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Horse Guards (building)

Coordinates:51°30′17″N0°07′38″W / 51.50472°N 0.12722°W /51.50472; -0.12722
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Military headquarters, barracks and stables in London
Horse Guards
Horse Guards viewed acrossHorse Guards Parade with theLondon EyeFerris wheel in the background.
Map
Interactive map of the Horse Guards area
General information
TypeMilitary headquarters,barracks andstables
Architectural stylePalladian
LocationLondon,SW1
Construction started1750
Completed1759; 267 years ago (1759)
Technical details
Floor countfour
Design and construction
ArchitectsWilliam Kent,John Vardy and William Robinson

Horse Guards is a historic building in theCity of Westminster,London, betweenWhitehall andHorse Guards Parade. It was built in the mid-18th century, replacing an earlier building, as abarracks andstables for theHousehold Cavalry. The current and previous buildings were, between the early 18th century and 1858, the mainmilitary headquarters for theBritish Empire. Horse Guards originally formed the entrance to thePalace of Whitehall and laterSt James's Palace; for that reason it is still ceremonially defended by theKing's Life Guard.

Although still in military use, part of the building houses the Household Cavalry Museum which is open to the public. It also functions as a gateway betweenWhitehall andSt James's Park.

History

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Old Horse Guards fromSt James's Park in 1749; painting byCanaletto.

The first Horse Guards building was commissioned byKing Charles II in 1663,[1] on the site of a cavalry stables which had been built on thetiltyard of the Palace of Whitehall during theCommonwealth. Built of red brick and costing some £4,000, it comprised a central range with aclock tower, under which an arch connected Whitehall withSt James's Park; two wings enclosed a courtyard with two largesentry boxes for mounted troopers on the Whitehall side, facing the palace gate. Entry to the park, then an enclosed private garden, was controlled by special ivory passes issued to favouredcourtiers, a tradition which continues to the present, although the modern passes are made of plastic; only the monarch has the right to drive through the arch without a pass. Initially, the building was intended only to accommodate theKing's Guard and included stabling for more than a hundred cavalry horses on the ground floor, as well as separate barracks for thefoot guards. Following a fire at Whitehall in 1698, the court transferred to St James's Palace, therefore the function of Horse Guards changed to controlling the ceremonial approach to St James's from Westminster.[2]

A plan ofWilliam Kent's design for the new Horse Guards, dated 1750, the year that work commenced but after Kent's death.

In the following decades, Horse Guards was increasingly used as administrative offices for the growing regular army and soon became overcrowded. The fabric of the building was also allowed to deteriorate; pieces of falling masonry were said to be a danger to the sentries. In 1745,King George II commissioned a new building in the fashionablePalladian style by the architectWilliam Kent. Having to reuse the same plot of land, Kent managed to retain essentially the same plan as the original building while doubling the interior space.[2] Kent died in April 1748 before the old Horse Guards had been demolished; work on the new building commenced in 1750 under the direction of Kent's assistant,John Vardy[1] and William Robinson from theOffice of Works.[3] The cost of the buildings was £65,000 and took nearly ten years to complete. The Household Cavalry moved into the northern wing of the uncompleted building in 1755; at that time, there was stabling for 62 horses compared to 17 today. Originally, the two wings were connected to the central block by single storey ranges; in 1803-5 a further two floors were added to these, giving the building its present appearance.[2] Kent's decision to retain aBaroque clock tower on his new Palladian building resulted in a peculiar blend of styles, perhaps the cause of it being described byCharles Knight as "the ugliest building in the metropolis".[4]

The building also served as the offices for the various administrative departments responsible to theSecretary at War, which would eventually become formalised as theWar Office. Also located at Horse Guards was the office of theCommander-in-Chief of the Forces.[5] Hence, for many decades the term 'Horse Guards' was used as ametonym for British Army headquarters. Two famous occupants of the office, a room originally intended forcourts-martial, werePrince Frederick, Duke of York and Albany (1795–1809), popularly believed to be "The Grand Old Duke of York", and theDuke of Wellington (1827–28 and 1842–1852). Wellington's coffin rested in this room on the night beforehis state funeral in 1852.[6] The final Commander-in-Chief at Horse Guards wasPrince George, Duke of Cambridge, who was so reluctant to move to the new War Office building atCumberland House inPall Mall that he had to be ordered to vacate the building byQueen Victoria in 1858. Wellington's desk is preserved in the same room, which is now the office of the Major-General Commanding theHousehold Division and General Officer Commanding London District.[2] Horse Guards subsequently became the headquarters of two major Army commands: theLondon District and theHousehold Cavalry.[5]

Horse Guards Clock, dating from 1756

At the annualTrooping the Colour ceremony in June, members of theRoyal Family who are not participants watch the parade from the windows of Wellington's office over the archway.[7]

Horse Guards Clock

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The clock is sited in the turret above the main archway; it has two faces, one facing Whitehall and the other, Horse Guards Parade, each dial being 7 feet 5 inches (2.26 metres) in diameter. It strikes the quarter-hours on two bells. Originally made byThwaites in 1756, the clock was rebuilt in 1815–16 byBenjamin Lewis Vulliamy, theclockmaker toKing George III.[8] Prior to the completion of the clock ofBig Ben in 1859, the Horse Guards Clock was the main public clock in Westminster. A dark stain above the Roman number two on the clock face is supposed to mark the time of theexecution of King Charles I in 1649, which took place in the roadway outside Horse Guards.[9] The annual ceremony of Trooping the Colour commences when the Horse Guards Clock strikes eleven.[10]

Household Cavalry Museum

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Horse Guards as seen fromWhitehall.

