Royal Mews: Difference between revisions

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{{Short description|Grade I listed transport museum in City of Westminster, United Kingdom}}
{{Redirect|Royal Stables|Royal Stables in other countries|Royal Stables (Sweden)|and|Royal Stables (Denmark)|and|Royal Stables of Córdoba}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2018}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2018}}
{{Use British English|date=August 2015}}
{{Use British English|date=August 2015}}
[[File:The Royal Mews (geograph 2321013).jpg|thumbnail|Entrance to the Royal Mews]]
[[File:The Royal Mews (geograph 2321013).jpg|thumbnail|Entrance to the Royal Mews]]


The '''Royal Mews''' is a [[mews]], or collection of equestrian stables, of the [[British Royal Family]]. In [[London]] these stables and stable-hands quarters have occupied two main sites in turn, being located at first on the north side of [[Charing Cross]], and then (since the 1820s) within the grounds of [[Buckingham Palace]].
The '''Royal Mews''' is a [[mews]], or collection of equestrian stables, of the [[British royal family]]. In [[London]] these stables and stable-hands' quarters have occupied two main sites in turn, being located at first on the north side of [[Charing Cross]], and then (since the 1820s) within the grounds of [[Buckingham Palace]].


The Royal Mews, Buckingham Palace includes an extensive display of royal carriages and other associated items, and is open to the public for much of the year. It is also a working part of the palace, where horses and people live and work, and where carriages and cars are in daily use supporting the work of the Queen as [[head of state]].
The Royal Mews, Buckingham Palace, includes an extensive display of royal carriages and other associated items, and is open to the public for much of the year. It is also a working part of the palace, where horses and people live and work, and where carriages and cars are in daily use supporting the work of the monarch as [[head of state]].


The titular head of the Royal Mews is the [[Master of the Horse]] (one of the three great officers of the [[Royal Households of the United Kingdom|Royal Household]]). The executive head is the [[Crown Equerry]], who lives on site and oversees the '''Royal Mews Department''' (which is a department of the Royal Household).
==Charing Cross==
[[File:John Norden's Map of Westminster - Charing Cross.jpg|thumb|left|"The mewes" (top right) at [[Charing Cross]], depicted on [[John Norden]]'s map of [[Westminster]], 1593. The map is oriented with north-west to the top.]]
The first set of stables to be referred to as a mews was at [[Charing Cross]] at the western end of [[Strand, London|The Strand]]. The royal hawks were kept at this site from 1377 and the name derives from the fact that they were confined there at [[moult]]ing (or "mew") time.


==History==
[[File:Royal Stables in the Mews, Charing Cross. Etching by Cook, 1793.jpg|thumb|The Mews at Charing Cross in 1793]]
===At Charing Cross===
The building was destroyed by fire in 1534 and rebuilt as a stables, keeping its former name when it acquired this new function. On old maps, such as the [[Woodcut map of London|"Woodcut" map of London]] of the early 1560s, the Mews can be seen extending back towards the site of today's [[Leicester Square]].
[[File:John Norden's Map of Westminster - Charing Cross.jpg|thumb|right|"The mewes" (top right) at [[Charing Cross]], depicted on [[John Norden]]'s map of [[Westminster]], 1593. The map is oriented with north-west to the top.]]
The first set of stables to be referred to as a mews was at [[Charing Cross]] at the western end of [[Strand, London|The Strand]]. The royal hawks were kept at this site from 1377 and the name originates from the fact that they were confined there at [[moulting]] time ("mew" being derived from the French verb "muer", to moult).<ref>{{cite web | title = Moult - Definition in the English-French Dictionary - Cambridge Dictionary | url = https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english-french/moult | website = dictionary.cambridge.org | date = | access-date = 10 September 2022}}</ref>

In the Tudor Period, the Royal Stables were located in Lomesbury (present-day [[Bloomsbury]]).<ref name="Ackermann1809">{{cite book |last1=Ackermann |first1=Rudolph |title=The Microcosm of London (vol. II) |date=1904 |publisher=Methuen and Co. |location=London |page=162 |url=https://archive.org/details/microcosmoflondo02pyneuoft/page/162/mode/2up |access-date=12 December 2023}}</ref> In 1534 they were destroyed by fire, whereupon the King, [[Henry VIII]], decided to rebuild the Charing Cross mews as a stables (the hawks having been given alternative accommodation). It kept its former name when it acquired this new function. On old maps, such as the [[Woodcut map of London|"Woodcut" map of London]] of the early 1560s, the Mews can be seen extending back towards the site of today's [[Leicester Square]].

[[File:Royal Stables in the Mews, Charing Cross. Etching by Cook, 1793.jpg|thumb|left|The 'Royal Stables in the Mews, Charing Cross' in 1793.]]
It was rebuilt again in 1732 to the designs of [[William Kent]], and in the early 19th century it was open to the public. This building was usually known as the '''King's Mews''' (or Queen's Mews when there was a woman on the throne), but was also sometimes referred to as the Royal Mews or the Royal Stables.

[[File:Microcosm of London Plate 047 - King's Mews.jpg|thumb|right|The King's Mews in 1809 (an etching by [[Thomas Rowlandson|Rowlandson]] and [[Augustus Charles Pugin|Pugin]]).]]
Kent's redesign was a classical building occupying the northern half of the site, with an open space in front of it that ranked among the few large ones in central London at a time when the [[Royal Parks]] were on the fringes of the city and most [[squares in London]] were [[garden square]]s open only to the residents of their surrounding houses.


