Authors: Edna Healey
The suggested plan was based upon the adoption of nave and side aisles, enabling arcading to be introduced to support the semi-circular or barrel ceiling of the nave. This ceiling treatment is continuous from the gallery to the altar. Solid fillings to the windows on both sides of the Chapel would be removed and glazing provided as a means of natural lighting; roof or clerestory lights are dispensed with. The solid wall behind the altar is retained.
This plan too was rejected, as was a scheme to build a cinema under the Chapel. This would not be possible, it was said, âwithout producing a structure incompatible with the existing elevation of the Palace, unless the present Chapel is pulled down and rebuilt. The estimated cost of this would be
£
50,000.'
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In 1945 this was obviously an indefensible expense. The memory of the devastated cathedral the King had seen at Coventry kept the loss of this little-used Chapel in perspective.
The greater problem was the installation of central heating. In 1945 the cost was estimated at
£
50,000, but it was argued that its installation would effect great economies. The work could be finished in twelve to eighteen months if the Palace were unoccupied, but otherwise, if the work had to be phased, it could be done in four sections so that three-quarters of the âPalace would be habitable during the whole period of work'. Although this would take three and a half years, the King needed to use the Palace; it was to be his headquarters during the trials of peace as it had been in war â conferences, audiences and investitures were to be held there during the post-war period. But these were years of considerable discomfort in the Palace.
In the bitter February of 1947 a
cri decïur
from the Marshal of the Diplomatic Corps, Sir John Monck, was sent to Sir Ulick Alexander, Keeper of the Privy Purse. He made a plea for central heating in his offices, where the temperature remains in the low fifties in cold weather, âa very cheerless welcome to give all the new Ambassadors', who âmostly come from centrally-heated hotels such as Claridges, the Ritz, the Dorchester etc. and it is not very dignified, after they have experienced the cold entrance passage, to ask them to keep on their overcoats as the temperature is much lower than anything to which they are accustomed'.
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Sir Ulick Alexander promised that in August 1947 work would begin on the installation of central heating âas part of the overall modernisation of the Palace'.
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So many different projects and costings were envisaged that it is difficult to ascertain exactly what the work at the Palace finally cost. But the news of armies of workmen there set the Parliamentary watch-dogs barking. When thousands were homeless few tears were shed for the chilly ambassadors. And at this period there was the strictest control of building materials.
In Parliament on 31 March 1947 Mr Ernest Davies
asked the Minister of Works the nature of the works now being undertaken at Buckingham Palace, the cost thereof, and the numbers employed thereon.
Mr. Key [replied]: The special work now in hand at Buckingham Palace includes bomb damage repairs, excavation work for a new boiler house and mains in connection with the modernisation of the heating system, and the improvement of the servants' quarters in the attics. There is also some work in connection with redecoration of certain rooms and the re-wiring of part of the State rooms. The total cost of this work is about
£
54,300, of which about half is on bomb damage repairs. The number of men employed is 178. I am satisfied that this work is necessary. The general programme for modernising engineering services in the Palace will be spread over many years, but the opportunity has been taken of the absence of the Royal Family in South Africa to carry out certain noisy and dirty work connected with the installation of new boilers which will be oil fired.
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The King's planned tour of South Africa in February, taking the Queen and Princesses with him, was a relief to his staff, who were anxious to begin the work: and the ministers and Household, concerned about the King's health, hoped that the sea trip would revive him.
Queen Mary had noticed how desperately tired the King was at the family gathering at Sandringham over the New Year in 1946â7. The constant stress of the war years had taken their toll of a man who had never been strong. In the seven years ahead, until his death in 1952, he was to face fundamental changes and crises at home and abroad. Like George III he had a deep sense of his royal responsibilities, and like him he insisted on being involved in every major and most minor decisions. He did not have George Ill's wide cultural and scientific interests, but he carried a similar burden. George III had to face the loss of America; King George VI had to accept the transformation of the British Empire into the Commonwealth of Nations, with the granting of independence to India and the separation of Eire from the Commonwealth.
