Prince William, Duke of Gloucester

This article is about the son of Queen Anne. For the brother of King George III, see Prince William Henry, Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh. For his son, see Prince William Frederick, Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh. For the grandson of George V, see Prince William of Gloucester.
Prince William
Duke of Gloucester

Portrait by Sir Godfrey Kneller, c. 1700
Born (1689-07-24)24 July 1689
Hampton Court Palace, London
Died 30 July 1700(1700-07-30) (aged 11)
Windsor Castle, Windsor, Berkshire
Burial 9 August 1700
Westminster Abbey, London
House Oldenburg
Father Prince George of Denmark
Mother Princess Anne, later Queen of Great Britain

Prince William, Duke of Gloucester (24 July 1689 – 30 July 1700),[lower-alpha 1] was the son of Princess Anne, later Queen of England, Ireland and Scotland from 1702, and her husband, Prince George, Duke of Cumberland. He was their only child to survive infancy. Styled Duke of Gloucester, he was viewed by contemporaries as a Protestant champion because his birth seemed to cement the Protestant succession established in the "Glorious Revolution" that had deposed his Catholic grandfather James II the previous year.

Gloucester's mother was estranged from her brother-in-law and cousin, William III, and her sister, Mary II, but supported links between them and her son. He grew close to his uncle William, who created him a Knight of the Garter, and his aunt Mary, who frequently sent him presents. At his nursery in Campden House, Kensington, he befriended his Welsh body-servant, Jenkin Lewis, whose memoir of the Duke is an important source for historians, and operated his own miniature army, called the "Horse Guards", which eventually comprised 90 boys.

Gloucester's precarious health was a constant source of worry to his mother. His death, in 1700 at the age of eleven, precipitated a succession crisis as his mother was the only individual remaining in the Protestant line of succession established by the Bill of Rights 1689. The English Parliament did not want the throne to revert to a Catholic, and so passed the Act of Settlement 1701, which settled the throne of England on Electress Sophia of Hanover, a cousin of King James II, and her Protestant heirs.

Birth and health

Anne and her son embrace against a Baroque garden background
Princess Anne embraces her only surviving child, the Duke of Gloucester, in a painting by Sir Godfrey Kneller, c. 1694.

In late 1688, in what became known as the "Glorious Revolution", the Roman Catholic King James of England, Scotland and Ireland was deposed by his Protestant nephew and son-in-law, Dutch stadtholder William Henry of Orange. William and his wife, James's elder daughter Mary, were recognised by the English and Scottish parliaments as king and queen. As they had no children, Mary's younger sister, Anne, was designated their heiress presumptive in England and Scotland.[1] The accession of William and Mary and the succession through Anne were enshrined in the Bill of Rights 1689.[2]

Anne was married to Prince George of Denmark and Norway, and in their six years of marriage Anne had been pregnant six times, but none of her children had survived. At the end of her seventh pregnancy, at 5 a.m. on 24 July 1689, she was delivered of a son in Hampton Court Palace. As it was usual for the births of potential heirs to the throne to be attended by several witnesses, the King and Queen and "most of the persons of quality about the court" were present.[3] Three days later, the newborn baby was baptised William Henry after his uncle King William by Henry Compton, Bishop of London. The King, who was one of the godparents along with the Marchioness of Halifax[4] and the Lord Chamberlain, Lord Dorset,[5] declared him Duke of Gloucester,[6] although the peerage was never formally created.[7] Gloucester was second in line to the throne after his mother, and because his birth secured the Protestant succession, he was the hope of the revolution's supporters.[8] The ode The Noise of Foreign Wars, attributed to Henry Purcell, was written in celebration of the birth.[9] Other congratulatory odes, such as Purcell's last royal ode Who Can From Joy Refrain? and John Blow's The Duke of Gloucester's March and A Song upon the Duke of Gloucester, were to follow on his birthdays in later years.[10][11] However, supporters of James, the Jacobites, spoke of Gloucester as "a sickly and doomed usurper".[8]

Despite being described as a "brave livlylike [sic] boy",[12] Gloucester became ill with convulsions when he was three weeks old, so his mother moved him into Craven House, Kensington, hoping that the air from the surrounding gravel pits would have a beneficial effect on his health.[13] His convulsions were possibly symptomatic of meningitis, likely contracted at birth and which resulted in hydrocephalus.[14] As was usual among royalty, Gloucester was placed in the care of a governess, Lady Fitzhardinge,[15] and was suckled by a wet nurse, Mrs. Pack, rather than his mother.[lower-alpha 2] As part of his treatment, Gloucester was driven outside every day in a small open carriage, pulled by Shetland ponies, to maximise his exposure to the air of the gravel pits.[18] The effectiveness of Gloucester's treatment having exceeded their expectations, Princess Anne and Prince George acquired a permanent residence in the area, Campden House, a Jacobean mansion, in 1690.[19] It was here that Gloucester befriended Welsh body-servant Jenkin Lewis, whose memoir of his master is an important source for historians.[20]