This building was usually known as the '''King's Mews''', but was also sometimes referred to as the Royal Mews, the Royal Stables, or as the Queen's Mews when there was a woman on the throne. It was rebuilt again in 1732 to the designs of [[William Kent]], and in the early 19th century it was open to the public.
On 15 June 1820, the Guards in the Royal Mews mutinied in support of [[Caroline of Brunswick]], whom King [[George IV]] was seeking to divorce.<ref>Robins, pp. 126–127</ref>
On 15 June 1820, the Guards in the Royal Mews mutinied in support of [[Caroline of Brunswick]], whom King [[George IV]] was seeking to divorce.<ref>Robins, pp. 126–127</ref>


The whole site was cleared in the late 1820s to create [[Trafalgar Square]], laid out in 1837–1844 after delays, and the [[National Gallery]] which opened in 1838.<ref>{{cite web | title = National Gallery - About the building | url = https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/about-us/history/about-the-building | website = nationalgallery.org.uk | date = | access-date = 10 September 2022}}</ref>
It was an impressive classical building, and there was an open space in front of it which ranked among the larger ones in central London at a time when the [[Royal Parks]] were on the fringes of the city and the gardens of [[Sloane Square|London's squares]] were open only to the residents of the surrounding houses. It was demolished to make way for [[Trafalgar Square]].
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==Buckingham Palace==
===At Buckingham Palace===
[[File:Royalmews.500px.jpg|thumb|upright=0.85|Stables in the Royal Mews]]
[[File:Royalmews.500px.jpg|thumb|upright|right|Stables in the Royal Mews]]
The present Royal Mews is in the grounds of Buckingham Palace, to the south of [[Buckingham Palace Gardens]], near Grosvenor Place.
The present Royal Mews is in the grounds of Buckingham Palace, to the south of [[Buckingham Palace Garden]]s, near Grosvenor Place.


In the 1760s [[George III of the United Kingdom|George III]] moved some of his day-to-day horses and carriages to the grounds of [[Buckingham Palace#Buckingham House|Buckingham House]], which he had acquired in 1762 for his wife's use, but the main royal stables housing the ceremonial coaches and their horses remained at the King's Mews. However, when his son [[George IV of the United Kingdom|George IV]] had Buckingham Palace converted into the main royal residence in the 1820s the whole stables establishment was moved. The old Mews at Charing Cross was demolished and [[Trafalgar Square]] was laid out on the site in 1837–1844. The current Royal Mews was built to designs by [[John Nash (architect)|John Nash]] and were completed in 1825 (though the Riding School, thought to be by [[William Chambers (architect)|William Chambers]], dates from the 1760s). The buildings have been modified extensively since.
In the 1760s [[George III of the United Kingdom|George III]] moved some of his day-to-day horses and carriages to the grounds of [[Buckingham Palace#Buckingham House|Buckingham House]], which he had acquired in 1762 for his wife's use. The [[Riding hall|Riding School]], thought to be by [[William Chambers (architect)|William Chambers]], dates from this period (it was completed in 1764; the [[pediment]], with sculptural motifs by [[William Theed]], was added in 1859).<ref name="Vickers2012" /> The main royal stables housing the ceremonial coaches and their horses remained at the King's Mews, Charing Cross; however, when his son [[George IV of the United Kingdom|George IV]] had Buckingham Palace converted into the main royal residence in the 1820s the whole stables establishment was moved there.


[[File:Buckingham Palace Royal Mews.jpg|thumb|left|The Riding School, seen from Buckingham Palace Road.]]
As well as being a full-time working facility, the Royal Mews is regularly open to the public. The state coaches and other carriages are kept there, along with about 30 horses, together with their modern counterparts, the [[State and royal cars of the United Kingdom|state motor cars]]. Coachmen, grooms, chauffeurs and other staff are accommodated in flats above the carriage houses and stables.
The current Royal Mews was built to designs by [[John Nash (architect)|John Nash]] and was completed in 1825 (though the mews buildings have been modified extensively since). The main quadrangle was laid out with coach houses on the east side, and stable blocks (alternating with harness and forage rooms) on the west.<ref name="Stewart-Wilson1991">{{cite book |last1=Stewart-Wilson |first1=Mary |title=The Royal Mews |date=1991 |publisher=The Bodley Head |location=London |page=187}}</ref> Beyond it, the 'back mews' included accommodation for a veterinary surgeon.


[[File:Royal Mews 2.jpg|thumb|right|The Main Quadrangle in 2015.]]
===Royal and State Carriages===
When [[Queen Victoria|Victoria]] came to the throne in 1837, Buckingham Palace became the monarch's principal residence. [[Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha|Prince Albert]] used the back mews for stabling his own horses (for riding and driving). By the 1850s there were just under two hundred people employed at the mews, most of whom lived on site with their families.<ref name="Stewart-Wilson1991" /> Standing either side of the entrance were official residences (one for the Crown Equerry, the other for the Clerk of the Stables); other staff were accommodated in rooms above the stables and carriage houses. In 1855 Queen Victoria established a Buckingham Palace Royal Mews School, for the education of the workers' children.

Under Victoria's successor, King [[Edward VII]], motor vehicles were introduced into the mews. In 1904 the Crown Equerry wrote to the Office of Works to request the conversion of 'two small coach-houses in the Back Mews' into 'a suitable Motor House [...] with a Lantern roof, hot water heating apparatus and electric lighting'.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Smith |first1=Brian E. |title=Royal Daimlers |date=1976 |publisher=Transport Bookman Publications |location=Brentwood, Middlesex |page=30}}</ref> The conversion duly took place, and accommodation was provided nearby for the chauffeurs.

