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Sandringham House

Sandringham House is a country house in the parish of Sandringham, Norfolk, England. It is one of the royal residences of Charles III, whose grandfather, George VI, and great-grandfather, George V, both died there. The house stands in a 20,000-acre (8,100 ha) estate in the Norfolk Coast Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The house is listed as Grade II* and the landscaped gardens, park and woodlands are on the National Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.

Sandringham House
"The most comfortable house in England"[1]
TypeCountry house
LocationNear Sandringham, Norfolk, England
Coordinates52°49′47″N 0°30′50″E / 52.82972°N 0.51389°E / 52.82972; 0.51389
Built1870–1892
Built forAlbert Edward, Prince of Wales
ArchitectA. J. Humbert
Robert William Edis
Architectural style(s)Jacobethan
OwnerCharles III (personally)
Official nameSandringham House
TypeGrade II*
Designated18 September 1987
Reference no.1001017
Location in Norfolk, England
Sandringham House (the United Kingdom)

The site has been occupied since Elizabethan times, when a large manor house was constructed. This was replaced in 1771 by a Georgian mansion for the owners, the Hoste Henleys. In 1836 Sandringham was bought by John Motteux, a London merchant, who already owned property in Norfolk and Surrey. Motteux had no direct heir, and on his death in 1843, his entire estate was left to Charles Spencer Cowper, the son of Motteux's close friend Emily Temple, Viscountess Palmerston. Cowper sold the Norfolk and the Surrey estates and embarked on rebuilding at Sandringham. He led an extravagant life, and by the early 1860s, the estate was mortgaged and he and his wife spent most of their time on the Continent.

In 1862 Sandringham and just under 8,000 acres of land were purchased for £220,000 for Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, later Edward VII, as a country home for him and his future wife, Princess Alexandra of Denmark. Between 1870 and 1900, the house was almost completely rebuilt in a style described by Pevsner as "frenetic Jacobean". Albert Edward also developed the estate, creating one of the finest shoots in England. Following his death in 1910, the estate passed to Edward's son and heir, George V, who described the house as "dear old Sandringham, the place I love better than anywhere else in the world".[2] It was the setting for the first Christmas broadcast in 1932. George died at the house on 20 January 1936. The estate passed to his son Edward VIII and, at his abdication, as the private property of the monarch, it was purchased by Edward's brother, George VI. George was as devoted to the house as his father, writing to his mother Queen Mary, "I have always been so happy here and I love the place". He died at Sandringham on 6 February 1952.

On the King's death, Sandringham passed to his daughter Elizabeth II. The Queen spent about two months each winter on the Sandringham Estate, including the anniversary of her father's death and of her own accession in early February. In 1957, she broadcast her first televised Christmas message from Sandringham. In the 1960s, plans were drawn up to demolish the house and replace it with a modern building, but these were not carried out. In 1977, to mark her Silver Jubilee, the Queen opened the house and grounds to the public for the first time. Unlike the royal palaces owned by the Crown, such as Buckingham Palace, Holyrood Palace and Windsor Castle, Sandringham (along with Balmoral Castle in Scotland) is owned personally by the monarch. In 2022, following the Queen's death, Sandringham passed to her son and heir Charles III.

History edit

Early history edit

 
The East front

Sandringham is recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as "sant-Dersingham" (the sandy part of Dersingham) and the land was awarded to a Norman knight, Robert Fitz-Corbun after the Norman Conquest.[3] The local antiquarian Claude Messent, in his study The Architecture on the Royal Estate of Sandringham, records the discovery of evidence of the pavements of a Roman villa near Appleton farm.[4] In the 15th century it was held by Anthony Woodville, Lord Scales, brother-in-law to Edward IV. In the Elizabethan era a manor was built on the site of the present house, which, by the 18th century, came into the possession of the Hoste Henley family, descendants of Dutch refugees.[5] In 1771 Cornish Henley cleared the site to build a Georgian mansion, Sandringham Hall.[6] In 1834, Henry Hoste Henley died without issue, and the estate was bought at auction by John Motteux, a London merchant.[7] Motteux was also without heirs and bequeathed Sandringham, together with another Norfolk estate and a property in Surrey, to the third son of his close friend, Emily Lamb, the wife of Lord Palmerston.[8] At the time of his inheritance in 1843, Charles Spencer Cowper was a bachelor diplomat, resident in Paris. On succeeding to Motteux's estates, he sold the other properties and based himself at Sandringham.[9] He undertook extensions to the hall, employing Samuel Sanders Teulon to add an elaborate porch and conservatory.[10] Cowper's style of living was extravagant – he and his wife spent much of their time on the Continent – and within 10 years the estate was mortgaged for £89,000.[9] The death of their only child, Mary Harriette, from cholera in 1854 led the couple to spend even more time abroad, mainly in Paris, and by the early 1860s Cowper was keen to sell the estate.[11]

