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George VI

George VI (Albert Frederick Arthur George; 14 December 1895 – 6 February 1952) was King of the United Kingdom and the Dominions of the British Commonwealth from 11 December 1936 until his death in 1952. He was also the last Emperor of India from 1936 until the British Raj was dissolved in August 1947, and the first Head of the Commonwealth following the London Declaration of 1949.

George VI
Head of the Commonwealth
Formal portrait, c. 1940–1946
King of the United Kingdom
and the British Dominions
Reign11 December 1936 – 6 February 1952
Coronation12 May 1937
PredecessorEdward VIII
SuccessorElizabeth II
Emperor of India
Reign11 December 1936 – 15 August 1947
PredecessorEdward VIII
SuccessorPosition abolished[a]
BornPrince Albert of York
(1895-12-14)14 December 1895
York Cottage, Sandringham, Norfolk, England
Died6 February 1952(1952-02-06) (aged 56)
Sandringham House, Norfolk, England
Burial15 February 1952
26 March 1969
King George VI Memorial Chapel, St George's Chapel
Spouse
(m. 1923)
Issue
Detail
Names
Albert Frederick Arthur George
House
FatherGeorge V
MotherMary of Teck
ReligionProtestant[b]
Signature
Military career
Service/branch
Years of active service1913–1919
Battles/wars

The future George VI was born in the reign of his great-grandmother Queen Victoria; he was named Albert at birth after his great-grandfather Albert, Prince Consort, and was known as "Bertie" to his family and close friends. His father ascended the throne as George V in 1910. As the second son of the king, Albert was not expected to inherit the throne. He spent his early life in the shadow of his elder brother, Prince Edward, the heir apparent. Albert attended naval college as a teenager and served in the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force during the First World War. In 1920, he was made Duke of York. He married Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon in 1923, and they had two daughters, Elizabeth and Margaret. In the mid-1920s, he engaged speech therapist Lionel Logue to treat his stammer, which he learned to manage to some degree. His elder brother ascended the throne as Edward VIII after their father died in 1936, but Edward abdicated later that year to marry the twice-divorced American socialite Wallis Simpson. As heir presumptive to Edward VIII, Albert thereby became the third monarch of the House of Windsor, taking the regnal name George VI.

In September 1939, the British Empire and most Commonwealth countries—but not Irelanddeclared war on Nazi Germany. War with the Kingdom of Italy and the Empire of Japan followed in 1940 and 1941, respectively. George VI was seen as sharing the hardships of the common people and his popularity soared. Buckingham Palace was bombed during the Blitz while the King and Queen were there, and his younger brother the Duke of Kent was killed on active service. George became known as a symbol of British determination to win the war. Britain and its allies were victorious in 1945, but the British Empire declined. Ireland had largely broken away, followed by the independence of India and Pakistan in 1947. George relinquished the title of Emperor of India in June 1948 and instead adopted the new title of Head of the Commonwealth. He was beset by smoking-related health problems in the later years of his reign and died of a coronary thrombosis in 1952. He was succeeded by his elder daughter, Elizabeth II.

Early life

 
Four kings: Edward VII (far right); his son George, Prince of Wales, later George V (far left); and grandsons Edward, later Edward VIII (rear); and Albert, later George VI (foreground), c. 1908

The future George VI was born at York Cottage, on the Sandringham Estate in Norfolk, during the reign of his great-grandmother Queen Victoria.[1] His father was Prince George, Duke of York (later King George V), the second and only surviving son of the Prince and Princess of Wales (later King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra). His mother, the Duchess of York (later Queen Mary), was the eldest child and only daughter of Francis, Duke of Teck, and Princess Mary Adelaide, Duchess of Teck.[2] His birthday, 14 December 1895, was the 34th anniversary of the death of his great-grandfather Albert, Prince Consort.[3] Uncertain of how the Prince Consort's widow, Queen Victoria, would take the news of the birth, the Prince of Wales wrote to the Duke of York that the Queen had been "rather distressed". Two days later, he wrote again: "I really think it would gratify her if you yourself proposed the name Albert to her."[4]

The Queen was mollified by the proposal to name the new baby Albert, and wrote to the Duchess of York: "I am all impatience to see the new one, born on such a sad day but rather more dear to me, especially as he will be called by that dear name which is a byword for all that is great and good."[5] Consequently, he was baptised "Albert Frederick Arthur George" at St Mary Magdalene Church, Sandringham on 17 February 1896.[c] Formally he was His Highness Prince Albert of York; within the royal family he was known informally as "Bertie".[7] The Duchess of Teck did not like the first name her grandson had been given, and she wrote prophetically that she hoped the last name "may supplant the less favoured one".[8] Albert was fourth in line to the throne at birth, after his grandfather, father and elder brother, Edward.

Albert was ill often and was described as "easily frightened and somewhat prone to tears".[9] His parents were generally removed from their children's day-to-day upbringing, as was the norm in aristocratic families of that era. He had a stammer that lasted for many years. Although naturally left-handed, he was forced to write with his right hand, as was common practice at the time.[10] He had chronic stomach problems as well as knock knees, for which he was forced to wear painful corrective splints.[11]

Queen Victoria died on 22 January 1901, and the Prince of Wales succeeded her as King Edward VII. Prince Albert moved up to third in line to the throne, after his father and elder brother.

Military career and education

 
Albert at an RAF dinner in 1919

Beginning in 1909, Albert attended the Royal Naval College, Osborne, as a naval cadet. In 1911 he came bottom of the class in the final examination, but despite this he progressed to the Royal Naval College, Dartmouth.[12] When his grandfather Edward VII died in 1910, his father became King George V. Prince Edward became Prince of Wales, with Albert second in line to the throne.[13]

Albert spent the first six months of 1913 on the training ship HMS Cumberland in the West Indies and on the east coast of Canada.[14] He was rated as a midshipman aboard HMS Collingwood on 15 September 1913. He spent three months in the Mediterranean, but never overcame his seasickness.[15] Three weeks after the outbreak of World War I he was medically evacuated from the ship to Aberdeen, where his appendix was removed by Sir John Marnoch.[16] He was mentioned in dispatches for his actions as a turret officer aboard Collingwood in the Battle of Jutland (31 May – 1 June 1916), the great naval battle of the war. He did not see further combat, largely because of ill health caused by a duodenal ulcer, for which he had an operation in November 1917.[17]

In February 1918 Albert was appointed Officer in Charge of Boys at the Royal Naval Air Service's training establishment at Cranwell. With the establishment of the Royal Air Force Albert transferred from the Royal Navy to the Royal Air Force.[18] He served as Officer Commanding Number 4 Squadron of the Boys' Wing at Cranwell until August 1918,[19] before reporting for duty on the staff of the RAF's Cadet Brigade at St Leonards-on-Sea and then at Shorncliffe.[20] He completed a fortnight's training and took command of a squadron on the Cadet Wing.[21] He was the first member of the British royal family to be certified as a fully qualified pilot.[22]

Albert wanted to serve on the Continent while the war was still in progress and welcomed a posting to General Trenchard's staff in France. On 23 October, he flew across the Channel to Autigny.[23] For the closing weeks of the war, he served on the staff of the RAF's Independent Air Force at its headquarters in Nancy, France.[24] Following the disbanding of the Independent Air Force in November 1918, he remained on the Continent for two months as an RAF staff officer until posted back to Britain.[25] He accompanied King Albert I of Belgium on his triumphal re-entry into Brussels on 22 November. Prince Albert qualified as an RAF pilot on 31 July 1919 and was promoted to squadron leader the following day.[26]

In October 1919, Albert went up to Trinity College, Cambridge, where he studied history, economics and civics for a year,[27] with the historian R. V. Laurence as his "official mentor".[28] On 4 June 1920 his father created him Duke of York, Earl of Inverness and Baron Killarney.[29] He began to take on more royal duties. He represented his father and toured coal mines, factories, and railyards. Through such visits he acquired the nickname of the "Industrial Prince".[30] His stammer, and his embarrassment over it, together with a tendency to shyness, caused him to appear less confident in public than his older brother, Edward. However, he was physically active and enjoyed playing tennis. He played at Wimbledon in the Men's Doubles with Louis Greig in 1926, losing in the first round.[31] He developed an interest in working conditions, and was president of the Industrial Welfare Society. His series of annual summer camps for boys between 1921 and 1939 brought together boys from different social backgrounds.[32]

Marriage

 
The Duke and Duchess of York (centre, reading programmes) at Eagle Farm Racecourse, Brisbane, Queensland, 1927