==Present day==
[[File:Horses at the Royal Mews - geograph.org.uk - 3181760.jpg|thumb|right|[[Windsor Greys]] at the Royal Mews.]]
As well as being a full-time working facility, the Royal Mews, Buckingham Palace, is regularly open to the public. The state coaches and other carriages are kept there, along with about 30 horses, together with their modern counterparts: the [[State and royal cars of the United Kingdom|state motor cars]]. Coachmen, grooms, chauffeurs and other staff are accommodated in flats above the carriage houses and stables.

===Royal and state carriages===
A few of the carriages stored at the Mews are pictured here in action; several more are illustrated on their own pages (see listing below).
A few of the carriages stored at the Mews are pictured here in action; several more are illustrated on their own pages (see listing below).
{{Gallery
{{Gallery
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|File:Horse (Cleveland Bay) Drawn Clarence (Brougham) Carriage & Victoria Memorial, Buckingham Palace, Westminster, London (3795290693).jpg|A [[Clarence (carriage)|Clarence]] from the Royal Mews, drawn by a pair of Cleveland Bay horses, passing the [[Victoria Memorial, London|Victoria Memorial]]. (A Clarence is a larger-than-standard, two-horse [[Brougham (carriage)|Brougham]].)
|File:Horse (Cleveland Bay) Drawn Clarence (Brougham) Carriage & Victoria Memorial, Buckingham Palace, Westminster, London (3795290693).jpg|A [[Clarence (carriage)|clarence]] from the Royal Mews, drawn by a pair of Cleveland Bay horses, passing the [[Victoria Memorial, London|Victoria Memorial]]. (A clarence is a larger-than-standard, two-horse [[Brougham (carriage)|brougham]].)
|File:Trooping the Colour 2009 040.jpg|One of two Royal Mews [[Barouche]]s carrying members of the Royal Family at the 2009 [[Trooping the Colour]].
|File:Trooping the Colour 2009 040.jpg|One of two Royal Mews [[barouche]]s carrying members of the Royal Family at the 2009 [[Trooping the Colour]].
|File:Trooping the Colour Queen carriage 16th June 2007.jpg|[[Elizabeth II|The Queen]] riding in a [[Phaeton (carriage)|Phaeton]], drawn by Windsor Grey horses, at the 2007 [[Trooping the Colour]]. (This carriage is known as the "Ivory-mounted Phaeton".)
|File:Trooping the Colour Queen carriage 16th June 2007.jpg|[[Elizabeth II|Queen Elizabeth II]] riding in a [[Phaeton (carriage)|phaeton]], drawn by Windsor Grey horses, at the 2007 [[Trooping the Colour]]. (This carriage is known as the "Ivory-mounted Phaeton".)
|File:Carriage Wedding Prince William Kate Middleton.jpg|"Ascot" Landau conveying bridesmaids back from Westminster Abbey to Buckingham Palace after the wedding of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, 2011.
|File:Carriage Wedding Prince William Kate Middleton.jpg|"Ascot" landau conveying bridesmaids back from Westminster Abbey to Buckingham Palace after the wedding of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, 2011.
|File:Lord Mayor's Show 2008 carriage.jpg|The "Balmoral" [[Sociable (carriage)|Sociable]] on a damp day at the [[Lord Mayor's Show]].
|File:Lord Mayor's Show 2008 carriage.jpg|The "Balmoral" [[Sociable (carriage)|sociable]] on a damp day at the [[Lord Mayor's Show]].
|File:Trooping the Colour 2018 (13).jpg| The "Balmoral" Landau conveying the Countess of Wessex and others from Trooping the Colour, 2018.
|File:Trooping the Colour 2018 (13).jpg| The "Balmoral" landau conveying the Countess of Wessex and others from Trooping the Colour, 2018.
}}
}}

