Followers of my blog will have noted that my
list of links to other blogs includes “A Covent Garden Gilflurt's Guide to Life” – a vastly entertaining
blog that addresses all aspects (but especially outrageous ones!) of 18th
Century life. Catherine Curzon, alias Madame
Gilflurt, has been kind enough to write a guest blog for me on the life of
Britain’s King William IV (1765
– 1837) who became known as “The Sailor King”.
Over to Madame for more…
William IV – A Stormy Voyage to the Throne
William IV in dress uniform by Sir Martin Archer Shee |
The end of the Georgian era is a point that has
come in for some debate and, as I found when researching Life in the
Georgian Court, William IV is not a man who is often included in the
notorious list of the Georgian monarchs. William was not a farmer like
his father, nor a Prinny, like his brother but instead the Sailor
King, a committed naval man and the heirless monarch who came to the throne
when he was already well into his sixties, paving the way for the Victorian era
that was to follow.
When William gave his first newborn cries at Buckingham
House, his status as third son to George III and Queen Charlotte meant it was
unlikely that he would ever inherit the throne. Rather than submit to the
painstaking preparation to rule that his brother faced, William’s life was set to be a nautical one. Under
the guidance of his tutors, Major-General Budé and Dr James
Majendie, he grew up fast until, at the age of
thirteen, William joined the Royal Navy. It was the best decision for all, the
king decided, keeping his son safely away from the potentially thorny influence
of his brother, George.
Accompanied by a tutor, William went to sea as
a midshipman aboard the Prince George and, in 1780, he even went to war
serving at the First Battle of Cape St Vincent in 1780. He was a keen member of
the crew yet his fame was about to get the better of him. It was in New York
during the American War of Independence that William dodged a kidnap attempt
sanctioned by George Washington himself. Though he was unharmed, this marked
the end of the young man’s
unrestricted gadding about.
The moonlight Battle of Cape St Vincent, 1780 by Francis Holman (1729–1784)
|
William’s rise through the ranks took a hiatus when he spent a couple of
years in Hanover and found his first romantic fancy but in 1785 he was once
more at sea, this time as Lieutenant. Just twelve months later, he was captain
of his own vessel. By the age of nineteen, the ambitious young sailor was
captain of HMS Pegasus and came to the attention of Nelson, who was soon
a devoted admirer; indeed, William gave the bride away and was a witness when
Nelson married Frances Nisbet in 1787.
Capriciousness was not the sole preserve of
George, Prince of Wales, and William, though apparently a charming and fun sort
of chap when the mood took him, was not a man who liked to be questioned. This
meant that relationships with his crew were occasionally just a little fractious,
though he had no such problems when it came to charming the girls.
In 1789, William’s star had grown even higher and he was appointed Rear-Admiral and
placed in command of HMS Valiant. However, though his
professional star was in the ascendancy,
at home William was not satisfied with the way
things were going. Whilst his brothers had been made into dukes, no similar
honour appeared to be coming his way and his father, in fact, seemed downright
reluctant.
William as Lord High Admiral 1828 |
Finally, William decided to force the king’s hand and declared that he was thinking
about standing as the parliamentary candidate for Totnes in Devon. As he had
known it would, the threat sent George III scrambling to meet his demands and
he accordingly named his son Duke of Clarence and St Andrews in 1789.
The following year, William resigned from
active service, a decision he would always regret. He pined to be back at sea
during the Napoleonic Wars, yet no call ever came. Following a speech in which
he questioned the need for the conflict, he became convinced that this was
the reason that he received no command and recanted, speaking out in favour of
the war, but still no call came.
Promotions followed and eventually he rose to
the rank of Lord High Admiral, yet even this couldn’t match the thrill of a naval command. When he took to the waves
with a fleet of ships in 1828 and no word as to their mission, Wellington
demanded that he resign; William was happy to oblige. Two years later William inherited
the throne as his two older brothers died without leaving living legitimate
issue.
William died on 20th June 1837, just a week
before the seventh anniversary of the beginning of his reign. With his death,
Queen Victoria assumed the throne whilst in Hanover, where no woman could rule,
the crown passed to his brother, Ernest Augustus, Duke of Cumberland.
No longer would the two thrones be linked.
An era had ended.
About the Author
Catherine
Curzon is a royal historian and blogs on all matters 18th century at A
Covent Garden Gilflurt's Guide to Life.
Her
work has featured by publications including BBC History Extra, All About History, History of Royals, Explore
History and Jane Austen’s Regency World. She has also provided additional
material for the sell-out theatrical show, An Evening with Jane Austen, will she will introduce at the Royal
Pavilion, Brighton, in September (tickets are available here).
Catherine
holds a Master’s degree in Film and when not dodging
the furies of the guillotine, she lives in Yorkshire atop a ludicrously steep
hill.
Her
book, Life in the Georgian Court, is available now from Amazon UK, Amazon US, Book Depository and all good bookshops!
About
Life in the Georgian Court
As
the glittering Hanoverian court gives birth to the British Georgian era, a
golden age of royalty dawns in Europe. Houses rise and fall, births, marriages
and scandals change the course of history and in France, Revolution stalks the
land.
Peep
behind the shutters of the opulent court of the doomed Bourbons, the absolutist
powerhouse of Romanov Russia and the epoch-defining family whose kings gave
their name to the era, the House of Hanover.
Behind
the pomp and ceremony were men and women born into worlds of immense privilege,
yet beneath the powdered wigs and robes of state were real people living lives
of romance, tragedy, intrigue and eccentricity. Take a journey into the private
lives of very public figures and learn of arranged marriages that turned to
love or hate and scandals that rocked polite society.
Here
the former wife of a king spends three decades in lonely captivity, Prinny
makes scandalous eyes at the toast of the London stage and Marie Antoinette
begins her last, terrible journey through Paris as her son sits alone in a
forgotten prison cell.
Life
in the Georgian Court is
a privileged peek into the glamorous, tragic and iconic courts of the Georgian
world, where even a king could take nothing for granted.
Merci for letting me set sail on your wonderful site!
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