In a time when royalty were expected to marry fellow royalty, it was unusual that Albert had a great deal of freedom in choosing a prospective wife. An infatuation with the already-married Australian socialite Lady Loughborough came to an end in April 1920 when the King, with the promise of the dukedom of York, persuaded Albert to stop seeing her.[33] That year, he met for the first time since childhood Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, the youngest daughter of the Earl and Countess of Strathmore. He became determined to marry her.[34] Elizabeth rejected his proposal twice, in 1921 and 1922, reportedly because she was reluctant to make the sacrifices necessary to become a member of the royal family.[35] In the words of Lady Strathmore, Albert would be "made or marred" by his choice of wife. After a protracted courtship, Elizabeth agreed to marry him.[36]

Albert and Elizabeth were married on 26 April 1923 in Westminster Abbey. Albert's marriage to someone not of royal birth was considered a modernising gesture.[37] The newly formed British Broadcasting Company wished to record and broadcast the event on radio, but the Abbey Chapter vetoed the idea (although the Dean, Herbert Edward Ryle, was in favour).[38]

 
On the cover of Time, January 1925

From December 1924 to April 1925, the Duke and Duchess toured Kenya, Uganda, and the Sudan, travelling via the Suez Canal and Aden. During the trip, they both went big-game hunting.[39]

Because of his stammer, Albert dreaded public speaking.[40] After his closing speech at the British Empire Exhibition at Wembley on 31 October 1925, one which was an ordeal for both him and his listeners,[41] he began to see Lionel Logue, an Australian-born speech therapist. The Duke and Logue practised breathing exercises, and the Duchess rehearsed with him patiently.[42] Subsequently, he was able to speak with less hesitation.[43] With his delivery improved, Albert opened the new Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, during a tour of the empire with the Duchess in 1927.[44] Their journey by sea to Australia, New Zealand and Fiji took them via Jamaica, where Albert played doubles tennis partnered with a black man, Bertrand Clark, which was unusual at the time and taken locally as a display of equality between races.[45]

The Duke and Duchess had two children: Elizabeth (called "Lilibet" by the family, and the future Elizabeth II) who was born in 1926, and Margaret who was born in 1930. The close family lived at 145 Piccadilly, rather than one of the royal palaces.[46] In 1931, the Canadian prime minister, R. B. Bennett, considered Albert for Governor General of Canada—a proposal that King George V rejected on the advice of the Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs, J. H. Thomas.[47]

Reluctant king

King George V had severe reservations about Prince Edward, saying "After I am dead, the boy will ruin himself in twelve months" and "I pray God that my eldest son will never marry and that nothing will come between Bertie and Lilibet and the throne."[48] On 20 January 1936, George V died and Edward ascended the throne as King Edward VIII. In the Vigil of the Princes, Prince Albert and his three brothers (the new king, Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester, and Prince George, Duke of Kent) took a shift standing guard over their father's body as it lay in state, in a closed casket, in Westminster Hall.

As Edward was unmarried and had no children, Albert was the heir presumptive to the throne. Less than a year later, on 11 December 1936, Edward abdicated in order to marry Wallis Simpson, who was divorced from her first husband and divorcing her second. Edward had been advised by British prime minister Stanley Baldwin that he could not remain king and marry a divorced woman with two living ex-husbands. He abdicated and Albert, though he had been reluctant to accept the throne, became king.[49] The day before the abdication, Albert went to London to see his mother, Queen Mary. He wrote in his diary, "When I told her what had happened, I broke down and sobbed like a child."[50]

On the day of Edward's abdication, the Oireachtas, the parliament of the Irish Free State, removed all direct mention of the monarch from the Irish constitution. The next day, it passed the External Relations Act, which gave the monarch limited authority (strictly on the advice of the government) to appoint diplomatic representatives for Ireland and to be involved in the making of foreign treaties. The two acts made the Irish Free State a republic in essence without removing its links to the Commonwealth.[51]

Across Britain, gossip spread that Albert was physically and psychologically incapable of being king. No evidence has been found to support the contemporaneous rumour that the government considered bypassing him, his children and his brother Prince Henry, in favour of their younger brother Prince George, Duke of Kent.[52] This seems to have been suggested on the grounds that Prince George was at that time the only brother with a son.[53]

Early reign

 
Crown coin with George in profile, 1937

Albert assumed the regnal name "George VI" to emphasise continuity with his father and restore confidence in the monarchy.[54] The beginning of George VI's reign was taken up by questions surrounding his predecessor and brother, whose titles, style and position were uncertain. He had been introduced as "His Royal Highness Prince Edward" for the abdication broadcast,[55] but George VI felt that by abdicating and renouncing the succession, Edward had lost the right to bear royal titles, including "Royal Highness".[56] In settling the issue, George's first act as king was to confer upon his brother the title "Duke of Windsor" with the style "Royal Highness", but the letters patent creating the dukedom prevented any wife or children from bearing royal styles. George VI was forced to buy from Edward the royal residences of Balmoral Castle and Sandringham House, as these were private properties and did not pass to him automatically.[57] Three days after his accession, on his 41st birthday, he invested his wife, the new queen consort, with the Order of the Garter.[58]

 
Cover of the 7 May 1937 edition of Radio Times, drawn by Christopher R. W. Nevinson, marking the first coronation to be broadcast, and partially televised, live

George VI's coronation at Westminster Abbey took place on 12 May 1937, the date previously intended for Edward's coronation. In a break with tradition, his mother Queen Mary attended the ceremony in a show of support for her son.[59] There was no Durbar held in Delhi for George VI, as had occurred for his father, as the cost would have been a burden to the Government of India.[60] Rising Indian nationalism made the welcome that the royal party would have received likely to be muted at best,[61] and a prolonged absence from Britain would have been undesirable in the tense period before the Second World War. Two overseas tours were undertaken, to France and to North America, both of which promised greater strategic advantages in the event of war.[62]

The growing likelihood of war in Europe dominated the early reign of George VI. The King was constitutionally bound to support British prime minister Neville Chamberlain's appeasement of Hitler.[11][63] When the King and Queen greeted Chamberlain on his return from negotiating the Munich Agreement in 1938, they invited him to appear on the balcony of Buckingham Palace with them. This public association of the monarchy with a politician was exceptional, as balcony appearances were traditionally restricted to the royal family.[11] While broadly popular among the general public, Chamberlain's policy towards Hitler was the subject of some opposition in the House of Commons, which led historian John Grigg to describe George's behaviour in associating himself so prominently with a politician as "the most unconstitutional act by a British sovereign in the present century".[64]

 
Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt with King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, on the USS Potomac, 9 June 1939

In May and June 1939, the King and Queen toured Canada and the United States; it was the first visit of a reigning British monarch to North America, although George had been to Canada prior to his accession. From Ottawa, George and Elizabeth were accompanied by Canadian prime minister Mackenzie King,[65] to present themselves in North America as King and Queen of Canada.[66][67] Both Mackenzie King and the Canadian governor general, Lord Tweedsmuir, hoped that George's presence in Canada would demonstrate the principles of the Statute of Westminster 1931, which gave full sovereignty to the British Dominions. On 19 May, George personally accepted and approved the Letter of Credence of the new U.S. ambassador to Canada, Daniel Calhoun Roper; gave royal assent to nine parliamentary bills; and ratified two international treaties with the Great Seal of Canada. The official royal tour historian, Gustave Lanctot, wrote "the Statute of Westminster had assumed full reality" and George gave a speech emphasising "the free and equal association of the nations of the Commonwealth".[68]

The trip was intended to soften the strong isolationist tendencies among the North American public with regard to the developing tensions in Europe. Although the aim of the tour was mainly political, to shore up Atlantic support for the United Kingdom in any future war, the King and Queen were enthusiastically received by the public.[69] The fear that George would be compared unfavourably to his predecessor was dispelled.[70] They visited the 1939 New York World's Fair and stayed with President Franklin D. Roosevelt at the White House and at his private estate at Hyde Park, New York.[71] A strong bond of friendship was forged between Roosevelt and the royal couple during the tour, which had major significance in the relations between the United States and the United Kingdom through the ensuing war years.[72][73]