The problem of India had weighed heavily on the King. He had been shocked when in July 1942 Churchill told him that his colleagues âand all three parties were quite prepared to give up India to the Indians after the war'.
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When Attlee came to power, determined to give India her independence, the King studied the complex problems of the Hindu and Muslim communities, followed closely the progress of the talks held at the London Conference of December 1946, and worried. He invited the leaders of the Muslim and Hindu communities to luncheon at Buckingham Palace and, after sitting between the silent Indian leaders, Jawaharlal Nehru and Mohammed Ali Jinnah, reflected gloomily that they would never agree.
The appointment of his cousin, Lord Mountbatten, as Viceroy of India did much to change the King's attitude. Attlee's choice was a brilliant stroke. Mountbatten was sympathetic to the Labour government, but, at the same time, was in his devotion to royalty more royal than the royals. His charm, energy and ruthless drive, combined with Attlee's determined idealism, were to bring about the change at a
remarkable speed. Appointed on 20 February 1947, he left for India in March; meanwhile the King himself had left for South Africa on 1 February, on a tour which, he hoped, would strengthen the ties with that country and keep it in the Commonwealth.
If the Household had hoped the sea voyage would take his mind off his worries they were mistaken. In fact, he followed closely all that was happening at home, consumed with guilt that he was not there to share the misery of frozen England as he had been during the war. Britain was suffering the worst winter on record: fuel stocks were low, transport was bogged down and the whole country was encased in a glittering coat of ice.
There was another change ahead that he dreaded. He now had to accept that Princess Elizabeth had made up her mind to marry Prince Philip. However, to delay the moment of separation, he insisted that she should wait until her twenty-first birthday and that she should go with them on the South African tour.
Her birthday was to be during the tour and the night before they left, Lady Airlie led a deputation to present the Household's birthday present â a silver inkstand. One member from each grade of the Household stood outside the Princess's room in the Palace. Lady Airlie spoke for them all, adding that she âhad played as a child with her grandmother Queen Mary, seen her mother learning her first dancing steps in the nursery at Glamis, and had watched herself grow up from babyhood'.
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This continuity of service has always been deeply important to Queen Elizabeth II.
Their tour gave Princess Elizabeth an understanding of the vast continent and its problems that would be invaluable to her when she became Queen. It was in South Africa that, on 21 April 1947, she celebrated her coming of age with a moving speech of dedication.
I should like to make that dedication now. It is very simple. I declare before you all that my whole life, whether it be long or short, shall be devoted to your service and the service of our great Commonwealth to which we all belong. But I shall not have strength to carry out this resolution unless you join in it with me, as I now invite you to do; I know that your support will be unfailingly given. God bless all of you who share it.'
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The King returned from South Africa desperately tired and alarmingly thin. In fact, he had lost seventeen pounds during the tour. Standing in line with the other members of the Household in the Grand Hall of the Palace to welcome home the royal family, Marion Crawford was shocked to see how ill and tired they all appeared.
It was the beginning of a gradual deterioration in the King's health. However, he could not rest. Attlee and Mountbatten were pressing ahead with their plans for Indian independence. On 10 July 1947 Attlee introduced the Indian Independence Bill in the House of Commons without opposition. It became law on 18 July. None of us who saw Attlee's unaccustomed emotion that July day could fail to be moved. He had realized an ideal. Attlee's determination, and Mountbatten's drive and royal magic, had succeeded.
On 15 August, Lord Mountbatten became Governor General of the Dominion of India, and Jinnah of the Dominion of Pakistan. It was with great sadness that the King ceased to sign himself âGRI'. On 18 August 1947 Queen Mary received a letter from him. On the back of the envelope she wrote, âThe first time Bertie wrote me a letter with the I for Emperor left out, very sad.'
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For Queen Mary, more than any other member of the royal family, India had been, indeed, the âJewel in the Crown'.