Vehicles in the care of the Royal Mews are listed below. A good number are on public display though not all are kept in London.<ref>'The Royal Mews, Buckingham Palace', Pitkin, London, 1973 &1990</ref> Most are in regular use, and some (for example, the Broughams) are driven on a daily basis.<ref>Since 1843 the daily messenger Brougham has set out from the Royal Mews to collect and deliver post between Buckingham Palace and St James's Palace</ref> Others (above all the Gold Coach) are only used on great and rare State occasions. The list includes vehicles for personal, recreational and sporting use, as well as those designed and kept for State occasions:
Vehicles in the care of the Royal Mews are listed below. A good number are on public display, though not all are kept in London.<ref>'The Royal Mews, Buckingham Palace', Pitkin, London, 1973 &1990</ref> Most are in regular use, and some (for example, the broughams) are driven on a daily basis.{{efn|Since 1843, the daily messenger brougham has set out from the Royal Mews to collect and deliver post between Buckingham Palace and St James's Palace.}} Others (above all the Gold Coach) are only used on great and rare state occasions. The list includes vehicles for personal, recreational and sporting use, as well as those designed and kept for state occasions:
[[File:Holyrood Brougham.jpg|thumb|A Royal Mews Brougham on display alongside a Station Bus at Holyrood Palace in Edinburgh.]]
[[File:Windsor1844Louis-PhilippeMarie-AmélieRoyalPartyCharabancJosephNash edited.jpg|thumb|Charabanc (presented by [[Louis Philippe of France]] to [[Queen Victoria]]) at [[Windsor Castle]] in 1844.]]
[[File:Holyrood Brougham.jpg|thumb|A Royal Mews Brougham on display alongside a station bus at Holyrood Palace in Edinburgh]]
[[File:Windsor1844Louis-PhilippeMarie-AmélieRoyalPartyCharabancJosephNash edited.jpg|thumb|Charabanc (presented by [[Louis Philippe of France]] to [[Queen Victoria]]) at [[Windsor Castle]] in 1844]]
[[File:Hyde Park Corner Carriage-1983.jpg|thumbnail|[[Brake (carriage)|Brakes]] are regularly used for training and exercising the carriage horses, as seen here in [[Hyde Park, London|Hyde Park]].]]
[[File:Hyde Park Corner Carriage-1983.jpg|thumbnail|[[Brake (carriage)|Brakes]] are regularly used for training and exercising the carriage horses, as seen here in [[Hyde Park, London|Hyde Park]].]]
* The [[Gold State Coach]]
* The [[Gold State Coach]]
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* The [[Glass Coach]]
* The [[Glass Coach]]
* [[King Edward VII's Town Coach]]
* [[King Edward VII's Town Coach]]
* Several [[Landau (carriage)|Landau carriages]] including:
* Several [[Landau (carriage)|landau carriages]] including:
** The [[1902 State Landau]]
** The [[1902 State Landau]]
** Seven other [[Landau (carriage)#Royal use in Britain|State Landaus]]
** Seven other [[Landau (carriage)#Royal use in Britain|state landaus]]
** Five Semi-state Landaus
** Five semi-state landaus
** Five Ascot Landaus
** Five Ascot landaus
* [[Barouche]]s and [[Barouche-sociable|Sociables]]
* [[Barouche]]s and [[Barouche-sociable|sociables]]
* [[Brougham (carriage)|Broughams]] and [[Clarence (carriage)|Clarences]]
* [[Brougham (carriage)|Broughams]] and [[Clarence (carriage)|clarences]]
* [[Phaeton (carriage)|Phaetons]] and [[Victoria (carriage)|Victorias]]
* [[Phaeton (carriage)|Phaetons]] and [[Victoria (carriage)|victorias]]
* Sporting carriages, including a rare [[Curricle]]
* Sporting carriages, including a rare [[curricle]]
* Recreational vehicles, such as the Louis-Philippe [[Charabanc]] (illustrated)
* Recreational vehicles, such as the Louis-Philippe [[charabanc]] (illustrated)
* A variety of pony carriages, [[Park drag#Types of coaches|drags]] and exercise vehicles
* A variety of pony carriages, [[Park drag#Types of coaches|drags]] and exercise vehicles
In less regular use is [[Queen Victoria]]'s State Sledge, one of a number of royal [[sleigh]]s in the Mews.


Also on display are some of the historic and immaculately kept liveries and harnesses (which likewise see regular use), ranging from the plainer items used for exercising and working horses, to the richly ornamented State liveries and harnesses designed for use with the similarly appointed State coaches.
In less regular use is [[Queen Victoria]]'s state sledge, one of a number of royal [[sleigh]]s in the Mews.
Also on display are some of the historic and immaculately kept liveries and harnesses (which likewise see regular use), ranging from the plainer items used for exercising and working horses, to the ornamented state liveries and harnesses designed for use with the similarly appointed state coaches.


===Carriage horses===
===Carriage horses===
The horses in the Royal Mews today are for the most part either [[Windsor Grey]]s or [[Cleveland Bay]]s, though this has not always been the case (for example, for over 200 years locally bred [[Hanoverian horse|Hanoverian Cream]] horses took pride of place in the harness on major state occasions, until problems due to inbreeding led to their use being discontinued in the mid-1920s). The horses are regularly exercised in the art of pulling carriages (one of the reasons for the continuing use of horse-drawn transport for the daily messenger rounds); they are used for [[Carriage driving|competitive]] and recreational driving as well as for ceremonial duties. The [[manure]] that is produced by the horses is used by the adjacent [[garden at Buckingham Palace]].
The horses in the Royal Mews today are mostly either [[Windsor Grey]]s or [[Cleveland Bay]]s.{{efn|This has not always been the case. For example, for over 200 years locally bred [[Hanoverian horse|Hanoverian Cream]] horses took pride of place in the harness on major state occasions, until problems due to inbreeding led to their use being discontinued in the mid-1920s}} The horses are regularly exercised in the art of pulling carriages (one of the reasons for the continuing use of horse-drawn transport for the daily messenger rounds); they are used for [[Carriage driving|competitive]] and recreational driving as well as for ceremonial duties. The [[manure]] that is produced by the horses is used by the adjacent [[Buckingham Palace Garden]].


