Alec Beechman was the only surviving son of Mr N C and Mrs Emily Beechman. He was educated at Westminster School where was King's Scholar and princeps oppidanorum. He then studied at Balliol College, Oxford where he was Domus Exhibitioner in Classics. In 1953 he married Mrs Mary Gwendolyn Caradoc Williams, the widow of Captain Garth Caradoc Williams, RE.
Career
During World War I Beechman joined the army as a Second lieutenant at the age of eighteen. He served in France and Belgium with the King's Royal Rifle Corps, winning the Military Cross in the same week as he celebrated his 21st birthday. He became a Captain in 1917 and received nine wounds in fifteen minutes at Passchendaele. He subsequently became an instructor in the training of officer cadets. For his professional career Beechman went in for the law and in 1923 he was called to the Bar at the Inner Temple. He was created King's Counsel in 1947. In building up his practice he was said to have concentrated on economic and social questions.
Politics
Beecham was a Liberal. After the war he returned to Oxford University. He was President of the Oxford Union in Hilary term of 1921 and was the first post-war chairman of the Oxford University Liberal Club in 1919–1920. In 1922 Beechman also served as Chairman of the Union of University Liberal Societies. In 1919 Beechman was a co-founder of the political publication Oxford Outlook, a left-leaning magazine whose main protagonist was the later author and journalist Beverley Nichols. The Oxford University Liberal Club suffered a decline during the First World War. Many undergraduates went off to fight and many Liberals found the approach of their party in government decidedly illiberal, especially after the coming to power in December 1916 of the Lloyd George Coalition government and the much closer relationship this meant with the Conservatives. One of those engaged in its revival after the war was Gilbert Murray, Professor of Greek and who Beechman, as a Liberal and classics scholar, must have encountered and respected. The Club which Gilbert helped revive and of which Beechman became the first president was made in Gilbert's ideological image and endorsed the Asquithian Liberals, that is those in the party who distanced themselves from the supporters of Lloyd George and collaboration with the Tories. The new Club was indeed inaugurated by Asquith himself. This is interesting in the light of Beechman's later political journey into the National Liberals and that party's relationship with the Conservatives. In 1931 Beechman was nominated as Liberal candidate for Oldham but in the event the party chose not to contest the seat in the context of the 1931 general election after the formation of the National Government which it at first supported. However at some point between 1931–1935, Beechman broke with the mainstream Liberal Party and began to support that section of the party led by Sir John Simon which continued to be part of the National Government when the orthodox Liberals under Herbert Samuel broke with the government over the traditional policy of Free trade after the Ottawa agreements of 1932. He did not contest a seat at the 1935 general election but in 1937 he was chosen as Liberal National candidate to fight the by-election at St Ives in Cornwall when the seat fell vacant with the elevation to the peerage of the sitting MPWalter Runciman. In a hard-fought contest against former Liberal MP Isaac Foot, Beechman held the seat by just 210 votes Despite the growing link between the Liberal Nationals and the Conservatives, Beechman remained at heart a Liberal and saw collaboration with the Conservatives as essentially an anti-socialist front. He stood at the 1945 general election as a National Liberal albeit without Conservative opposition and remained MP for St Ives until he stood down at the 1950 general election. According to one historian of Liberal politics in the South West of England, the Liberal Nationals were looking to distance themselves from their Conservative allies after the 1945 general election and he names Beechman and George Lambert the MP for South Molton in Devon as two Liberal Nationals who were likely to favour a new Centre grouping of reunited Liberals, Conservative reformers and the right-wing of the Labour Party.