Throughout his life, Gloucester suffered from a recurrent "ague", which was treated with regular doses of Jesuit's bark (an early form of quinine) by his physician, John Radcliffe. Gloucester disliked the treatment intensely, and usually vomited after being given it.[21] Possibly as a result of hydrocephalus,[22][23] he had an enlarged head, which his surgeons pierced intermittently to draw off fluid.[24] He could not walk properly, and was apt to stumble.[22] Nearing the age of five, Gloucester refused to climb stairs without two attendants to hold him, which Lewis blamed on indulgent nurses who over-protected the boy. His father birched him until he agreed to walk by himself.[25] Corporal punishment was usual at the time, and such treatment would not have been considered harsh.[26]

Education

Portrait by Edmund Lilly of Prince William in the azure mantle of the Order of the Garter, c. 1698

Gloucester's language acquisition was delayed: he did not speak correctly until the age of three,[27] and consequently the commencement of his education was postponed by a year.[28] The Reverend Samuel Pratt, a Cambridge graduate, was appointed the Duke's tutor in 1693.[15] Lessons concentrated on geography, mathematics, Latin, and French.[17] Pratt was an enemy of Jenkin Lewis, and they frequently disagreed over how Gloucester should be educated.[15] Lewis remained Gloucester's favourite attendant because, unlike Pratt, he was knowledgeable in military matters and could therefore help him with his "Horse Guards",[29] a miniature army consisting of local children.[30] Over a couple of years from 1693, the size of the army grew from 22 to over 90 boys.[31]

Princess Anne had fallen out with her sister and brother-in-law, William and Mary, and reluctantly agreed to the advice of her friend, the Countess of Marlborough, that Gloucester should visit his aunt and uncle regularly to ensure their continued goodwill towards him.[32] In an attempt to heal the rift, Anne invited the King and Queen to see Gloucester drill the "Horse Guards".[33] After watching the boys' display at Kensington Palace, the King praised them, and made a return visit to Campden House the following day.[34] Gloucester grew closer to his aunt and uncle: the Queen bought him presents from his favourite toy shop regularly.[35] Her death in 1694 led to a superficial reconciliation between Anne and William, which occasioned a move to St James's Palace, London.[36] Gloucester having tired of him, Lewis only attended St James's every two months.[37]

On his seventh birthday, Gloucester attended a ceremony at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, to install him as a knight of the Order of the Garter, an honour the King had given him six months before. Gloucester became ill during the celebratory banquet afterwards and left early, but after his recovery went deer hunting in Windsor Great Park, where he was blooded by Samuel Masham, his father's page.[38] Princess Anne wrote to the Countess of Marlborough, "My boy continues yet very well, and looks better, I think, than ever he did in his life; I mean more healthy, for though I love him very well, I can't brag of his beauty."[38]

King William entrusting Prince William to Bishop Burnet, illustrated in John Cassell's Illustrated History of England

During the trial of Sir John Fenwick, who was implicated in a plot to assassinate King William,[39] Gloucester signed a letter to the King promising his loyalty. "I, your Majesty's most dutiful subject," the letter read, "had rather lose my life in your Majesty's cause than in any man's else, and I hope it will not be long ere you conquer France."[40] Added to the letter was a declaration by the boys in Gloucester's army: "We, your Majesty's subjects, will stand by you while we have a drop of blood."[40]

In 1697, Parliament granted King William £50,000 to establish a household for the Duke of Gloucester, though the King only permitted the release of £15,000, keeping the difference for himself.[41] The establishment of Gloucester's own household in early 1698 revived the feud between Anne and William.[42] William was determined to limit Anne's involvement in the household, and therefore appointed, against her wishes, the low church Gilbert Burnet, Bishop of Salisbury, as Gloucester's preceptor.[43] Anne was high church,[44] and Burnet, knowing she was unhappy, attempted to decline the appointment, but the King insisted he accept it.[45] Anne's anger was only placated by an assurance from King William that she could choose all the lower servants of the household.[46] The Earl of Marlborough, a friend of Anne's, was appointed Gloucester's governor, after the Duke of Shrewsbury declined the office on the grounds of ill health.[41] Shortly before the King sailed for the Netherlands, he received Anne's choices from Marlborough but he refused to confirm them.[46] His favourite, the Earl of Albemarle, eventually convinced him to agree to Anne's appointments, and the King's acceptance was sent from the Netherlands in September 1698.[47] The Marlboroughs' twelve-year-old son, Lord Churchill, was appointed Gloucester's Master of the Horse, and became a friend and playmate.[48] Abigail Hill, a kinswoman of the Countess of Marlborough, was appointed his laundress, and Abigail's brother, Jack Hill, was made one of Gloucester's gentlemen of the bedchamber.[49]