The King accepted the inevitable with good grace, just as he did on 10 July 1947 when he announced the engagement of Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip. Lady Airlie watched them both at the Buckingham Palace garden party in July. Elizabeth was
flushed and radiant with happiness and I was again reminded of Queen Victoria. Although the Queen had been old, fat and plain when I had seen her and this girl was young, pretty and slim, she had the same air of majesty. Even Queen Mary was not as regal as the 21 year old Princess.
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Queen Mary herself saw in Princess Elizabeth âsomething very steadfast and determined ⦠like her father. She won't give her heart lightly, but when she does it will be for always.'
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In July there had been little ease for the King. In that month a new economic crisis made further stringent measures necessary. During his
summer break at Balmoral he worried about the world. And he worried that Attlee did not appear to worry. âI do wish one could see a glimmer of a bright light anywhere in world affairs,' he wrote to Queen Mary. âNever in the history of mankind have things looked gloomier than they do now and one feels powerless to help.'
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In fact, the King was âburned out', and unlike his Prime Minister he could not look forward to the respite of a possible period of opposition.
That autumn the Palace was not a restful place. It was still the King's headquarters, where he received Attlee for their silent Tuesday sessions. But workmen were still hammering, rushing to complete the repairs to the State Rooms in time for the wedding on 20 November.
Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip would have been perfectly happy with a simple wedding, but it was decided to make this marriage an occasion for national celebration. The royal wedding was to take place in the sanctified setting of Westminster Abbey and it was hoped that the unpleasant affair of King Edward VIII would be forgotten.
Attlee, however, was strongly criticized by some members of his left wing for extravagance in a time of economic crisis, especially since the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Hugh Dalton, was to bring in a stringent emergency budget. Not all critics were silenced by the statement that the King would bear most of the cost out of his Civil List allowance. Most members of the Labour Party were content, however, knowing that the country needed a chance to cheer.
Settling the income of the royal couple was a more difficult problem. By tradition the heir to the throne could expect an increase in his or her Civil List allowance on marriage. Sir Alan Lascelles and Sir Ulick Alexander, the Keeper of the Privy Purse, asked for an increase of
£
35,000 â bringing Princess Elizabeth's annuity to
£
50,000. Dalton rejected this proposal. It would be unacceptable when the nation was being asked to tighten its belts. However, in the middle of the negotiations, Dalton resigned. He had accidentally let slip some part of his budget to a journalist just before his speech to the Commons. There was great relief at the Palace, where Dalton was very unpopular. His successor, Stafford Cripps, recommended that Princess Elizabeth should
have an annuity of
£
50,000, with
£
10,000 for Prince Philip. The King was to provide
£
100,000 from his own savings from the Civil List. The annuity was approved by the Cabinet â even Aneurin Bevan remarked that âso long as Britain had a monarchy we ought never to lower [its] standards'.
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The marriage became a rare chance to celebrate. âLondon was grey, life was grey,' Princess Elizabeth's Private Secretary, John Colville, wrote. It was an âevent which with nationwide rejoicing, splendid decorations and the re-emergence of State Carriages and the House-hold Cavalry in full-dress uniform, helped to lift the encircling gloom'.
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Queen Mary, for all her frugality, firmly believed that majesty should shine on such occasions, and delighted in the âmagnificent evening party'
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held at Buckingham Palace before the wedding, for which sparkling tiaras and orders emerged from long years of storage. To Lady Airlie it seemed
after the years of austerity like a scene out of a fairy tale ⦠Old friends scattered far and wide by the war were reunited ⦠most of us were sadly shabby â anyone fortunate enough to have a new dress drew all eyes â but all the famous diamonds came out again, even though most of them had not been cleaned since 1939. Queen Mary looked supremely happy ⦠For the first time in many years I saw the old radiance in her smile. When Winston Churchill went up to greet her she held out both hands to him, a thing I had never known her to do before ⦠Philip had won ⦠her liking and her approbation. When someone complained to her that he had been at a âcrank school where boys were taught to mix with all and sundry and that it remained to be seen whether the objects of this training would be useful or baneful to the King's son-in-law,' she had replied decisively âuseful'.
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