Edward VII edit

In 1861 Queen Victoria's eldest son and heir, Albert Edward, was approaching his twentieth birthday. Edward's dissipated lifestyle had been disappointing to his parents, and his father, Prince Albert, thought that marriage and the purchase of a suitable establishment were necessary to ground the prince in country life and pursuits and lessen the influence of the "Marlborough House set"[a] with which he was involved.[13] Albert had his staff investigate 18 possible country estates that might be suitable, including Newstead Abbey in Nottinghamshire and Houghton Hall in Norfolk.[14] The need to act quickly was reinforced by the Nellie Clifden affair, when Edward's fellow officers smuggled the actress into his quarters. The possibility of a scandal was deeply concerning to his parents.[13] Sandringham Hall was on the list of the estates considered, and a personal recommendation to the Prince Consort from the prime minister Lord Palmerston, stepfather to the owner, swayed Prince Albert. Negotiations were only slightly delayed by Albert's death in December 1861—his widow declared, "His wishes – his plans – about everything are to be my law".[15] Edward visited in February 1862, and a sale was agreed for the house and just under 8,000 acres of land,[16] which was finalised that October.[17] Queen Victoria only twice visited the house she had paid for.[18][b] Over the course of the next forty years, and with considerable expenditure, Edward was to create a house and country estate that his friend Charles Carington[1] called "the most comfortable in England".[22]

The price paid for Sandringham, £220,000, has been described as "exorbitant".[23][24][c] This is questioned by Helen Walch, author of the estate's recent (2012) history, who shows the detailed analysis undertaken by the Prince Consort's advisers and suggests that the cost was reasonable.[17] However, the house was soon found to be too small to accommodate the Prince of Wales's establishment following his marriage in March 1863 and the many guests he wished to entertain. In 1865, two years after moving in, the prince commissioned A. J. Humbert[26] to raze the original hall and create a much larger building.[d][28] Humbert was an architect favoured by the royal family—"for no good reason", according to the architectural historian Mark Girouard—and had previously undertaken work for Queen Victoria at Osborne House[29] and at Frogmore House.[10] The new red-brick house was complete by late 1870; the only element of the original house of the Henley Hostes and the Cowpers that was retained was the elaborate conservatory designed by Teulon in the 1830s.[30] Edward had this room converted into a billiard room.[30] A plaque in the entrance hall records that "This house was built by Albert Edward Prince of Wales and Alexandra his wife in the year of our Lord 1870".[31] The building was entered through a large porte-cochère straight into the main living room (the saloon), an arrangement that was subsequently found to be inconvenient. The house provided living and sleeping accommodation over three storeys, with attics and a basement.[32] The Norfolk countryside surrounding the house appealed to Alexandra, as it reminded her of her native Denmark.[33]

 
The Norwich Gates – a wedding present to Edward and Alexandra from the gentry of Norfolk

Within a decade, the house was again found to be too small,[2] and in 1883 a new extension, the Bachelors' Wing,[2] was constructed to the designs of a Norfolk architect, Colonel R. W. Edis.[28] Edis also built a new billiard room and converted the old conservatory into a bowling alley.[28] The Prince of Wales had been impressed by one he had seen at Trentham Hall in Staffordshire,[18] and the alley at Sandringham was modelled on an example from Rumpenheim Castle, Germany.[34] In 1891, during preparations for Edward's fiftieth birthday,[35] a serious fire broke out when maids lit all the fires in the second-floor bedrooms to warm them in advance of the prince's arrival.[36][e] Edis was recalled to undertake rebuilding and further construction. As he had with the Bachelors' Wing, Edis tried to harmonise these additions with Humbert's house by following the original Jacobethan style, and by using matching brickwork and Ketton stone.[28]

The house was up to date in its facilities, the modern kitchens and lighting running on gas from the estate's own plant[38] and water being supplied from the Appleton Water Tower, constructed at the highest point on the estate.[39] The tower was designed in an Italianate style by Robert Rawlinson, and Alexandra laid the foundation stone in 1877.[40][f] The Prince's efforts as a country gentleman were approved by the press of the day; a contemporary newspaper expressed a wish to "Sandringhamize Marlborough House – as a landlord, agriculturist and country gentleman, the Prince sets an example which might be followed with advantage".[43]

