Executive summary by darmansjah
Osborne House is a former royal residence in East Cowes,
Isle of Wight, UK. The house was built between 1845 and 1851 for Queen Victoria
and Prince Albert as a summer home and rural retreat. Prince Albert designed
the house himself in the style of an Italian Renaissance palazzo. The builder
was Thomas Cubitt, the London architect and builder whose company built the
main façade of Buckingham Palace for the royal couple in 1847. An earlier
smaller house on the site was demolished to make way for a new and far larger
house.
Queen Victoria died at Osborne House in January 1901.
Following her death, the house became surplus to royal requirements and was
given to the state with a few rooms retained as a private royal museum
dedicated to Queen Victoria. From 1903 until 1921 it was used as a junior
officer training college for the Royal Navy known as the Royal Naval College,
Osborne. Today it is fully open to the public.
Queen Victoria and her husband Prince Albert bought Osborne
House on the Isle of Wight in October 1845. They were searching for a home away
from the stresses of court life. Queen Victoria had spent two holidays on the
Isle of Wight as a young girl, when her mother, the then Duchess of Kent,
rented Norris Castle, the estate next door to Osborne. The setting of the existing
three-storey Georgian house appealed to Queen Victoria and Prince Albert; in
particular, the views of the Solent reminded Albert of the Bay of Naples in
Italy. It soon became obvious that it was too small for their needs. Pulling
down the house and building a new residence was deemed to be the appropriate
course of action.
The new Osborne House was built in the style of the Italian
Renaissance complete with two belvedere towers between 1845 and 1851. Prince
Albert designed the house himself in conjunction with builder Thomas Cubitt,[1]
the London architect and builder whose company also built the main façade of
Buckingham Palace. The sale of the Royal Pavilion at Brighton paid for much of
the new house's furnishings.
Detail of NE Facade
The house consisted of the original square wing known as
'The Pavilion', which contained the principal and royal apartments. The
apartments contain reminders of Victoria's dynastic links with the other
European royal families. The Billiard Room houses a massive porcelain vase,
which was a gift of the Russian Tsar. The grandeur of the Billiard Room,
Queen's Dining Room and the Drawing Room on the ground floor forms a marked
contrast with the much more homely and unassuming decor of the royal apartments
on the first floor. These rooms include the Prince's Dressing Room, the Queen's
Sitting Room, The Queen's Bedroom and the children's nurseries, which were
intended for private, domestic use and were therefore as comfortable as
possible. Both Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were determined to bring up
their children in as natural and loving an environment as their situation
allowed, so that as a consequence the royal children visited their parents'
bedrooms when other children of a similar status lived in a far more detached
manner.
Prince Albert's Dressing Room, 1851, watercolour by James
Roberts.
The 'main wing', containing the household accommodation and
council and audience chambers, was added later. The final addition to the house
was a wing built between 1890 and 1891. It contains on the ground floor the
famous Durbar Room which is named after an anglicised version of the Hindi word
durbar. This word means court. The Durbar Room was built for state functions
and decorated by Bhai Ram Singh in an elaborate and intricate style, with a
carpet from Agra. It now contains the gifts Queen Victoria received on her
Golden and Diamond Jubilees. These include engraved silver and copper vases,
Indian armour and even a model of an Indian palace.The first floor of the
new wing was for the sole use of Princess Beatrice and her family. Beatrice was
the Queen's youngest daughter, who remained permanently at her side.
The Indian associations of Osborne House also include its
housing a collection of paintings of Indian persons and scenes, painted at
Queen Victoria's request by Rudolf Swoboda. There are both depictions of
Indians resident or visiting Britain in the 19th Century and scenes painted in
India itself when the painter went there for the purpose.
