Prince William | |||||
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![]() William in 1971 | |||||
Born | (1941-12-18)18 December 1941 Hadley Common,Barnet,Hertfordshire,England | ||||
Died | 28 August 1972(1972-08-28) (aged 30) Halfpenny Green,Staffordshire,England | ||||
Burial | 2 September 1972 | ||||
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House | Windsor | ||||
Father | Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester | ||||
Mother | Lady Alice Montagu Douglas Scott | ||||
Alma mater | |||||
Prince William of Gloucester (William Henry Andrew Frederick; 18 December 1941 – 28 August 1972) was a member of theBritish royal family. The elder son ofPrince Henry, Duke of Gloucester, andPrincess Alice, Duchess of Gloucester, he was a grandson ofGeorge V, nephew ofEdward VIII andGeorge VI, and first cousin ofElizabeth II. At birth he was fourth inline to the throne; he was ninth in line at the time of his death.
ACambridge andStanford graduate, he joined theForeign and Commonwealth Office serving in Lagos and Tokyo, before returning to take over royal duties. He led an active life, flyingPiper aircraft,[1] trekking through theSahara,[1] andhot air ballooning.[1]
He was the most recent descendant ofGeorge III to be diagnosed withporphyria, probably hereditary, which is conjectured to be the illness that caused George III's mental breakdown.[2]
Prince William died in 1972, aged 30, in an air crash while piloting his plane in a competition.
Prince William was born atHadley Common,[3]Hertfordshire. His father wasPrince Henry, Duke of Gloucester, the third son ofKing George V andQueen Mary. His mother wasAlice, Duchess of Gloucester, the third daughter of the7th Duke of Buccleuch andLady Margaret Bridgeman.
He was baptised in the Private Chapel atWindsor Castle on 22 February 1942 byCosmo Gordon Lang,Archbishop of Canterbury. His godparents wereKing George VI (his paternal uncle), Queen Mary (his paternal grandmother),Princess Helena Victoria (his paternal first cousin twice-removed), Lady Margaret Hawkins (his maternal aunt), MajorLord William Montagu Douglas Scott (his maternal uncle) andLord Gort, who was unable to attend. Because of the war, newspapers did not identify the actual location of the christening, and said instead that it took place at "a private chapel in the country".[4]
At the time of his birth, and for months afterwards, Prince Henry was away on military duties, some of which meant considerable risk. This prompted George VI to write to his sister-in-law, promising that, if anything should happen to his brother, he would become Prince William's guardian.[5]
In 1947, Prince William was apage boy for his cousinPrincess Elizabeth ather wedding toPhilip, Duke of Edinburgh.[6] The other page boy wasPrince Michael of Kent. In 1953, he attended thecoronation of Elizabeth II.
Prince William spent his early childhood atBarnwell Manor inNorthamptonshire and later inCanberra, Australia, where his father served asGovernor-General from 1945 to 1947. After returning to England, he received his education atWellesley House School, a prep school atBroadstairs in Kent, then atEton College, where he achieved mention in theEton College Chronicle for his performance in junior cricket[7] and achieved house colours forfootball.[8] After leaving Eton in 1960, he went up toMagdalene College, Cambridge, to read history, graduating with aBA degree in 1963, subsequently raised to anMA (Cantab.) degree in 1968. After Cambridge, he spent a post-baccalaureate year atStanford University, studying political science, American history, and business.
After returning to Britain, Prince William took a position withLazards, a merchant bank.[1]
He was the second member of theBritish royal family to work in thecivil service or the diplomatic service (the first was his uncle,Prince George, Duke of Kent, in the 1920s). He joined theCommonwealth Office in 1965 and was posted toLagos as thethird secretary at the BritishHigh Commission.[1] In 1968, he transferred toTokyo assecond secretary (commercial) in theBritish Embassy.[1]
By 1970, the health of his father, the Duke of Gloucester, had become critical after further strokes.[1] William had no choice but to resign from the diplomatic service and return to Britain in order to take care of his father's estate and, as he put it, take on the full-time job of a royal prince.[1] On his way back, he represented the Queen at the celebrations to mark the termination ofTonga's status as a protected state. For the next two years, he managedBarnwell Manor and began to carry out public duties as a member of the royal family.[1]
Apart from taking over many engagements his father could no longer perform, William took particular interest inSt John Ambulance, where he became increasingly active. He was also President of National Ski Federation Supporters' Association, the Magdalene Society (Cambridge), the East Midlands Tourist Board, and the Royal African Society. His patronages included the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain, the British Schools Exploring Society and the Talyllyn Railway Preservation Society.[9]
Prince William served on some occasions asCounsellor of State in the absence of his cousin, the Queen.[1]
The prince was consistently described by friends as adventurous (almost to the point of recklessness), warm, tender and extremely generous. But of all his qualities, the one most often mentioned is that of loyalty to his friends. One account describes how William was particularly kind to friends who were either "ill, unpopular with others, or even downright embarrassing".[1] His status and circumstances had also influenced his personality and he could, at times, be "tiresomely selfish".[1]