Second World War

Following the German invasion of Poland in September 1939, the United Kingdom and the self-governing Dominions other than Ireland declared war on Nazi Germany.[74] The King and Queen resolved to stay in London, despite German bombing raids. They officially stayed in Buckingham Palace throughout the war, although they usually spent nights at Windsor Castle.[75] The first night of the Blitz on London, on 7 September 1940, killed about one thousand civilians, mostly in the East End.[76] On 13 September, the couple narrowly avoided death when two German bombs exploded in a courtyard at Buckingham Palace while they were there.[77] In defiance, Elizabeth declared: "I am glad we have been bombed. It makes me feel we can look the East End in the face."[78] The royal family were portrayed as sharing the same dangers and deprivations as the rest of the country. They were subject to British rationing restrictions, and U.S. First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt remarked on the rationed food served and the limited bathwater that was permitted during a stay at the unheated and boarded-up Palace.[79] In August 1942, the King's brother, the Duke of Kent, was killed on active service.[80]

 
With Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery (right), near the front lines in the Netherlands, October 1944

In 1940, Winston Churchill replaced Neville Chamberlain as prime minister, though personally George would have preferred to appoint Lord Halifax.[81] After the King's initial dismay over Churchill's appointment of Lord Beaverbrook to the Cabinet, he and Churchill developed "the closest personal relationship in modern British history between a monarch and a Prime Minister".[82] Every Tuesday for four and a half years from September 1940, the two men met privately for lunch to discuss the war in secret and with frankness.[83] George related much of what the two discussed in his diary, which is the only extant first-hand account of these conversations.[84]

Throughout the war, George and Elizabeth provided morale-boosting visits throughout the United Kingdom, visiting bomb sites, munitions factories, and troops. George visited military forces abroad in France in December 1939, North Africa and Malta in June 1943, Normandy in June 1944, southern Italy in July 1944, and the Low Countries in October 1944.[85] Their high public profile and apparently indefatigable determination secured their place as symbols of national resistance.[86] At a social function in 1944, the Chief of the Imperial General Staff, Field Marshal Alan Brooke, revealed that every time he met Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery, he thought Montgomery was after his job. George replied: "You should worry, when I meet him, I always think he's after mine!"[87]

In 1945, crowds shouted "We want the King!" in front of Buckingham Palace during the Victory in Europe Day celebrations. In an echo of Chamberlain's appearance, the King invited Churchill to appear with the royal family on the balcony to public acclaim.[88] In January 1946, George addressed the United Nations at its first assembly, which was held in London, and reaffirmed "our faith in the equal rights of men and women and of nations great and small".[89]

Empire to Commonwealth

 
With British prime minister Clement Attlee (left) at Buckingham Palace, July 1945

George VI's reign saw the acceleration of the dissolution of the British Empire. The Statute of Westminster 1931 had already acknowledged the evolution of the Dominions into separate sovereign states. The process of transformation from an empire to a voluntary association of independent states, known as the Commonwealth, gathered pace after the Second World War.[90] During the ministry of Clement Attlee, British India became the two independent Dominions of India and Pakistan in August 1947.[91] George relinquished the title of Emperor of India,[92] and became King of India and King of Pakistan instead. In late April 1949, the Commonwealth leaders issued the London Declaration, which laid the foundation of the modern Commonwealth and recognised George as Head of the Commonwealth.[93][94][95] In January 1950, he ceased to be King of India when it became a republic. He remained King of Pakistan until his death. Other countries left the Commonwealth, such as Burma in January 1948, Palestine (divided between Israel and the Arab states) in May 1948 and the Republic of Ireland in 1949.[96]

In 1947, George and his family toured southern Africa.[97] The prime minister of the Union of South Africa, Jan Smuts, was facing an election and hoped to make political capital out of the visit.[98] George was appalled, however, when instructed by the South African government to shake hands only with whites,[99] and referred to his South African bodyguards as "the Gestapo".[100] Despite the tour, Smuts lost the election the following year, and the new government instituted a strict policy of racial segregation.

Illness and death

The stress of the war had taken its toll on George's health,[101][102] made worse by his heavy smoking,[103] and subsequent development of lung cancer among other ailments, including arteriosclerosis and Buerger's disease. A planned tour of Australia and New Zealand was postponed after George suffered an arterial blockage in his right leg, which threatened the loss of the leg and was treated with a right lumbar sympathectomy in March 1949.[104] His elder daughter and heir presumptive, Elizabeth, took on more royal duties as her father's health deteriorated. The delayed tour was re-organised, with Princess Elizabeth and her husband, Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, taking the place of the King and Queen.

George was well enough to open the Festival of Britain in May 1951, but on 4 June it was announced that he would need immediate and complete rest for the next four weeks, despite the arrival of Haakon VII of Norway the following afternoon for an official visit.[105] On 23 September 1951, he underwent a surgical operation where his entire left lung was removed by Clement Price Thomas after a malignant tumour was found.[106] In October 1951, Elizabeth and Philip went on a month-long tour of Canada; the trip had been delayed for a week due to George's illness. At the State Opening of Parliament in November, the Lord Chancellor, Lord Simonds, read the King's speech from the throne.[107] The King's Christmas broadcast of 1951 was recorded in sections, and then edited together.[108]

On 31 January 1952, despite advice from those close to him, George went to London Airport[d] to see Elizabeth and Philip off on their tour to Australia via Kenya. It was his last public appearance. Six days later, at 07:30 GMT on the morning of 6 February, he was found dead in bed at Sandringham House in Norfolk.[110] He had died in the night from a coronary thrombosis at the age of 56.[111] His daughter flew back to Britain from Kenya as Queen Elizabeth II.[112]

From 9 February George's coffin rested in St Mary Magdalene Church, Sandringham, before lying in state at Westminster Hall from 11 February.[113] His funeral took place at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, on the 15th.[114] He was interred initially in the Royal Vault until he was transferred to the King George VI Memorial Chapel inside St George's on 26 March 1969.[115] In 2002, fifty years after his death, the remains of his widow, Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, and the ashes of his younger daughter, Princess Margaret, who both died that year, were interred in the chapel alongside him.[116] In 2022, the remains of Queen Elizabeth II and her husband, Prince Philip, were also interred in the chapel.[117]

Legacy

In the words of Labour Member of Parliament (MP) George Hardie, the abdication crisis of 1936 did "more for republicanism than fifty years of propaganda".[118] George VI wrote to his brother Edward that in the aftermath of the abdication he had reluctantly assumed "a rocking throne" and tried "to make it steady again".[119] He became king at a point when public faith in the monarchy was at a low ebb. During his reign, his people endured the hardships of war, and imperial power was eroded. However, as a dutiful family man and by showing personal courage, he succeeded in restoring the popularity of the monarchy.[120][121]

The George Cross and the George Medal were founded at the King's suggestion during the Second World War to recognise acts of exceptional civilian bravery.[122] He bestowed the George Cross on the entire "island fortress of Malta" in 1943.[123] He was posthumously awarded the Order of Liberation by the French government in 1960, one of only two people (the other being Churchill in 1958) to be awarded the medal after 1946.[124]

Colin Firth won an Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance as George VI in the 2010 film The King's Speech.[125]

Honours and arms

Arms

As Duke of York, Albert bore the royal arms of the United Kingdom differenced with a label of three points argent, the centre point bearing an anchor azure—a difference earlier awarded to his father, George V, when he was Duke of York, and then later awarded to his grandson Prince Andrew, Duke of York. As king, he bore the royal arms undifferenced.[126]

 
 
 
 
Coat of arms as Duke of York Coat of arms as King of the United Kingdom Coat of arms in Scotland Coat of arms in Canada

Issue

Ancestry

Notes

  1. ^ George VI continued as titular Emperor of India until 22 June 1948.
  2. ^ As monarch, George was Supreme Governor of the Church of England. He was also a member of the Church of Scotland.
  3. ^ His godparents were: Queen Victoria (his great-grandmother, for whom his grandmother the Princess of Wales stood proxy); the Grand Duke and Grand Duchess of Mecklenburg (his maternal great-aunt and great-uncle, for whom his grandfather the Duke of Teck and his paternal aunt Princess Maud of Wales stood proxy); Empress Frederick (his paternal great-aunt, for whom his paternal aunt Princess Victoria of Wales stood proxy); the Crown Prince of Denmark (his great-uncle, for whom his grandfather the Prince of Wales stood proxy); the Duke of Connaught (his great-uncle); the Duchess of Fife (his paternal aunt); and Prince Adolphus of Teck (his maternal uncle).[6]
  4. ^ Renamed Heathrow Airport in 1966.[109]