Portrait by Sir Godfrey Kneller, c. 1698

Burnet lectured Gloucester for hours at a time on subjects such as the feudal constitutions of Europe and law before the time of Christianity.[50] Burnet also encouraged Gloucester to memorise facts and dates by heart.[50] Government ministers inspected Gloucester's academic progress every four months, finding themselves "amazed" by his "wonderful memory and good judgement".[50] His childhood troop was disbanded, and King William made him the honorary commander of a real regiment of Dutch footguards.[51] In 1699, he attended the trials in the House of Lords of Lord Mohun and Lord Warwick, who were accused of murder.[31] Mohun was acquitted; Warwick was found guilty of manslaughter but escaped punishment by pleading privilege of peerage.[52]

Death

As he neared his eleventh birthday, Gloucester was assigned Mary's old apartments in Kensington Palace.[31] At his birthday party at Windsor, on 24 July 1700, he complained of a sudden fatigue, but was initially thought to have overheated himself while dancing.[53] By nightfall, he was suffering from a sore throat and chills, followed by a severe headache and a high fever the next day.[53][54] A physician, Hannes, did not arrive until 27 July. Gloucester was immediately bled, but his condition continued to deteriorate. Over the next day, he developed a rash and suffered a bout of diarrhoea. A second physician, Gibbons, arrived early on 28 July, followed by Radcliffe that evening.[54]

The physicians could not agree on a diagnosis.[53] Radcliffe thought he had scarlet fever, while others thought it was smallpox.[55] They administered "cordial powders and cordial juleps".[54] Gloucester was bled, to which Radcliffe strongly objected. He told his colleagues, "you have destroyed him and you may finish him".[55] He prescribed blistering, which was no more effective.[56] In great pain, Gloucester passed the evening of 28 July "in great sighings and dejections of spirits ... towards morning, he complained very much of his blisters."[54] Anne, who had spent an entire day and night by her son's bedside, now became so distressed that she fainted.[54] However, by midday on 29 July, Gloucester was breathing more easily and his headache had diminished, leading to hopes that he would recover. The improvement was fleeting, and that evening, he was "taken with a convulsing sort of breathing, a defect in swallowing and a total deprivation of all sense".[54] Prince William died close to 1 a.m. on 30 July 1700, with his parents beside him. In the end, the physicians decided the cause of death was "a malignant fever".[54] An autopsy revealed severe swelling of the lymph nodes in the neck and an abnormal amount of fluid in the ventricles of his brain:[57] "four and a half ounces of a limpid humour were taken out."[54] A modern diagnosis is that Gloucester died of acute bacterial pharyngitis, with associated pneumonia. Had he lived, though, it is almost certain the prince would have succumbed to complications of his hydrocephalus.[54]

King William, who was in the Netherlands, wrote to Marlborough, "It is so great a loss to me as well as to all England, that it pierces my heart."[58] Anne was prostrate with grief, taking to her chamber.[59] In the evenings, she was carried into the garden "to divert her melancholy thoughts".[54] Gloucester's body was moved from Windsor to Westminster on the night of 1 August, and he lay in state in the Palace of Westminster before being entombed in the Royal Vault of the Henry VII Chapel in Westminster Abbey on 9 August.[60] As was usual for royalty in mourning, his parents did not attend the funeral service, instead remaining in seclusion at Windsor.[59]

In an allusion to Prince William's death, Tory politician William Shippen wrote:

So by the course of the revolving spheres,
Whene'er a new-discovered star appears,
Astronomers, with pleasure and amaze,
Upon the infant luminary gaze.
They find their heaven's enlarged, and wait from thence
Some blest, some more than common influence,
But suddenly, alas! The fleeting light,
Retiring, leaves their hopes involv'd in endless night.[61]

Gloucester's death destabilised the succession, as his mother was the only person remaining in the Protestant line to the throne established by the Bill of Rights 1689.[53] Although Anne had ten other pregnancies after the birth of Gloucester, all her subsequent children died, either in the womb or immediately after birth.[62] The English parliament did not want the throne to revert to a Catholic,[63] so it passed the Act of Settlement 1701, which settled the throne of England on a cousin of King James, Sophia, Electress of Hanover, and her Protestant heirs.[64] Anne succeeded King William in 1702, and reigned until her death on 1 August 1714. Sophia predeceased her by a few weeks, and so Sophia's son George ascended the throne as the first British monarch of the House of Hanover.[65]