Regarding his family, Prince William considered himself extremely lucky compared to other members of the royal family. He had a very close relationship with both his parents, especially with his mother of whom he said, "She is a human being and she must possess some faults. But so far as I am concerned she has no faults at all".[1] He was also very fond of his father, one friend describing William's love and tenderness for him as "infectious".[1] William acknowledged his father couldn't have been very happy as a young man, as a result of the strict upbringing he had received, so he was very grateful to him for the freedom he had given him throughout his life.[1]
Former Hungarian model and stewardess Zsuzsi Starkloff (1936–2020, born Zsuzsana Maria Lehel in a Jewish-Hungarian family) had a long-running relationship with Prince William. They first met in 1968 inJapan, where Starkloff worked and divorced from American pilot Edward Starkloff. The last time Prince William and Zsuzsi met in person was in August 1970.[10] The relationship with Starkloff was further explored in the 2015Channel 4 TV documentary,The Other Prince William.[11] Despite the alleged reluctance of senior members of the royal family to take William's relationship with Starkloff seriously, the standards regarding marriage in the royal family at the time were no longer as strict as they had been. Princess Margaret, while not encouraging William, did sympathize with him in this regard, telling him to "wait a bit" and to "see how everything looks" once he returned to Britain.[1] Furthermore, once back in England, Starkloff went to stay with William's family atBarnwell Manor, where his parents were kind and accommodating to her.[11] William's intentions regarding his relationship with Starkloff are unclear. In the year of his death, he gave an interview to Audrey Whiting for theSunday Mirror, in which he declared that if he ever married, he would do so to a woman not only right for him, but right in "the eyes of other members of the Family".[1]
In the early 1970s, Prince William began a relationship with divorcee Nicole Sieff (née Moschietto), daughter of aMonte Carlo restaurateur, who had two sons from her marriage to Jonathan Sieff, grandson ofIsrael Sieff, Baron Sieff.[12]
Shortly before transferring to Tokyo in August 1968, Prince William was examined by aRoyal Air Force doctor, Headly Bellringer, at the request of the prince's mother. William told the doctor that he had suffered fromjaundice, beginning in December 1965 and lasting several months. He had subsequently noticed that his skin was prone to a blistering rash, particularly on exposure to sunshine. Bellringer tentatively diagnosedporphyria, prescribedsunblock cream and gave him a medical warning card regarding the need to avoid certain medications. Although he was aware of the theory of the royal family's history of porphyria then being proposed by Ida Macalpine and Richard Hunter,[13] he stated he "tried not to let it influence him...with all the symptoms, I was left with little option but to diagnose the Prince's condition as porphyria."[14] William was later examined by haematologists atAddenbrooke's Hospital inCambridge, and also by a Professor Ishihara in Tokyo, both of whom also concluded he was suffering from variegate porphyria, by then in remission.[15]
A member of the British royal family being reliably diagnosed with porphyria added credence to the theory—first proposed by Professor Macalpine in the late 1960s—that porphyria was the source of the ill-health of bothMary, Queen of Scots (an ancestor of both of William's parents), and ofGeorge III, and that the disorder had been inherited by some members of the royal families of the UK,Prussia and several German duchies and principalities.[2]
A licensed pilot and President of the British Light Aviation Centre,[16] Prince William owned several aircraft and competed in amateur air show races. On 28 August 1972, he was competing in the Goodyear International Air Trophy atHalfpenny Green nearWolverhampton. Vyrell Mitchell—a pilot with whom the prince had often raced—was listed as a passenger. Shortly before the race started, the wind direction changed and a different take-off runway was brought into use. This required the race participants to turn left as soon as possible after take-off to establish themselves in the previously planned race circuit. Shortly after Prince William's take-off and while at a very low altitude, thePiper Cherokee banked steeply into the left turn; the bank angle was so great that the pilot was unable to maintain height and the aircraft sank towards the ground until its port wing hit a tree, shearing off. The out-of-control plane flipped over and crashed into an earthen bank, bursting into flames. Prince William and Mitchell were killed.[17][18] The crash happened before 30,000 spectators, the fire took two hours to control, and the bodies were identified at inquest the next day from dental records.[16]
His father, Prince Henry, was in such poor health at the time of his death that his mother hesitated whether to tell him. She later admitted in her memoirs that she did not, but that he may have learned of their son's death from television coverage.[19]
Prince William was buried in theRoyal Burial Ground, Frogmore.[20] The comprehensive school inOundle, which he opened in 1971, was renamedPrince William School in his memory. His will was sealed in London after his death in 1972. His estate was valued at £416,001 (or £3.9 million in 2022 when adjusted for inflation).[21]
William was the heir apparent of his father's peerages,Duke of Gloucester,Earl of Ulster, andBaron Culloden. Upon his death, his younger brotherPrince Richard of Gloucester became heir apparent, and succeeded to these peerages in 1974. William was the first grandchild of King George V and Queen Mary to die.
For his 21st birthday, in 1962, Prince William was granted the use of the Royal Arms, differenced with a label argent of five points, the outer pair and central point bearing lions gules, the inner pair crosses gules.[25]
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)Later, Nicole became the last girlfriend of the Queen's cousin, Prince William of Gloucester, following his return from Tokyo.