===State Cars===
===Motor vehicles===
{{Main|State and royal cars of the United Kingdom}}
{{Main|State and royal cars of the United Kingdom}}
The maintenance and provision of modern motor vehicles is as much a part of the work of the Royal Mews as that of carriages and horses. [[Edward VII]] first established a garage in the Mews in the early years of the twentieth century.
[[File:2002 Bentley State Limousine.jpg|thumb|2002 [[Bentley State Limousine]]]]
[[File:Royal cars.JPG|thumbnail|Rolls-Royce Phantom VI limousines from 1986 (left) and 1978 (right)]]
The maintenance and provision of modern motor vehicles is as much a part of the work of the Royal Mews as that of carriages and horses. [[Edward VII]] first established a garage in the Mews in the early 20th century; by 1920 his son [[George V]] had converted two of the coach-houses to accommodate his State [[Daimler Company|Daimler]]s.<ref name="Stewart-Wilson1991" />


The [[Official state car#United Kingdom|official cars]] (as opposed to vehicles for staff or private use) are all painted in black over [[claret]] (known as Royal Claret).<ref>[http://www.thechauffeur.com/the-royal-fleet-of-limousines/ The Royal fleet of limousines]</ref> They are driven, cared for and maintained by a number of chauffeurs, who are based in the Mews and work under the Head Chauffeur (who, along with his deputy, is primarily responsible for driving the Queen).
The principal [[Official state car#United Kingdom|official cars]] are all painted in black over [[claret]] (known as Royal Claret).<ref>[http://www.thechauffeur.com/the-royal-fleet-of-limousines/ The Royal fleet of limousines]</ref> They are driven, cared for and maintained by a number of chauffeurs, who are based in the Mews and work under the head chauffeur (who, along with his deputy, is primarily responsible for driving the monarch).<ref name="Stewart-Wilson1991" />


====State cars====
The five principal State Cars are without number plates. They comprise:
The five principal state cars are without [[Vehicle registration plates of the United Kingdom|number plates]]. They comprise:
* Two [[Bentley State Limousine]]s (given to the Queen in 2002 to mark her [[Golden Jubilee of Elizabeth II|Golden Jubilee]]).
* Two [[Bentley State Limousine]]s (given to [[Elizabeth II|Queen Elizabeth II]] in 2002 to mark her [[Golden Jubilee of Elizabeth II|Golden Jubilee]]).
* Two [[Rolls-Royce Phantom VI]] limousines: the 1978 [[Official state car#Other state cars|Silver Jubilee Phantom VI]] and a 1986 Phantom VI, both nearly identical outwardly, save for the slightly higher roof on the 1978 example (see photo).
* Two [[Rolls-Royce Phantom VI]] limousines: the 1978 [[Official state car#Current state cars|Silver Jubilee Phantom VI]] and a 1986 Phantom VI, both nearly identical outwardly, save for the slightly higher roof on the 1978 example (see photo).
* A rare 1950 [[Rolls-Royce Phantom IV]] with body by [[HJ Mulliner & Co.]], the first example of this model built; it was fitted with an automatic gearbox in 1955.
* A rare 1950 [[Rolls-Royce Phantom IV]] with body by [[HJ Mulliner & Co.]], the first example of this model built; it was fitted with an automatic gearbox in 1955.

====Former State Cars====
During the Queen's reign the following vehicles also served as State Cars:
* A pair of [[Rolls-Royce Phantom V]] limousines delivered to the Royal Mews in 1960 and 1961 (retired from the working fleet after the Bentleys were acquired in 2002).
* A 1954 Rolls-Royce Phantom IV landaulette with coachwork by [[Hooper (coachbuilder)|Hooper]], purchased in 1959 (retired from the working fleet after the second Phantom VI was acquired in 1987).<ref name="Stewart-Wilson1991">{{cite book |last1=Stewart-Wilson |first1=Mary |title=The Royal Mews |date=1991 |publisher=The Bodley Head |location=London |page=187}}</ref>
* Four [[Daimler DE]]36 landaulettes, built as State Cars for [[King George VI]] in the late 1940s and inherited by the Queen when she came to the throne. (Of these, one was then given to [[the Queen Mother]] to use, while the others remained as State Cars alongside the Phantom IV limousine; these were sold when the Phantom IV landaulette and the Phantom V limousines were acquired).


====Other official vehicles====
====Other official vehicles====
The following vehicles, used for less-formal occasions and as support vehicles, are similarly painted in the royal claret and black livery:
[[File:2017 Royal Mews 012.jpg|thumb|[[Daimler DS420]] limousine on display in the Royal Mews in 2017]]
* Three [[Daimler DS420]] limousines, two dating from 1992 (number plates KLL1 and K326EHV) and one from 1988 (F728OUL).
Limousines used for less formal occasions and as support vehicles:
* Two 2012 [[Jaguar XJ]] limousines (number plates NGN 1 and NGN 2).
* Two 2012 [[Jaguar XJ (X351)|Jaguar XJ]] limousines (number plates NGN 1 and NGN 2).
* Three c. 1992 [[Daimler DS420]] limousines (number plates KLL1, K326EHV and F728OUL).
* At least two 2022 [[Range Rover (L460)|Range Rovers]] (number plates MYT1, MYT 2).
* A [[State Hearse]]

[[Land Rover]]s, [[Estate car|luggage brake]]s and [[people carrier]]s are also kept at the Royal Mews. A number of electric vehicles have been acquired since 2012, for various purposes, ranging from a [[BMW i3]] and a [[BMW 7 Series]] [[Hybrid electric vehicle|hybrid]] to a [[Nissan]] van and a [[Renault Twizy]].<ref>{{cite news |last1=Javed |first1=Saman |title=HOW ECO FRIENDLY IS THE QUEEN? |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/climate-change/sustainable-living/queen-environment-climate-change-royal-b1938928.html |access-date=2 November 2021 |work=The Independent |date=15 October 2021}}</ref>
[[Land Rover]]s, [[Estate car|luggage brake]]s and [[people carrier]]s are also kept at the Royal Mews. A number of electric vehicles have been acquired since 2012, for various purposes, ranging from a [[BMW i3]] and a [[BMW 7 Series]] [[Hybrid electric vehicle|hybrid]] to a [[Nissan]] van and a [[Renault Twizy]].<ref>{{cite news |last1=Javed |first1=Saman |title=HOW ECO FRIENDLY IS THE QUEEN? |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/climate-change/sustainable-living/queen-environment-climate-change-royal-b1938928.html |access-date=2 November 2021 |work=The Independent |date=15 October 2021}}</ref>