TheHousehold Cavalry Museum is the official museum of the Household Cavalry and is located in the Horse Guards. Visitors can view the horses in the 18th-century working stables through a glazed partition. Exhibits explain the training and history of the regiment and include ceremonial uniforms, regalia, royal standards, awards, musical instruments, horse furniture and silverware byFabergé. Visitors to the museum are welcome to watch the afternoon inspection of the guards and horses that happens daily at 4 pm. This routine began in 1894 when Queen Victoria found the guards drinking and gambling in the afternoon instead of tending to their duty. She proclaimed that they would be punished by a four o'clock inspection daily for the next 100 years. This proclamation and punishment officially expired in 1994, but Queen Elizabeth II chose to continue the inspection out of respect for tradition.[11]

Between 2001 and 2011 Major Michael Whatley used the museum’s name without its knowledge to acquire a number of tanks and armoured vehicles from European museums, some of which he then sold on.[12][13] He was convicted of three counts of misconduct in a public office in 2021.[12][13]

Ceremonial

[edit]
The daily ceremony of Changing The King's Life Guard on Horse Guards Parade.
Main article:King's Guard § The King's Life Guard

Every morning, the mounted King's Life Guard rides fromHyde Park Barracks inKnightsbridge, by way ofHyde Park Corner,Constitution Hill andThe Mall, to take over guard duties in a ceremony at 11:00 am, or 10:00 am on Sundays. The guard is usually provided by theHousehold Cavalry Mounted Regiment, which consists of a squadron from each of the Household Cavalry regiments; theLife Guards who wear red tunics and white helmet-plumes, and theBlues and Royals who wear blue tunics and red plumes. However, some other mounted units from Britain and otherCommonwealth realms occasionally mount the guard; theKing's Troop, Royal Horse Artillery and theRoyal Canadian Mounted Police are examples.

When the monarch is in London, the guard consists of one officer and twelve other ranks including a trumpeter andstandard bearer; known as a Long Guard. When the monarch is not in London, the guard is reduced to twonon-commissioned officers and ten troopers; known as a Short Guard.

The ceremony of Changing The King's Life Guard takes place on Horse Guards Parade adjacent to the Horse Guards building. Two mounted sentries guard the entrance to Horse Guards on Whitehall from 10:00 am until 4:00 pm and are changed every hour. There is a dismounted parade at 4:00 pm (described above) and two dismounted sentries remain on duty until 8:00 pm.[14]

Gallery

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References

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  1. ^abTabor (2010), p. 18
  2. ^abcdHQ London District."Visitor's Guide to Horse Guards".www.trooping-the-colour.co.uk. Retrieved13 October 2017.
  3. ^"Horse Guards: A Grade I Listed Building in St James's, London".www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk. British Listed Buildings. Retrieved12 October 2017.
  4. ^Stocqueler (1873), p. 8
  5. ^abTabor (2010), p. 19
  6. ^Gleig, George Robert (1865).The Life of Arthur, Duke of Wellington. London: Longmans, Green, Reader and Dyer. p. 459.
  7. ^McKenzie, John M., ed. (1992).Popular imperialism and the military. Manchester University Press. p. 32.ISBN 0-7190-3358-6.
  8. ^Timbs, John (1855).Curiosities of London: Exhibiting the Most Rare and Remarkable Objects of Interest in the Metropolis. Fleet Street, London: David Bogue. p. 378-380.
  9. ^Duncan, Andrew (2006).Secret London. New Holland Publishers. p. 116.ISBN 978-1-84537-305-4.[permanent dead link]
  10. ^Paget, Julian (1979).The Pageantry of Britain. London: Michael Joseph Ltd. p. 31.ISBN 978-0718118051.
  11. ^"The Household Cavalry Museum".www.householdcavalrymuseum.co.uk. Retrieved11 October 2017.
  12. ^abGriffin, Katy (14 August 2021)."Major Michael Whatley sentenced for dishonestly obtaining military vehicles".Salisbury Journal. Newsquest Media Group Ltd. Retrieved31 January 2024.
  13. ^ab"Police probe sees disgraced ex-Major face jail threat".gov.uk. Ministry of Defence. 24 August 2021. Retrieved31 January 2024.
  14. ^"The Queen's Life Guard".www.householddivision.org.uk. The Household Division. Retrieved10 January 2021.

Bibliography

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toHorse Guards (building).

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