References

Citations

  1. ^ Rhodes James, p. 90; Weir, p. 329
  2. ^ Weir, pp. 322–323, 329
  3. ^ Judd, p. 3; Rhodes James, p. 90; Townsend, p. 15; Wheeler-Bennett, pp. 7–8
  4. ^ Judd, pp. 4–5; Wheeler-Bennett, pp. 7–8
  5. ^ Wheeler-Bennett, pp. 7–8
  6. ^ The Times, Tuesday 18 February 1896, p. 11
  7. ^ Judd, p. 6; Rhodes James, p. 90; Townsend, p. 15; Windsor, p. 9
  8. ^ Bradford, p. 2
  9. ^ Wheeler-Bennett, pp. 17–18
  10. ^ Kushner, Howard I. (2011), "Retraining the King's left hand", The Lancet, 377 (9782): 1998–1999, doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(11)60854-4, PMID 21671515, S2CID 35750495
  11. ^ a b c Matthew, H. C. G. (2004), "George VI (1895–1952)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  12. ^ Bradford, pp. 41–45; Judd, pp. 21–24; Rhodes James, p. 91
  13. ^ Judd, pp. 22–23
  14. ^ Judd, p. 26
  15. ^ Judd, p. 186
  16. ^ "Royal Connections", Aberdeen Medico-Chirugical Society, from the original on 17 January 2019, retrieved 16 January 2019
  17. ^ Bradford, pp. 55–76
  18. ^ Bradford, p. 72
  19. ^ Bradford, pp. 73–74
  20. ^ Darbyshire, Taylor (1929). The Duke of York. Hutchinson & Company Limited. p. 51.
  21. ^ Wheeler-Bennett, p. 115
  22. ^ Judd, p. 45; Rhodes James, p. 91
  23. ^ Wheeler-Bennett, p. 116
  24. ^ Boyle, Andrew (1962), "Chapter 13", Trenchard Man of Vision, St James's Place London: Collins, p. 360
  25. ^ Judd, p. 44
  26. ^ Heathcote, Tony (2012), The British Field Marshals: 1736–1997: A Biographical Dictionary, Casemate Publisher, ISBN 978-1783461417, from the original on 29 July 2016, retrieved 18 March 2016
  27. ^ Judd, p. 47; Wheeler-Bennett, pp. 128–131
  28. ^ Wheeler-Bennett, p. 128
  29. ^ Weir, p. 329
  30. ^ Current Biography 1942, p. 280; Judd, p. 72; Townsend, p. 59
  31. ^ Judd, p. 52
  32. ^ Judd, pp. 77–86; Rhodes James, p. 97
  33. ^ Henderson, Gerard (31 January 2014), "Sheila: The Australian Ingenue Who Bewitched British Society – review", Daily Express, from the original on 2 April 2015, retrieved 15 March 2015; Australian Associated Press (28 February 2014), A Sheila who captured London's heart, Special Broadcasting Service, from the original on 6 November 2017, retrieved 14 March 2015
  34. ^ Rhodes James, pp. 94–96; Vickers, pp. 31, 44
  35. ^ Bradford, p. 106
  36. ^ Bradford, p. 77; Judd, pp. 57–59
  37. ^ Roberts, Andrew (2000), Antonia Fraser (ed.), The House of Windsor, London: Cassell & Co., pp. 57–58, ISBN 978-0-304-35406-1
  38. ^ Reith, John (1949), Into the Wind, London: Hodder and Stoughton, p. 94
  39. ^ Judd, pp. 89–93
  40. ^ Judd, p. 49
  41. ^ Judd, pp. 93–97; Rhodes James, p. 97
  42. ^ Judd, p. 98; Rhodes James, p. 98
  43. ^ Current Biography 1942, pp. 294–295; Judd, p. 99
  44. ^ Judd, p. 106; Rhodes James, p. 99
  45. ^ Shawcross, p. 273
  46. ^ Judd, pp. 111, 225, 231
  47. ^ Howarth, p. 53
  48. ^ Ziegler, p. 199
  49. ^ Judd, p. 140
  50. ^ Wheeler-Bennett, p. 286
  51. ^ Townsend, p. 93
  52. ^ Bradford, p. 208; Judd, pp. 141–142
  53. ^ Howarth, p. 63; Judd, p. 135
  54. ^ Howarth, p. 66; Judd, p. 141
  55. ^ Judd, p. 144; Sinclair, p. 224
  56. ^ Howarth, p. 143
  57. ^ Ziegler, p. 326
  58. ^ Bradford, p. 223
  59. ^ Bradford, p. 214
  60. ^ Vickers, p. 175
  61. ^ Bradford, p. 209
  62. ^ Bradford, pp. 269, 281
  63. ^ Sinclair, p. 230
  64. ^ Hitchens, Christopher (1 April 2002), "Mourning will be brief" 28 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine, The Guardian, retrieved 1 May 2009
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General and cited sources

External links

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George VI
Born: 14 December 1895 Died: 6 February 1952
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of the United Kingdom and the British Dominions
1936–1952
Succeeded by
Emperor of India1
1936–1947
Partition of India
Masonic offices
Preceded by Grand Master Mason of the Grand Lodge of Scotland
1936–1937
Succeeded by
Honorary titles
Preceded by Air commodore-in-chief of the Auxiliary Air Force
1936–1952
Succeeded by
New title Head of the Commonwealth
1949–1952
Air commodore-in-chief of the Air Training Corps
1941–1952
Succeeded by
Notes and references
1. Indian Empire dissolved 15 August 1947. Title abandoned 22 June 1948 ("No. 38330". The London Gazette. 22 June 1948. p. 3647.)