{{Gallery
===Official oversight===
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The care and training of so many horses, the ongoing care and maintenance of the carriages, cars and [[Horse tack|tack]], along with the actual use of these royal vehicles, means that the Mews is very much a working part of the Palace. The Royal Mews Department is overseen by an official called the [[Crown Equerry]].
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|File:State Bentley Long Walk Crop 1.JPG|2002 [[Bentley State Limousine]]
|File:Royal cars.JPG|[[Rolls-Royce Phantom VI]] limousines from 1986 (left) and 1978 (right)
|File:State Limousine, Royal Mews.jpg|1950 [[Rolls-Royce Phantom IV]] limousine
|File:Jaguar XJ limousine in the Royal Mews.jpg|2012 [[Jaguar XJ (X351)|Jaguar XJ]] limousine
|File:2017 Royal Mews 012.jpg|[[Daimler DS420]] limousine (number plate KLL1)
}}

===The Royal Mews Department===
The following chart shows the staff structure of the Royal Mews Department at the end of the twentieth century (when around fifty people lived and worked at the Mews).<ref name="AllisonRiddell1991">{{cite book |editor1-last=Allison |editor1-first=Ronald |editor2-last=Riddell |editor2-first=Sarah |title=The Royal Encyclopedia |date=1991 |publisher=Macmillan and Co. Ltd |location=London |pages=464–467}}</ref> The position of Superintendent, which included oversight of the staff of the Mews, was abolished in 2000.<ref name="Vickers2012">{{cite book |last1=Vickers |first1=Hugo |title=The Royal Mews at Buckingham Palace |date=2012 |publisher=Royal Collection Enterprises Ltd |location=London}}</ref>

{{Tree chart/start|align=center|summary=The Royal Mews Department}}
{{Tree chart| | | | | | | | | | | | | | CE | | | | | | |CE=Crown Equerry}}
{{Tree chart| | | | | | | | | | | | | | |!| | | | | | | |}}
{{Tree chart| | | | | | | | | | | | | | SM | | | | | | |SM=Superintendent of <br/>the Royal Mews}}
{{Tree chart| , | -|v|- |-| -|v|- |-| -|v|- |-| -|+|- |-| -|v|- |-| -|.|}}
{{Tree chart| ! | VS | | HD | | SH | | SW | | CS | | CC |VS=Veterinary <br/>Surgeon|HD=Horsebox Driver <br/>of Windsor|SH=Stud Groom of <br/>[[Hampton Court]]|SW=Stud Groom of <br/>Windsor|CS=Comptroller <br/>of Stores|CC=Chief Clerk}}
{{Tree chart| ! | | | | | |,|- |-| -|v|- |-| -|v|- |-| -|(| | | |!|}}
{{Tree chart| ! | | | | | ST | | CR | | DL | | DW | | DC |ST=Storeman|CR=Carriage <br/>Restorers|DL=Daily Ladies <br/>of London|DW=Daily Ladies <br/>of Windsor|DC=Deputy <br/>Chief Clerk}}
{{Tree chart| ` | -|v|- |-| -|-|- |-| -|-|- |-| -|.| | | | | | | |!|}}
{{Tree chart| | HC | | | | | | | | | | HO | | | | | | AC |HC=Head [[Chauffeur]]|HO=Head [[Coachman]]|AC=Assistant <br/>Chief Clerk}}
{{Tree chart| | |!| | | | | | | | | | | |!| | | | | | | | |}}
{{Tree chart| | HC | | | | | | | | | | HO | | | | | | |HC=Deputy <br/>Head Chauffeur|HO=Deputy <br/>Head Coachman}}
{{Tree chart| | |!| | | |,|- |-| -|v|- |-| -|+|- |-| -|v|- |-| -|.|}}
{{Tree chart| | FC | | SF | | RR | | SL | | CC | | YM |FC=First Chauffeurs|SF=Sergeant [[Farrier]]|RR=Rough Rider|SL=Senior <br/>Liveried Helpers|CC=Carriage Cleaners|YM=Yardmen}}
{{Tree chart| | |!| | | | | | | | | | | |!| | | | | | | | |}}
{{Tree chart| | SC | | | | | | | | | | LH | | | | | | |SC=Second Chauffeurs|LH=Liveried Helpers}}
{{Tree chart/end}}


==Other locations==
==Other locations==
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==See also==
==See also==
* [[:w:simple:Japan state carriages|Japan state carriages]]
* [[Royal Stables (Denmark)]]
* [[Royal Stables (Denmark)]]
* [[Royal Stables (Sweden)]]
* [[Royal Stables (Sweden)]]

==Notes==
{{notelist}}


==References==
==References==
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{{London landmarks}}
{{London landmarks}}
{{Museums and galleries in London}}
{{LB Westminster}}
{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}
{{Coord|51.49873170|-0.14362900|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-LND_source:wikidata|display=title}}
{{Coord|51.49873170|-0.14362900|format=dms|type:landmark_region:GB-LND_source:wikidata|display=title}}

Latest revision as of 00:29, 18 February 2024

Entrance to the Royal Mews

The Royal Mews is a mews, or collection of equestrian stables, of the British royal family. In London these stables and stable-hands' quarters have occupied two main sites in turn, being located at first on the north side of Charing Cross, and then (since the 1820s) within the grounds of Buckingham Palace.