The royal family stayed at Osborne for lengthy periods each
year: in the spring for Victoria's birthday in May; in July and August when
they celebrated Albert's birthday; and just before Christmas. In a break
from the past, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert allowed photographers and
painters to capture their family in the grounds and in the house, partly for
their own enjoyment and partly as a form of propaganda for the nation to show
what a happy and devoted family they were. Many thousands of prints of the
royal family were sold to the public which led Victoria to remark, "no
Sovereign was ever more loved than I am (I am bold enough to say)."Writing
to her daughter Victoria in 1858 about the gloominess of Windsor Castle, Queen
Victoria stated, "I long for our cheerful and unpalacelike rooms at
Osborne."
The domestic idyll at Osborne was not to continue. In
December 1861, Prince Albert died at Windsor Castle. During her widowhood,
Osborne House continued as one of Queen Victoria's favourite homes.
In 1876, as a tribute to Queen Victoria, the Government
House of the colony (now State) of Victoria, Australia, was constructed as a
copy of Osborne House.
The laying out of the estate, gardens and woodlands provided
a way for the Prince Consort to prove his knowledge of forestry and landscaping,
an area in which previously at the more official royal residences he had been
thwarted by the Commissioners of Woods and Forest. Below the gardens was a
private beach where the Queen kept her own private bathing machine.
The grounds include a 'Swiss Cottage'. The cottage was
dismantled and brought piece by piece from Switzerland to Osborne where it was
reassembled. There, the royal children were encouraged to garden. Each child
was given a rectangular plot in which to grow fruit, vegetables and flowers.
They would then sell their produce to their father. Prince Albert used this as
a way to teach the basics of economics. The children also learned to cook in
the Swiss Cottage, which was equipped with a fully functioning kitchen. Both
parents saw this kind of education as a way of keeping their children's feet
firmly on the ground in spite of their royal status.
Queen Victoria died at Osborne on 22 January 1901 with two
generations of her family gathered around her. Although Victoria had adored it,
Osborne held few charms for her children. Victoria's will left strict
instructions that Osborne was to stay within the family, but nobody wanted it
so the new King Edward VII presented it to the nation.With the exception of
Princess Beatrice and Princess Louise, who both retained houses on the estate,
the rest of the royal family saw Osborne as something of an inaccessible white
elephant. The royal apartments on the upper floors of the pavilion wing,
including the late Queen's bedroom, were turned into a private museum
accessible only to the royal family.
In 1903, part of the estate became a junior officer training
college for the Royal Navy known as the Royal Naval College, Osborne.
Initial training began at the age of 13, and further studies were continued at
the Royal Naval College, Dartmouth. The College closed in 1921, with the last
students leaving on 9 April 1921.
Former students included Queen Victoria's great-grandsons,
the future Edward VIII and George VI, and their younger brother George, Duke of
Kent. Another well-known alumnus of the college was Jack Llewelyn Davies, one
of the five Llewelyn Davies boys who inspired J. M. Barrie's Peter Pan. The
case of George Archer-Shee from 1908, who was expelled from Osborne after being
falsely accused of stealing a 5-shilling postal order, inspired the play The
Winslow Boy.
During World War I, the secondary wings of Osborne House
were used as an officers' convalescent home—Robert Graves and A.A. Milne were
two famous patients. Known as King Edward VII Retirement Home for Officers,
this later included convalescents from military and civil service backgrounds,
until the late 1990s for retired officers of the British Armed Services.The
Naval college semi-developed into the nearby T.S. Osborne Sea Cadet unit.
Today, Osborne House is under the care of English Heritage
and is open to the public. The former Naval College's cricket pavilion was
converted into a holiday cottage in 2004 and can be booked by members of the
public. Guests staying at the cottage are given the right to use the Osborne
Estate private beach.
Cricket pavilion – Osborne House
Since 2005, the house has occasionally hosted picnic-style
concerts on the lawn outside the main house.
English Heritage has a management contract to run Osborne
House as a historic tourist attraction. The residence's ownership since 1971
has been held in a private property trust connected to Historic Royal Palaces –
the overarching trust covering, among others, Hampton Court and the Tower of
London.
Queen Victoria's private beach at Osborne, including her
personal bathing machine, was opened to the public for the first time in July
2012 following an extensive restoration programme
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