george, other, uses, disambiguation, albert, frederick, arthur, george, december, 1895, february, 1952, king, united, kingdom, dominions, british, commonwealth, from, december, 1936, until, death, 1952, also, last, emperor, india, from, 1936, until, british, d. For other uses see George VI disambiguation George VI Albert Frederick Arthur George 14 December 1895 6 February 1952 was King of the United Kingdom and the Dominions of the British Commonwealth from 11 December 1936 until his death in 1952 He was also the last Emperor of India from 1936 until the British Raj was dissolved in August 1947 and the first Head of the Commonwealth following the London Declaration of 1949 George VIHead of the CommonwealthFormal portrait c 1940 1946King of the United Kingdomand the British DominionsReign11 December 1936 6 February 1952Coronation12 May 1937PredecessorEdward VIIISuccessorElizabeth IIEmperor of IndiaReign11 December 1936 15 August 1947PredecessorEdward VIIISuccessorPosition abolished a BornPrince Albert of York 1895 12 14 14 December 1895York Cottage Sandringham Norfolk EnglandDied6 February 1952 1952 02 06 aged 56 Sandringham House Norfolk EnglandBurial15 February 1952Royal Vault St George s Chapel Windsor Castle 26 March 1969King George VI Memorial Chapel St George s ChapelSpouseElizabeth Bowes Lyon m 1923 wbr IssueDetailElizabeth II Princess Margaret Countess of SnowdonNamesAlbert Frederick Arthur GeorgeHouseWindsor from 1917 Saxe Coburg and Gotha until 1917 FatherGeorge VMotherMary of TeckReligionProtestant b SignatureMilitary careerService wbr branchRoyal Navy Royal Air ForceYears of active service1913 1919Battles warsFirst World War Battle of JutlandThe future George VI was born in the reign of his great grandmother Queen Victoria he was named Albert at birth after his great grandfather Albert Prince Consort and was known as Bertie to his family and close friends His father ascended the throne as George V in 1910 As the second son of the king Albert was not expected to inherit the throne He spent his early life in the shadow of his elder brother Prince Edward the heir apparent Albert attended naval college as a teenager and served in the Royal Navy and Royal Air Force during the First World War In 1920 he was made Duke of York He married Lady Elizabeth Bowes Lyon in 1923 and they had two daughters Elizabeth and Margaret In the mid 1920s he engaged speech therapist Lionel Logue to treat his stammer which he learned to manage to some degree His elder brother ascended the throne as Edward VIII after their father died in 1936 but Edward abdicated later that year to marry the twice divorced American socialite Wallis Simpson As heir presumptive to Edward VIII Albert thereby became the third monarch of the House of Windsor taking the regnal name George VI In September 1939 the British Empire and most Commonwealth countries but not Ireland declared war on Nazi Germany War with the Kingdom of Italy and the Empire of Japan followed in 1940 and 1941 respectively George VI was seen as sharing the hardships of the common people and his popularity soared Buckingham Palace was bombed during the Blitz while the King and Queen were there and his younger brother the Duke of Kent was killed on active service George became known as a symbol of British determination to win the war Britain and its allies were victorious in 1945 but the British Empire declined Ireland had largely broken away followed by the independence of India and Pakistan in 1947 George relinquished the title of Emperor of India in June 1948 and instead adopted the new title of Head of the Commonwealth He was beset by smoking related health problems in the later years of his reign and died of a coronary thrombosis in 1952 He was succeeded by his elder daughter Elizabeth II Contents 1 Early life 2 Military career and education 3 Marriage 4 Reluctant king 5 Early reign 6 Second World War 7 Empire to Commonwealth 8 Illness and death 9 Legacy 10 Honours and arms 10 1 Arms 11 Issue 12 Ancestry 13 Notes 14 References 14 1 Citations 14 2 General and cited sources 15 External linksEarly life Edit Four kings Edward VII far right his son George Prince of Wales later George V far left and grandsons Edward later Edward VIII rear and Albert later George VI foreground c 1908 The future George VI was born at York Cottage on the Sandringham Estate in Norfolk during the reign of his great grandmother Queen Victoria 1 His father was Prince George Duke of York later King George V the second and only surviving son of the Prince and Princess of Wales later King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra His mother the Duchess of York later Queen Mary was the eldest child and only daughter of Francis Duke of Teck and Princess Mary Adelaide Duchess of Teck 2 His birthday 14 December 1895 was the 34th anniversary of the death of his great grandfather Albert Prince Consort 3 Uncertain of how the Prince Consort s widow Queen Victoria would take the news of the birth the Prince of Wales wrote to the Duke of York that the Queen had been rather distressed Two days later he wrote again I really think it would gratify her if you yourself proposed the name Albert to her 4 The Queen was mollified by the proposal to name the new baby Albert and wrote to the Duchess of York I am all impatience to see the new one born on such a sad day but rather more dear to me especially as he will be called by that dear name which is a byword for all that is great and good 5 Consequently he was baptised Albert Frederick Arthur George at St Mary Magdalene Church Sandringham on 17 February 1896 c Formally he was His Highness Prince Albert of York within the royal family he was known informally as Bertie 7 The Duchess of Teck did not like the first name her grandson had been given and she wrote prophetically that she hoped the last name may supplant the less favoured one 8 Albert was fourth in line to the throne at birth after his grandfather father and elder brother Edward Albert was ill often and was described as easily frightened and somewhat prone to tears 9 His parents were generally removed from their children s day to day upbringing as was the norm in aristocratic families of that era He had a stammer that lasted for many years Although naturally left handed he was forced to write with his right hand as was common practice at the time 10 He had chronic stomach problems as well as knock knees for which he was forced to wear painful corrective splints 11 Queen Victoria died on 22 January 1901 and the Prince of Wales succeeded her as King Edward VII Prince Albert moved up to third in line to the throne after his father and elder brother Military career and education Edit Albert at an RAF dinner in 1919 Beginning in 1909 Albert attended the Royal Naval College Osborne as a naval cadet In 1911 he came bottom of the class in the final examination but despite this he progressed to the Royal Naval College Dartmouth 12 When his grandfather Edward VII died in 1910 his father became King George V Prince Edward became Prince of Wales with Albert second in line to the throne 13 Albert spent the first six months of 1913 on the training ship HMS Cumberland in the West Indies and on the east coast of Canada 14 He was rated as a midshipman aboard HMS Collingwood on 15 September 1913 He spent three months in the Mediterranean but never overcame his seasickness 15 Three weeks after the outbreak of World War I he was medically evacuated from the ship to Aberdeen where his appendix was removed by Sir John Marnoch 16 He was mentioned in dispatches for his actions as a turret officer aboard Collingwood in the Battle of Jutland 31 May 1 June 1916 the great naval battle of the war He did not see further combat largely because of ill health caused by a duodenal ulcer for which he had an operation in November 1917 17 In February 1918 Albert was appointed Officer in Charge of Boys at the Royal Naval Air Service s training establishment at Cranwell With the establishment of the Royal Air Force Albert transferred from the Royal Navy to the Royal Air Force 18 He served as Officer Commanding Number 4 Squadron of the Boys Wing at Cranwell until August 1918 19 before reporting for duty on the staff of the RAF s Cadet Brigade at St Leonards on Sea and then at Shorncliffe 20 He completed a fortnight s training and took command of a squadron on the Cadet Wing 21 He was the first member of the British royal family to be certified as a fully qualified pilot 22 Albert wanted to serve on the Continent while the war was still in progress and welcomed a posting to General Trenchard s staff in France On 23 October he flew across the Channel to Autigny 23 For the closing weeks of the war he served on the staff of the RAF s Independent Air Force at its headquarters in Nancy France 24 Following the disbanding of the Independent Air Force in November 1918 he remained on the Continent for two months as an RAF staff officer until posted back to Britain 25 He accompanied King Albert I of Belgium on his triumphal re entry into Brussels on 22 November Prince Albert qualified as an RAF pilot on 31 July 1919 and was promoted to squadron leader the following day 26 In October 1919 Albert went up to Trinity College Cambridge where he studied history economics and civics for a year 27 with the historian R V Laurence as his official mentor 28 On 4 June 1920 his father created him Duke of York Earl of Inverness and Baron Killarney 29 He began to take on more royal duties He represented his father and toured coal mines factories and railyards Through such visits he acquired the nickname of the Industrial Prince 30 His stammer and his embarrassment over it together with a tendency to shyness caused him to appear less confident in public than his older brother Edward However he was physically active and enjoyed playing tennis He played at Wimbledon in the Men s Doubles with Louis Greig in 1926 losing in the first round 31 He developed an interest in working conditions and was president of the Industrial Welfare Society His series of annual summer camps for boys between 1921 and 1939 brought together boys from different social backgrounds 32 Marriage EditSee also Wedding of Prince Albert Duke of York and Lady Elizabeth Bowes Lyon The Duke and Duchess of York centre reading programmes at Eagle Farm Racecourse Brisbane Queensland 1927 In a time when royalty were expected to marry fellow royalty it was unusual that Albert had a great deal of freedom in