The Royal Mews, Buckingham Palace, includes an extensive display of royal carriages and other associated items, and is open to the public for much of the year. It is also a working part of the palace, where horses and people live and work, and where carriages and cars are in daily use supporting the work of the monarch as head of state.

The titular head of the Royal Mews is the Master of the Horse (one of the three great officers of the Royal Household). The executive head is the Crown Equerry, who lives on site and oversees the Royal Mews Department (which is a department of the Royal Household).

History[edit]

At Charing Cross[edit]

"The mewes" (top right) at Charing Cross, depicted on John Norden's map of Westminster, 1593. The map is oriented with north-west to the top.

The first set of stables to be referred to as a mews was at Charing Cross at the western end of The Strand. The royal hawks were kept at this site from 1377 and the name originates from the fact that they were confined there at moulting time ("mew" being derived from the French verb "muer", to moult).[1]

In the Tudor Period, the Royal Stables were located in Lomesbury (present-day Bloomsbury).[2] In 1534 they were destroyed by fire, whereupon the King, Henry VIII, decided to rebuild the Charing Cross mews as a stables (the hawks having been given alternative accommodation). It kept its former name when it acquired this new function. On old maps, such as the "Woodcut" map of London of the early 1560s, the Mews can be seen extending back towards the site of today's Leicester Square.

The 'Royal Stables in the Mews, Charing Cross' in 1793.

It was rebuilt again in 1732 to the designs of William Kent, and in the early 19th century it was open to the public. This building was usually known as the King's Mews (or Queen's Mews when there was a woman on the throne), but was also sometimes referred to as the Royal Mews or the Royal Stables.

The King's Mews in 1809 (an etching by Rowlandson and Pugin).

Kent's redesign was a classical building occupying the northern half of the site, with an open space in front of it that ranked among the few large ones in central London at a time when the Royal Parks were on the fringes of the city and most squares in London were garden squares open only to the residents of their surrounding houses.

On 15 June 1820, the Guards in the Royal Mews mutinied in support of Caroline of Brunswick, whom King George IV was seeking to divorce.[3]

The whole site was cleared in the late 1820s to create Trafalgar Square, laid out in 1837–1844 after delays, and the National Gallery which opened in 1838.[4]

At Buckingham Palace[edit]

Stables in the Royal Mews

The present Royal Mews is in the grounds of Buckingham Palace, to the south of Buckingham Palace Gardens, near Grosvenor Place.

In the 1760s George III moved some of his day-to-day horses and carriages to the grounds of Buckingham House, which he had acquired in 1762 for his wife's use. The Riding School, thought to be by William Chambers, dates from this period (it was completed in 1764; the pediment, with sculptural motifs by William Theed, was added in 1859).[5] The main royal stables housing the ceremonial coaches and their horses remained at the King's Mews, Charing Cross; however, when his son George IV had Buckingham Palace converted into the main royal residence in the 1820s the whole stables establishment was moved there.

The Riding School, seen from Buckingham Palace Road.

The current Royal Mews was built to designs by John Nash and was completed in 1825 (though the mews buildings have been modified extensively since). The main quadrangle was laid out with coach houses on the east side, and stable blocks (alternating with harness and forage rooms) on the west.[6] Beyond it, the 'back mews' included accommodation for a veterinary surgeon.

The Main Quadrangle in 2015.

When Victoria came to the throne in 1837, Buckingham Palace became the monarch's principal residence. Prince Albert used the back mews for stabling his own horses (for riding and driving). By the 1850s there were just under two hundred people employed at the mews, most of whom lived on site with their families.[6] Standing either side of the entrance were official residences (one for the Crown Equerry, the other for the Clerk of the Stables); other staff were accommodated in rooms above the stables and carriage houses. In 1855 Queen Victoria established a Buckingham Palace Royal Mews School, for the education of the workers' children.

Under Victoria's successor, King Edward VII, motor vehicles were introduced into the mews. In 1904 the Crown Equerry wrote to the Office of Works to request the conversion of 'two small coach-houses in the Back Mews' into 'a suitable Motor House [...] with a Lantern roof, hot water heating apparatus and electric lighting'.[7] The conversion duly took place, and accommodation was provided nearby for the chauffeurs.

Present day[edit]

Windsor Greys at the Royal Mews.

As well as being a full-time working facility, the Royal Mews, Buckingham Palace, is regularly open to the public. The state coaches and other carriages are kept there, along with about 30 horses, together with their modern counterparts: the state motor cars. Coachmen, grooms, chauffeurs and other staff are accommodated in flats above the carriage houses and stables.

Royal and state carriages[edit]

A few of the carriages stored at the Mews are pictured here in action; several more are illustrated on their own pages (see listing below).

Vehicles in the care of the Royal Mews are listed below. A good number are on public display, though not all are kept in London.[8] Most are in regular use, and some (for example, the broughams) are driven on a daily basis.[a] Others (above all the Gold Coach) are only used on great and rare state occasions. The list includes vehicles for personal, recreational and sporting use, as well as those designed and kept for state occasions:

A Royal Mews Brougham on display alongside a station bus at Holyrood Palace in Edinburgh
Charabanc (presented by Louis Philippe of France to Queen Victoria) at Windsor Castle in 1844
Brakes are regularly used for training and exercising the carriage horses, as seen here in Hyde Park.