Titles, styles, honours and arms

The Duke of Gloucester's arms

William was styled as: His Royal Highness Prince William, Duke of Gloucester.[66]

Honours

Arms

Gloucester bore the royal arms, differenced by an inescutcheon of the Danish coat of arms and a label of three points Argent, the centre point bearing a cross Gules.[67]

Ancestry

Notes

  1. All dates in this article are in the Old Style Julian calendar in use in Britain throughout Gloucester's life; however, years are assumed to start on 1 January rather than 25 March, which was the English New Year.
  2. Mrs Pack was said to be so ugly that she was "fitter to go to a pigsty than to a prince's bed".[16] She apparently failed to gain Gloucester's affection; on her death in 1694, he was asked by the Queen if he was sad at the news, to which he replied, "No, madam".[17]

References

  1. Gregg, pp. 63–69; Somerset, pp. 98–110
  2. Somerset, p. 109
  3. Gregg, p. 72; Somerset, p. 113
  4. Chapman, p. 21
  5. Gregg, p. 72
  6. Chapman, p. 21; Green, p. 54; Gregg, p. 72
  7. 1 2 Gibbs and Doubleday, p. 743
  8. 1 2 Chapman, p. 46
  9. White, Brian (Winter 2007). "Music for a 'brave livlylike boy': the Duke of Gloucester, Purcell and 'The noise of foreign wars'" The Musical Times 148 (1901): 75–83
  10. Baldwin, Olive; Wilson, Thelma (September 1981). "Who Can from Joy Refraine? Purcell's Birthday Song for the Duke of Gloucester" The Musical Times 122 (1663): 596–599
  11. McGuinness, Rosamund (April 1965). "The Chronology of John Blow's Court Odes" Music and Letters 46 (2): 102–121
  12. Letter from Lord Melville to the Duke of Hamilton, 26 July 1689, quoted in Gregg, p. 76 and Waller, p. 296
  13. Waller, p. 296
  14. Somerset, p. 116
  15. 1 2 3 Chapman, p. 49
  16. Somerset, p. 113
  17. 1 2 Somerset, p. 145
  18. Chapman, p. 31
  19. Chapman, pp. 31–32
  20. Gregg, p. 100
  21. Green, p. 64
  22. 1 2 Green, p. 55
  23. Somerset, p. 116
  24. Chapman, pp. 30–31; Curtis, p. 74
  25. Chapman, pp. 57, 74–75
  26. Somerset, p. 144
  27. Gregg, p. 100; Waller, p. 317
  28. Chapman, p. 43
  29. Chapman, p. 54
  30. Brown, p. 141; Chapman, pp. 53, 59
  31. 1 2 3 Kilburn, Matthew (2004). "William, Prince, duke of Gloucester (1689–1700)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/29454. Retrieved 8 October 2011. (subscription required)
  32. Gregg, pp. 98–99
  33. Waller, p. 320
  34. Chapman, p. 65
  35. Waller, p. 317
  36. Gregg, pp. 105–107
  37. Chapman, p. 89
  38. 1 2 Green, p. 74
  39. Churchill, vol. I, p. 401
  40. 1 2 Churchill, vol. I, p. 446
  41. 1 2 Gregg, p. 114
  42. Chapman, p. 131
  43. Green, p. 78; Gregg, p. 115
  44. Somerset, p. 157
  45. Chapman, p. 133; Green, p. 78; Gregg, p. 115
  46. 1 2 Gregg, p. 115
  47. Gregg, p. 116
  48. Churchill, vol. I, p. 433
  49. Churchill, vol. I, pp. 433–434
  50. 1 2 3 Chapman, p. 137
  51. Chapman, p. 134
  52. Lovell, C. R. (October 1949). "The Trial of Peers in Great Britain" The American Historical Review 55: 69–81
  53. 1 2 3 4 Waller, p. 352
  54. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Somerset, p. 164
  55. 1 2 Green, p. 79
  56. Chapman, p. 138
  57. Gregg, p. 120
  58. Chapman, p. 142; Churchill, vol. I, p. 447
  59. 1 2 Somerset, p. 163
  60. Chapman, pp. 143–144; Green, p. 80; Gregg, p. 120
  61. Jacob, pp. 306–307
  62. Green, p. 335
  63. Starkey, p. 216
  64. Starkey, pp. 215–216
  65. Gregg, pp. 384, 394–397
  66. Chapman, p. 90
  67. Ashmole, p. 539
  68. Paget, pp. 110–112

Further reading

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