choosing a prospective wife An infatuation with the already married Australian socialite Lady Loughborough came to an end in April 1920 when the King with the promise of the dukedom of York persuaded Albert to stop seeing her 33 That year he met for the first time since childhood Lady Elizabeth Bowes Lyon the youngest daughter of the Earl and Countess of Strathmore He became determined to marry her 34 Elizabeth rejected his proposal twice in 1921 and 1922 reportedly because she was reluctant to make the sacrifices necessary to become a member of the royal family 35 In the words of Lady Strathmore Albert would be made or marred by his choice of wife After a protracted courtship Elizabeth agreed to marry him 36 Albert and Elizabeth were married on 26 April 1923 in Westminster Abbey Albert s marriage to someone not of royal birth was considered a modernising gesture 37 The newly formed British Broadcasting Company wished to record and broadcast the event on radio but the Abbey Chapter vetoed the idea although the Dean Herbert Edward Ryle was in favour 38 On the cover of Time January 1925 From December 1924 to April 1925 the Duke and Duchess toured Kenya Uganda and the Sudan travelling via the Suez Canal and Aden During the trip they both went big game hunting 39 Because of his stammer Albert dreaded public speaking 40 After his closing speech at the British Empire Exhibition at Wembley on 31 October 1925 one which was an ordeal for both him and his listeners 41 he began to see Lionel Logue an Australian born speech therapist The Duke and Logue practised breathing exercises and the Duchess rehearsed with him patiently 42 Subsequently he was able to speak with less hesitation 43 With his delivery improved Albert opened the new Parliament House in Canberra Australia during a tour of the empire with the Duchess in 1927 44 Their journey by sea to Australia New Zealand and Fiji took them via Jamaica where Albert played doubles tennis partnered with a black man Bertrand Clark which was unusual at the time and taken locally as a display of equality between races 45 The Duke and Duchess had two children Elizabeth called Lilibet by the family and the future Elizabeth II who was born in 1926 and Margaret who was born in 1930 The close family lived at 145 Piccadilly rather than one of the royal palaces 46 In 1931 the Canadian prime minister R B Bennett considered Albert for Governor General of Canada a proposal that King George V rejected on the advice of the Secretary of State for Dominion Affairs J H Thomas 47 Reluctant king EditMain article Abdication of Edward VIII King George V had severe reservations about Prince Edward saying After I am dead the boy will ruin himself in twelve months and I pray God that my eldest son will never marry and that nothing will come between Bertie and Lilibet and the throne 48 On 20 January 1936 George V died and Edward ascended the throne as King Edward VIII In the Vigil of the Princes Prince Albert and his three brothers the new king Prince Henry Duke of Gloucester and Prince George Duke of Kent took a shift standing guard over their father s body as it lay in state in a closed casket in Westminster Hall As Edward was unmarried and had no children Albert was the heir presumptive to the throne Less than a year later on 11 December 1936 Edward abdicated in order to marry Wallis Simpson who was divorced from her first husband and divorcing her second Edward had been advised by British prime minister Stanley Baldwin that he could not remain king and marry a divorced woman with two living ex husbands He abdicated and Albert though he had been reluctant to accept the throne became king 49 The day before the abdication Albert went to London to see his mother Queen Mary He wrote in his diary When I told her what had happened I broke down and sobbed like a child 50 On the day of Edward s abdication the Oireachtas the parliament of the Irish Free State removed all direct mention of the monarch from the Irish constitution The next day it passed the External Relations Act which gave the monarch limited authority strictly on the advice of the government to appoint diplomatic representatives for Ireland and to be involved in the making of foreign treaties The two acts made the Irish Free State a republic in essence without removing its links to the Commonwealth 51 Across Britain gossip spread that Albert was physically and psychologically incapable of being king No evidence has been found to support the contemporaneous rumour that the government considered bypassing him his children and his brother Prince Henry in favour of their younger brother Prince George Duke of Kent 52 This seems to have been suggested on the grounds that Prince George was at that time the only brother with a son 53 Early reign Edit Crown coin with George in profile 1937 Albert assumed the regnal name George VI to emphasise continuity with his father and restore confidence in the monarchy 54 The beginning of George VI s reign was taken up by questions surrounding his predecessor and brother whose titles style and position were uncertain He had been introduced as His Royal Highness Prince Edward for the abdication broadcast 55 but George VI felt that by abdicating and renouncing the succession Edward had lost the right to bear royal titles including Royal Highness 56 In settling the issue George s first act as king was to confer upon his brother the title Duke of Windsor with the style Royal Highness but the letters patent creating the dukedom prevented any wife or children from bearing royal styles George VI was forced to buy from Edward the royal residences of Balmoral Castle and Sandringham House as these were private properties and did not pass to him automatically 57 Three days after his accession on his 41st birthday he invested his wife the new queen consort with the Order of the Garter 58 Cover of the 7 May 1937 edition of Radio Times drawn by Christopher R W Nevinson marking the first coronation to be broadcast and partially televised live George VI s coronation at Westminster Abbey took place on 12 May 1937 the date previously intended for Edward s coronation In a break with tradition his mother Queen Mary attended the ceremony in a show of support for her son 59 There was no Durbar held in Delhi for George VI as had occurred for his father as the cost would have been a burden to the Government of India 60 Rising Indian nationalism made the welcome that the royal party would have received likely to be muted at best 61 and a prolonged absence from Britain would have been undesirable in the tense period before the Second World War Two overseas tours were undertaken to France and to North America both of which promised greater strategic advantages in the event of war 62 The growing likelihood of war in Europe dominated the early reign of George VI The King was constitutionally bound to support British prime minister Neville Chamberlain s appeasement of Hitler 11 63 When the King and Queen greeted Chamberlain on his return from negotiating the Munich Agreement in 1938 they invited him to appear on the balcony of Buckingham Palace with them This public association of the monarchy with a politician was exceptional as balcony appearances were traditionally restricted to the royal family 11 While broadly popular among the general public Chamberlain s policy towards Hitler was the subject of some opposition in the House of Commons which led historian John Grigg to describe George s behaviour in associating himself so prominently with a politician as the most unconstitutional act by a British sovereign in the present century 64 Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt with King George VI and Queen Elizabeth on the USS Potomac 9 June 1939 In May and June 1939 the King and Queen toured Canada and the United States it was the first visit of a reigning British monarch to North America although George had been to Canada prior to his accession From Ottawa George and Elizabeth were accompanied by Canadian prime minister Mackenzie King 65 to present themselves in North America as King and Queen of Canada 66 67 Both Mackenzie King and the Canadian governor general Lord Tweedsmuir hoped that George s presence in Canada would demonstrate the principles of the Statute of Westminster 1931 which gave full sovereignty to the British Dominions On 19 May George personally accepted and approved the Letter of Credence of the new U S ambassador to Canada Daniel Calhoun Roper gave royal assent to nine parliamentary bills and ratified two international treaties with the Great Seal of Canada The official royal tour historian Gustave Lanctot wrote the Statute of Westminster had assumed full reality and George gave a speech emphasising the free and equal association of the nations of the Commonwealth 68 The trip was intended to soften the strong isolationist tendencies among the North American public with regard to the developing tensions in Europe Although the aim of the tour was mainly political to shore up Atlantic support for the United Kingdom in any future war the King and Queen were enthusiastically received by the public 69 The fear that George would be compared unfavourably to his predecessor was dispelled 70 They visited the 1939 New York World s Fair and stayed with President Franklin D Roosevelt at the White House and at his private estate at Hyde Park New York 71 A strong bond of friendship was forged between Roosevelt and the royal couple during the tour which had major significance in the relations between the United States and the United Kingdom through the ensuing war years 72 73 Second World War EditFollowing the German invasion of Poland in September 1939 the United Kingdom and the self governing Dominions other than Ireland declared war on Nazi Germany 74 The King and Queen resolved to stay in London despite German bombing raids They officially stayed in Buckingham Palace throughout the war although they usually spent nights at Windsor Castle 75 The first night of the Blitz on London on 7 September 1940 killed about one thousand civilians mostly in the East End 76 On 13 September the couple narrowly avoided death when two German bombs exploded in a courtyard at Buckingham Palace while they were there 77 In defiance Elizabeth declared I am glad we have been bombed It makes me feel we can look the East End in the face 78 The royal family were portrayed as sharing the same dangers and deprivations as the rest of the