Osborne House and its grounds are now open to the public
Osborne House is a former royal residence in East Cowes, Isle of Wight, England.
History
The house was built between 1845 and 1851 for Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. Prince Albert designed the house himself. The builder was Thomas Cubitt, the London architect and builder whose company
also built the main façade of Buckingham Palace. An earlier, smaller house on the site
was demolished.
The architecture of the building is based on palaces of the Italian Renaissance, complete with two pseudo-campanile towers.
The house consisted of the original square wing known as 'The Pavilion', which contained the principal and royal apartments.
The 'main wing', containing the household accommodation and council and audience chambers, was added later. The final addition to
the house was the 'Durbar Wing' built between 1890 and 1891. No
single, large room was in the original building, and so a grand chamber was included in the new wing. On the ground floor was the
Durbar room, a large hall decorated in the Indian style by
Indian craftsmen brought to England especially for the task. This was used as a grand formal room and ballroom. The second floor
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 ([1]).
Osborne House at the time of its construction
The house was always the favourite of Victoria, who spent many summer months there. It became the nearest thing to a family
home her children were to know. The grounds include a 'Swiss Cottage' complete with rooms built on miniature scale for use by the
Queen's children. The children also had their own adjoining garden.
Following Albert's death in 1861, it continued as one of her favourite homes. As a widow,
Victoria always spent Christmas at Osborne. Marconi
later transmitted some of the first radio messages to Victoria at Osborne to keep her abreast of
the state of health of her son Edward, when he was seriously ill at
Sandringham.
Following Queen Victoria's death at Osborne in 1901, her son and successor Edward donated the
house to the nation. He (and the Royal Family with the exception of Princess Beatrice who
retained a house on the estate) saw Osborne as something of an inaccessible white
elephant. The new King also had his own rural retreat at Sandringham House, and
he also preferred to spend his leisure time shooting or racing rather than in seclusion on an island. The house was used as an
officers' convalescent home during World War I - Robert Graves and A.A. Milne were two famous patients.
Admirers of the building included the Queen's grandson Kaiser Wilhelm II
(in whose arms she died there) and also, ironically, Adolf Hitler, who, being under the
impression that the house could become one of his post-war retreats, gave orders that the Osborne Estate should not be bombed
during World War II.
Naval College
Osborne House from the south lawn, in 1910
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[1]. Former students
included Queen Victoria's great-grandsons, the future Edward VIII and
George VI, and their younger brother George, Duke of Kent. Among other well-known alumni of the college was Jack Llewelyn-Davies, one of the five Llewelyn-Davies brothers (George, Jack, Peter, Michael and
Nico) who inspired Peter Pan by J. M. Barrie.
Jack described his five years at Osborne as horrendous—his brothers all went to Eton. The
case of George Archer-Shee from 1908 onwards, who was
expelled from Osborne after being falsely accused of stealing a 5-shilling postal order, inspired the play The Winslow Boy.
Following the closure of the naval college, the building operated as a museum, with a wing set aside until the late
1990s for retired officers of the British Armed Services. Known as King
Edward VII Retirement Home for Officers, this later included convalescents from military and civil service backgrounds.
Osborne today
Immediately following the death of Queen Victoria, the royal apartments on the upper floors of the pavilion wing were turned
into a private museum for the sole use of the royal family. They remained completely as she had left them. Part of the ground
floor was opened to the public early in the 20th century, and in
1954 Victoria's bedroom and private apartments could be seen by the public for the first time,
followed by the nurseries in 1989. Today the house has been substantially restored to its former
splendour as the summer palace of the Queen Empress.
English Heritage
The house is now owned by English Heritage and is open to the public from spring
through to autumn. The former Naval College's cricket pavilion was converted into a holiday cottage in 2004 and can be booked by
members of the public.
Notes
- ^ The Times, 2 February
1921.
External links
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Coordinates:
50°45′02″N, 1°16′11″W
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