 6 October 1781.[7]
Family
On 13 April 1736, in London, he married Mary Chambers (c. 1714-21 January 1783),[8] a maternal granddaughter of the 2nd Earl of Berkeley. They later had six children (four of whom died young):[9]
Vere Beauclerk (12 January 1737 – 26 December 1739)
Chamber Beauclerk (22 February 1738 – 16 July 1747)[10]
Sackville Beauclerk (12 April 1739 – 25 April 1739)[11]
^The Register Book for Burials. In the Parish of St James in Westminster in the County of Middlesex. 1754-1812. 6 October 1781.
^Buried at St James's Church, Piccadilly on 11 February 1783. Source: The Register Book for Burials. In the Parish of St James in Westminster in the County of Middlesex. 1754-1812. 11 February 1783.