country They were subject to British rationing restrictions and U S First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt remarked on the rationed food served and the limited bathwater that was permitted during a stay at the unheated and boarded up Palace 79 In August 1942 the King s brother the Duke of Kent was killed on active service 80 With Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery right near the front lines in the Netherlands October 1944 In 1940 Winston Churchill replaced Neville Chamberlain as prime minister though personally George would have preferred to appoint Lord Halifax 81 After the King s initial dismay over Churchill s appointment of Lord Beaverbrook to the Cabinet he and Churchill developed the closest personal relationship in modern British history between a monarch and a Prime Minister 82 Every Tuesday for four and a half years from September 1940 the two men met privately for lunch to discuss the war in secret and with frankness 83 George related much of what the two discussed in his diary which is the only extant first hand account of these conversations 84 Throughout the war George and Elizabeth provided morale boosting visits throughout the United Kingdom visiting bomb sites munitions factories and troops George visited military forces abroad in France in December 1939 North Africa and Malta in June 1943 Normandy in June 1944 southern Italy in July 1944 and the Low Countries in October 1944 85 Their high public profile and apparently indefatigable determination secured their place as symbols of national resistance 86 At a social function in 1944 the Chief of the Imperial General Staff Field Marshal Alan Brooke revealed that every time he met Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery he thought Montgomery was after his job George replied You should worry when I meet him I always think he s after mine 87 In 1945 crowds shouted We want the King in front of Buckingham Palace during the Victory in Europe Day celebrations In an echo of Chamberlain s appearance the King invited Churchill to appear with the royal family on the balcony to public acclaim 88 In January 1946 George addressed the United Nations at its first assembly which was held in London and reaffirmed our faith in the equal rights of men and women and of nations great and small 89 Empire to Commonwealth Edit With British prime minister Clement Attlee left at Buckingham Palace July 1945 George VI s reign saw the acceleration of the dissolution of the British Empire The Statute of Westminster 1931 had already acknowledged the evolution of the Dominions into separate sovereign states The process of transformation from an empire to a voluntary association of independent states known as the Commonwealth gathered pace after the Second World War 90 During the ministry of Clement Attlee British India became the two independent Dominions of India and Pakistan in August 1947 91 George relinquished the title of Emperor of India 92 and became King of India and King of Pakistan instead In late April 1949 the Commonwealth leaders issued the London Declaration which laid the foundation of the modern Commonwealth and recognised George as Head of the Commonwealth 93 94 95 In January 1950 he ceased to be King of India when it became a republic He remained King of Pakistan until his death Other countries left the Commonwealth such as Burma in January 1948 Palestine divided between Israel and the Arab states in May 1948 and the Republic of Ireland in 1949 96 In 1947 George and his family toured southern Africa 97 The prime minister of the Union of South Africa Jan Smuts was facing an election and hoped to make political capital out of the visit 98 George was appalled however when instructed by the South African government to shake hands only with whites 99 and referred to his South African bodyguards as the Gestapo 100 Despite the tour Smuts lost the election the following year and the new government instituted a strict policy of racial segregation Illness and death EditMain article Death and state funeral of George VI The stress of the war had taken its toll on George s health 101 102 made worse by his heavy smoking 103 and subsequent development of lung cancer among other ailments including arteriosclerosis and Buerger s disease A planned tour of Australia and New Zealand was postponed after George suffered an arterial blockage in his right leg which threatened the loss of the leg and was treated with a right lumbar sympathectomy in March 1949 104 His elder daughter and heir presumptive Elizabeth took on more royal duties as her father s health deteriorated The delayed tour was re organised with Princess Elizabeth and her husband Philip Duke of Edinburgh taking the place of the King and Queen George was well enough to open the Festival of Britain in May 1951 but on 4 June it was announced that he would need immediate and complete rest for the next four weeks despite the arrival of Haakon VII of Norway the following afternoon for an official visit 105 On 23 September 1951 he underwent a surgical operation where his entire left lung was removed by Clement Price Thomas after a malignant tumour was found 106 In October 1951 Elizabeth and Philip went on a month long tour of Canada the trip had been delayed for a week due to George s illness At the State Opening of Parliament in November the Lord Chancellor Lord Simonds read the King s speech from the throne 107 The King s Christmas broadcast of 1951 was recorded in sections and then edited together 108 On 31 January 1952 despite advice from those close to him George went to London Airport d to see Elizabeth and Philip off on their tour to Australia via Kenya It was his last public appearance Six days later at 07 30 GMT on the morning of 6 February he was found dead in bed at Sandringham House in Norfolk 110 He had died in the night from a coronary thrombosis at the age of 56 111 His daughter flew back to Britain from Kenya as Queen Elizabeth II 112 From 9 February George s coffin rested in St Mary Magdalene Church Sandringham before lying in state at Westminster Hall from 11 February 113 His funeral took place at St George s Chapel Windsor Castle on the 15th 114 He was interred initially in the Royal Vault until he was transferred to the King George VI Memorial Chapel inside St George s on 26 March 1969 115 In 2002 fifty years after his death the remains of his widow Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother and the ashes of his younger daughter Princess Margaret who both died that year were interred in the chapel alongside him 116 In 2022 the remains of Queen Elizabeth II and her husband Prince Philip were also interred in the chapel 117 Legacy EditSee also Cultural depictions of George VI In the words of Labour Member of Parliament MP George Hardie the abdication crisis of 1936 did more for republicanism than fifty years of propaganda 118 George VI wrote to his brother Edward that in the aftermath of the abdication he had reluctantly assumed a rocking throne and tried to make it steady again 119 He became king at a point when public faith in the monarchy was at a low ebb During his reign his people endured the hardships of war and imperial power was eroded However as a dutiful family man and by showing personal courage he succeeded in restoring the popularity of the monarchy 120 121 The George Cross and the George Medal were founded at the King s suggestion during the Second World War to recognise acts of exceptional civilian bravery 122 He bestowed the George Cross on the entire island fortress of Malta in 1943 123 He was posthumously awarded the Order of Liberation by the French government in 1960 one of only two people the other being Churchill in 1958 to be awarded the medal after 1946 124 Colin Firth won an Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance as George VI in the 2010 film The King s Speech 125 Honours and arms EditMain article List of titles and honours of George VI Arms Edit As Duke of York Albert bore the royal arms of the United Kingdom differenced with a label of three points argent the centre point bearing an anchor azure a difference earlier awarded to his father George V when he was Duke of York and then later awarded to his grandson Prince Andrew Duke of York As king he bore the royal arms undifferenced 126 Coat of arms as Duke of York Coat of arms as King of the United Kingdom Coat of arms in Scotland Coat of arms in CanadaIssue EditName Birth Death Marriage ChildrenDate SpouseElizabeth II 21 April 1926 8 September 2022 20 November 1947 Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh Charles IIIAnne Princess RoyalPrince Andrew Duke of YorkPrince Edward Earl of Wessex and ForfarPrincess Margaret 21 August 1930 9 February 2002 6 May 1960Divorced 11 July 1978 Antony Armstrong Jones 1st Earl of Snowdon David Armstrong Jones 2nd Earl of SnowdonLady Sarah ChattoAncestry EditAncestors of George VI 127 8 Prince Albert of Saxe Coburg and Gotha4 Edward VII of the United Kingdom9 Victoria of the United Kingdom2 George V of the United Kingdom10 Christian IX of Denmark5 Princess Alexandra of Denmark11 Princess Louise of Hesse Kassel1 George VI of the United Kingdom12 Duke Alexander of Wurttemberg6 Francis Duke of Teck13 Countess Claudine Rhedey von Kis Rhede3 Princess Victoria Mary of Teck14 Prince Adolphus Duke of Cambridge7 Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge15 Princess Augusta of Hesse KasselNotes Edit George VI continued as titular Emperor of India until 22 June 1948 As monarch George was Supreme Governor of the Church of England He was also a member of the Church of Scotland His godparents were Queen Victoria his great grandmother for whom his grandmother the Princess of Wales stood proxy the Grand Duke and Grand Duchess of Mecklenburg his maternal great aunt and great uncle for whom his grandfather the Duke of Teck and his paternal aunt Princess Maud of Wales stood proxy Empress Frederick his paternal great aunt for whom his paternal aunt Princess Victoria of Wales stood proxy the Crown Prince of Denmark his great uncle for whom his grandfather the Prince of Wales stood proxy the Duke of Connaught his great uncle the Duchess of Fife his paternal aunt and Prince Adolphus of Teck his maternal uncle 6 Renamed Heathrow Airport in 1966 109 References EditCitations Edit Rhodes James p 90 Weir p 329 Weir pp 322 323 329 Judd p 3 Rhodes James p 90 Townsend p 15 Wheeler Bennett pp 7 8 Judd pp 4 5 Wheeler