In less regular use is Queen Victoria's state sledge, one of a number of royal sleighs in the Mews.

Also on display are some of the historic and immaculately kept liveries and harnesses (which likewise see regular use), ranging from the plainer items used for exercising and working horses, to the ornamented state liveries and harnesses designed for use with the similarly appointed state coaches.

Carriage horses[edit]

The horses in the Royal Mews today are mostly either Windsor Greys or Cleveland Bays.[b] The horses are regularly exercised in the art of pulling carriages (one of the reasons for the continuing use of horse-drawn transport for the daily messenger rounds); they are used for competitive and recreational driving as well as for ceremonial duties. The manure that is produced by the horses is used by the adjacent Buckingham Palace Garden.

Motor vehicles[edit]

The maintenance and provision of modern motor vehicles is as much a part of the work of the Royal Mews as that of carriages and horses. Edward VII first established a garage in the Mews in the early years of the twentieth century.

The principal official cars are all painted in black over claret (known as Royal Claret).[9] They are driven, cared for and maintained by a number of chauffeurs, who are based in the Mews and work under the head chauffeur (who, along with his deputy, is primarily responsible for driving the monarch).[6]

State cars[edit]

The five principal state cars are without number plates. They comprise:

Other official vehicles[edit]

The following vehicles, used for less-formal occasions and as support vehicles, are similarly painted in the royal claret and black livery:

  • Three Daimler DS420 limousines, two dating from 1992 (number plates KLL1 and K326EHV) and one from 1988 (F728OUL).
  • Two 2012 Jaguar XJ limousines (number plates NGN 1 and NGN 2).
  • At least two 2022 Range Rovers (number plates MYT1, MYT 2).
  • A State Hearse

Land Rovers, luggage brakes and people carriers are also kept at the Royal Mews. A number of electric vehicles have been acquired since 2012, for various purposes, ranging from a BMW i3 and a BMW 7 Series hybrid to a Nissan van and a Renault Twizy.[10]

The Royal Mews Department[edit]

The following chart shows the staff structure of the Royal Mews Department at the end of the twentieth century (when around fifty people lived and worked at the Mews).[11] The position of Superintendent, which included oversight of the staff of the Mews, was abolished in 2000.[5]

Crown Equerry
Superintendent of
the Royal Mews
Veterinary
Surgeon
Horsebox Driver
of Windsor
Stud Groom of
Hampton Court
Stud Groom of
Windsor
Comptroller
of Stores
Chief Clerk
StoremanCarriage
Restorers
Daily Ladies
of London
Daily Ladies
of Windsor
Deputy
Chief Clerk
Head ChauffeurHead CoachmanAssistant
Chief Clerk
Deputy
Head Chauffeur
Deputy
Head Coachman
First ChauffeursSergeant FarrierRough RiderSenior
Liveried Helpers
Carriage CleanersYardmen
Second ChauffeursLiveried Helpers

Other locations[edit]

Entrance to the Royal Mews, Windsor Castle

The Royal Mews, Hampton Court Palace overlooks Hampton Court Green. It continues to provide accommodation for royal staff, and horses are stabled there from time to time. It is not open to the public.

There is a working Royal Mews at Windsor Castle where the Ascot carriages are normally kept, together with vehicles used in Windsor Great Park. Some horses for riding (rather than driving) are also stabled here.

At Holyrood, the Royal Mews (situated in Abbey Strand) is one of the oldest parts of the Palace, and is still pressed into service whenever royal carriages are used in Edinburgh.

Historically, the old stables of St James's Palace, which stood where Lancaster House is now, were also sometime referred to as the Royal Mews.

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Since 1843, the daily messenger brougham has set out from the Royal Mews to collect and deliver post between Buckingham Palace and St James's Palace.
  2. ^ This has not always been the case. For example, for over 200 years locally bred Hanoverian Cream horses took pride of place in the harness on major state occasions, until problems due to inbreeding led to their use being discontinued in the mid-1920s

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Moult - Definition in the English-French Dictionary - Cambridge Dictionary". dictionary.cambridge.org. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  2. ^ Ackermann, Rudolph (1904). The Microcosm of London (vol. II). London: Methuen and Co. p. 162. Retrieved 12 December 2023.
  3. ^ Robins, pp. 126–127
  4. ^ "National Gallery - About the building". nationalgallery.org.uk. Retrieved 10 September 2022.
  5. ^ a b Vickers, Hugo (2012). The Royal Mews at Buckingham Palace. London: Royal Collection Enterprises Ltd.
  6. ^ a b c Stewart-Wilson, Mary (1991). The Royal Mews. London: The Bodley Head. p. 187.
  7. ^ Smith, Brian E. (1976). Royal Daimlers. Brentwood, Middlesex: Transport Bookman Publications. p. 30.
  8. ^ 'The Royal Mews, Buckingham Palace', Pitkin, London, 1973 &1990
  9. ^ The Royal fleet of limousines
  10. ^ Javed, Saman (15 October 2021). "HOW ECO FRIENDLY IS THE QUEEN?". The Independent. Retrieved 2 November 2021.
  11. ^ Allison, Ronald; Riddell, Sarah, eds. (1991). The Royal Encyclopedia. London: Macmillan and Co. Ltd. pp. 464–467.

External links[edit]

51°29′55″N 0°08′37″W / 51.49873170°N 0.14362900°W / 51.49873170; -0.14362900