Bennett pp 7 8 Wheeler Bennett pp 7 8 The Times Tuesday 18 February 1896 p 11 Judd p 6 Rhodes James p 90 Townsend p 15 Windsor p 9 Bradford p 2 Wheeler Bennett pp 17 18 Kushner Howard I 2011 Retraining the King s left hand The Lancet 377 9782 1998 1999 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 11 60854 4 PMID 21671515 S2CID 35750495 a b c Matthew H C G 2004 George VI 1895 1952 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Bradford pp 41 45 Judd pp 21 24 Rhodes James p 91 Judd pp 22 23 Judd p 26 Judd p 186 Royal Connections Aberdeen Medico Chirugical Society archived from the original on 17 January 2019 retrieved 16 January 2019 Bradford pp 55 76 Bradford p 72 Bradford pp 73 74 Darbyshire Taylor 1929 The Duke of York Hutchinson amp Company Limited p 51 Wheeler Bennett p 115 Judd p 45 Rhodes James p 91 Wheeler Bennett p 116 Boyle Andrew 1962 Chapter 13 Trenchard Man of Vision St James s Place London Collins p 360 Judd p 44 Heathcote Tony 2012 The British Field Marshals 1736 1997 A Biographical Dictionary Casemate Publisher ISBN 978 1783461417 archived from the original on 29 July 2016 retrieved 18 March 2016 Judd p 47 Wheeler Bennett pp 128 131 Wheeler Bennett p 128 Weir p 329 Current Biography 1942 p 280 Judd p 72 Townsend p 59 Judd p 52 Judd pp 77 86 Rhodes James p 97 Henderson Gerard 31 January 2014 Sheila The Australian Ingenue Who Bewitched British Society review Daily Express archived from the original on 2 April 2015 retrieved 15 March 2015 Australian Associated Press 28 February 2014 A Sheila who captured London s heart Special Broadcasting Service archived from the original on 6 November 2017 retrieved 14 March 2015 Rhodes James pp 94 96 Vickers pp 31 44 Bradford p 106 Bradford p 77 Judd pp 57 59 Roberts Andrew 2000 Antonia Fraser ed The House of Windsor London Cassell amp Co pp 57 58 ISBN 978 0 304 35406 1 Reith John 1949 Into the Wind London Hodder and Stoughton p 94 Judd pp 89 93 Judd p 49 Judd pp 93 97 Rhodes James p 97 Judd p 98 Rhodes James p 98 Current Biography 1942 pp 294 295 Judd p 99 Judd p 106 Rhodes James p 99 Shawcross p 273 Judd pp 111 225 231 Howarth p 53 Ziegler p 199 Judd p 140 Wheeler Bennett p 286 Townsend p 93 Bradford p 208 Judd pp 141 142 Howarth p 63 Judd p 135 Howarth p 66 Judd p 141 Judd p 144 Sinclair p 224 Howarth p 143 Ziegler p 326 Bradford p 223 Bradford p 214 Vickers p 175 Bradford p 209 Bradford pp 269 281 Sinclair p 230 Hitchens Christopher 1 April 2002 Mourning will be brief Archived 28 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine The Guardian retrieved 1 May 2009 Library and Archives Canada Biography and People gt A Real Companion and Friend gt Behind the Diary gt Politics Themes and Events from King s Life gt The Royal Tour of 1939 Queen s Printer for Canada archived from the original on 30 October 2009 retrieved 12 December 2009 Bousfield Arthur Toffoli Garry 1989 Royal Spring The Royal Tour of 1939 and the Queen Mother in Canada Toronto Dundurn Press pp 60 66 ISBN 978 1 55002 065 6 archived from the original on 18 March 2021 retrieved 21 September 2020 Lanctot Gustave 1964 Royal Tour of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in Canada and the United States of America 1939 Toronto E P Taylor Foundation Galbraith William 1989 Fiftieth Anniversary of the 1939 Royal Visit Canadian Parliamentary Review 12 3 7 9 archived from the original on 7 August 2017 retrieved 24 March 2015 Judd pp 163 166 Rhodes James pp 154 168 Vickers p 187 Bradford pp 298 299 The Times Monday 12 June 1939 p 12 col A Swift Will 2004 The Roosevelts and the Royals Franklin and Eleanor the King and Queen of England and the Friendship that Changed History John Wiley amp Sons Judd p 189 Rhodes James p 344 Judd pp 171 172 Townsend p 104 Judd p 183 Rhodes James p 214 Arnold Forster Mark 1983 1973 The World at War London Thames Methuen p 303 ISBN 978 0 423 00680 3 Churchill Winston 1949 The Second World War vol II Cassell and Co Ltd p 334 Judd p 184 Rhodes James pp 211 212 Townsend p 111 Goodwin Doris Kearns 1994 No Ordinary Time Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt The Home Front in World War II New York Simon amp Schuster p 380 Judd p 187 Weir p 324 Judd p 180 Rhodes James p 195 Rhodes James pp 202 210 Weisbrode Kenneth 2013 Churchill and the King New York Viking pp 107 117 118 148 154 155 166 ISBN 978 0670025763 Judd pp 176 201 203 207 208 Judd p 170 Reagan Geoffrey 1992 Military Anecdotes Guinness p 25 ISBN 978 0 85112 519 0 Judd p 210 Townsend p 173 Townsend p 176 Townsend pp 229 232 247 265 Published by Authority 18 June 1948 A proclamation by the King 22 June 1948 Supplement to the Belfast Gazette Official Public Record 1408 153 Archived from the original on 5 September 2021 London Declaration 1949 PDF Commonwealth Secretariat archived PDF from the original on 27 September 2012 retrieved 2 April 2013 S A de Smith 1949 The London Declaration of the Commonwealth Prime Ministers April 28 1949 The Modern Law Review 12 3 351 354 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2230 1949 tb00131 x JSTOR 1090506 Queen Elizabeth II and the Royal Family A Glorious Illustrated History Dorling Kindersley 2016 p 118 ISBN 9780241296653 Townsend pp 267 270 Townsend pp 221 223 Judd p 223 Rhodes James p 295 Rhodes James p 294 Shawcross p 618 King George VI Official website of the British monarchy 12 January 2016 archived from the original on 1 December 2017 retrieved 18 April 2016 Judd p 225 Townsend p 174 Judd p 240 Rhodes James pp 314 317 The King to rest The Times 5 June 1951 Bradford p 454 Rhodes James p 330 Rhodes James p 331 Rhodes James p 334 About Heathrow Airport Heathrow s history LHR Airports archived from the original on 3 October 2013 retrieved 9 March 2015 1952 King George VI dies in his sleep BBC 6 February 1952 archived from the original on 7 October 2010 retrieved 29 May 2018 Judd pp 247 248 The day the King died BBC 6 February 2002 archived from the original on 30 May 2018 retrieved 29 May 2018 Repose at Sandringham Life Time Inc p 38 18 February 1952 ISSN 0024 3019 archived from the original on 3 June 2013 retrieved 26 December 2011 Zweiniger Bargielowska Ina 2016 Royal death and living memorials the funerals and commemoration of George V and George VI 1936 52 Historical Research 89 243 158 175 doi 10 1111 1468 2281 12108 Royal Burials in the Chapel since 1805 Dean amp Canons of Windsor archived from the original on 27 September 2011 retrieved 15 February 2010 Mourners visit Queen Mother s vault BBC News 10 April 2002 archived from the original on 7 December 2008 retrieved 2 March 2018 Your complete guide to the Queen s funeral BBC News 19 September 2022 archived from the original on 9 September 2022 retrieved 19 September 2022 Hardie in the British House of Commons 11 December 1936 quoted in Rhodes James p 115 Letter from George VI to the Duke of Windsor quoted in Rhodes James p 127 Ashley Mike 1998 British Monarchs London Robinson pp 703 704 ISBN 978 1 84119 096 9 Judd pp 248 249 Judd p 186 Rhodes James p 216 Townsend p 137 List of Companions PDF Ordre de la Liberation archived from the original PDF on 6 March 2009 retrieved 19 September 2009 Brooks Xan 28 February 2011 Colin Firth takes the best actor crown at the Oscars The Guardian Retrieved 17 August 2022 Velde Francois 19 April 2008 Marks of Cadency in the British Royal Family Archived 17 March 2018 at the Wayback Machine Heraldica retrieved 22 April 2009 Montgomery Massingberd Hugh ed 1973 The Royal Lineage Burke s Guide to the Royal Family London Burke s Peerage pp 252 293 307 ISBN 0 220 66222 3 General and cited sources Edit Bradford Sarah 1989 King George VI London Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 79667 1 Howarth Patrick 1987 George VI Hutchinson ISBN 978 0 09 171000 2 Judd Denis 1982 King George VI London Michael Joseph ISBN 978 0 7181 2184 6 Matthew H C G 2004 George VI 1895 1952 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Rhodes James Robert 1998 A Spirit Undaunted The Political Role of George VI London Little Brown and Co ISBN 978 0 316 64765 6 Shawcross William 2009 Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother The Official Biography Macmillan ISBN 978 1 4050 4859 0 Sinclair David 1988 Two Georges The Making of the Modern Monarchy Hodder and Stoughton ISBN 978 0 340 33240 5 Townsend Peter 1975 The Last Emperor London Weidenfeld and Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 77031 2 Vickers Hugo 2006 Elizabeth The Queen Mother Arrow Books Random House ISBN 978 0 09 947662 7 Wheeler Bennett Sir John 1958 King George VI His Life and Reign New York St Martin s Press Weir Alison 1996 Britain s Royal Families The Complete Genealogy Revised Edition London Random House ISBN 978 0 7126 7448 5 Windsor The Duke of 1951 A King s Story London Cassell amp Co Ltd Ziegler Philip 1990 King Edward VIII The Official Biography London Collins ISBN 978 0 00 215741 4 External links EditListen to this article 37 minutes source source This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 12 July 2014 2014 07 12 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles George VI at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Data from Wikidata Footage of King George VI stammering in a 1938 speech on YouTube Soundtrack of King George VI Coronation speech in 1937 on YouTube Portraits of King George VI at the National Portrait Gallery London Newspaper clippings about George VI in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWGeorge VIHouse of WindsorBorn 14 December 1895 Died 6 February 1952Regnal titlesPreceded byEdward VIII King of the United Kingdom and the British Dominions1936 1952 Succeeded byElizabeth IIEmperor of India11936 1947 Partition of IndiaMasonic officesPreceded byIain Colquhoun Grand Master Mason of the Grand Lodge of Scotland1936 1937 Succeeded byNorman Orr EwingHonorary titlesPreceded byEdward VIII Air commodore in chief of the Auxiliary Air Force1936 1952 Succeeded byElizabeth IINew title Head of the Commonwealth1949 1952Air commodore in chief of the Air Training Corps1941 1952 Succeeded byThe Duke of EdinburghNotes and references1 Indian Empire dissolved 15 August 1947 Title abandoned 22 June 1948 No 38330 The London Gazette 22 June 1948 p 3647 Portals Biography Monarchy United Kingdom British Empire World War II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George VI amp oldid 1137665864, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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