The royal couple's developments at Sandringham were not confined to the house; over the course of their occupation, the wider estate was also transformed. Ornamental and kitchen gardens were established, employing over 100 gardeners at their peak.[44] Many estate buildings were constructed, including cottages for staff, kennels, a school, a rectory and a staff clubhouse, the Babingley.[45] Edward also made Sandringham one of the best sporting estates in England to provide a setting for the elaborate weekend shooting parties that became Sandringham's defining rationale.[46] To increase the amount of daylight available during the shooting season, which ran from October to February,[47] the prince introduced the tradition of Sandringham Time, whereby all the clocks on the estate were set half an hour ahead of GMT. This tradition was maintained until 1936.[48][g] Edward's entertaining was legendary,[50] and the scale of the slaughter of game birds, predominantly pheasants and partridges, was colossal. The meticulously maintained game books recorded annual bags of between 6,000 and 8,000 birds in the 1870s, rising to bags of over 20,000 a year by 1900.[51] The game larder, constructed for the storage of the carcasses, was inspired by that at Holkham Hall and was the largest in Europe.[49][h]

 
Wolferton Station, now closed – it was used by the royal family and their guests to reach Sandringham House for over 100 years

Guests for Sandringham house parties generally arrived at Wolferton railway station, 2.5 miles from the house, travelling in royal trains that ran from St Pancras Station to King's Lynn and then on to Wolferton. The station served the house from 1862 until its closure in 1969.[54] Thereafter, the Queen and others staying at the house have generally travelled by car from King's Lynn.[55] Edward VII established the Sandringham stud in 1897, achieving considerable success with the racehorses Persimmon and Diamond Jubilee.[56] Neither his son nor his grandsons evinced as much interest in horses, although the stud was maintained; but his great-granddaughter, Elizabeth II, tried to match Edward's equestrian achievements and bred several winners at the Sandringham Stud.[57]

On 14 January 1892, Edward's eldest son and heir, Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence and Avondale, died of pneumonia at the house.[58] He is commemorated in the clock tower, which bears an inscription in Latin that translates as "the hours perish and will be charged to our account".[59]

George V edit

In his will Edward VII left his widow £200,000 and a lifetime interest in the Sandringham estate.[60] Queen Alexandra's continued occupancy of the "big house" compelled George V, his wife, Queen Mary, and their expanding family to remain at York Cottage in the grounds, in rather "cramped" conditions.[61] Suggestions from courtiers that Queen Alexandra might move out were firmly rebuffed by the King; "It is my mother's house, my father built it for her".[62] The King also lacked the sociability of his father, and the shortage of space at York Cottage enabled him to limit the entertaining he undertook, with the small rooms reportedly reminding him of the onboard cabins of his naval career.[63]

 
Memorial plaque to George V in the Church of St Mary Magdalene

The new King's primary interests, aside from his constitutional duties, were shooting and stamp collecting.[64][i] He was considered one of the best shots in England, and his collections of shotguns and stamps were among the finest in the world.[j][67] Deeply conservative by nature, George sought to maintain the traditions of Sandringham estate life established by his father, and life at York Cottage provided respite from the constitutional and political struggles that overshadowed the early years of George's reign. Even greater upheaval was occasioned by the outbreak of the First World War, a dynastic struggle that involved many of his relatives, including the German Kaiser and the Russian Emperor, both of whom had previously been guests at Sandringham.[68][69][k] The estate and village of Sandringham suffered a major loss when all but two members of the King's Own Sandringham Company, a territorial unit of the Fifth Battalion of the Royal Norfolk Regiment, were killed at Suvla Bay during the Gallipoli Campaign.[71] The story of the battalion was the subject of a BBC drama, All the King's Men.[72] A memorial to the dead was raised on the estate; the names of those killed in the Second World War were added subsequently.[73]

Following Queen Alexandra's death at Sandringham on 20 November 1925, the King and his family moved to the main house.[74] In 1932, George V gave the first of the royal Christmas messages from a studio erected at Sandringham. The speech, written by Rudyard Kipling, began, "I speak now from my home and from my heart to you all".[75] George V died in his bedroom at Sandringham at 11:55 p.m. on 20 January 1936, his death hastened by injections of morphine and cocaine, to maintain the King's dignity and to enable the announcement of his death to be made in the following day's Times.[76] The King's body was moved to St Mary Magdalene's Church, a scene described by the late King's assistant private secretary, "Tommy" Lascelles. "Next evening we took him over to the little church at the end of the garden. We saw the lych-gate brilliantly lit [and] the guardsmen slung the coffin on their shoulders and laid it before the altar. After a brief service, we left it, to be watched over by the men of the Sandringham Estate."[77] Two days later, George's body was transported by train from Wolferton to London, and to its lying in state at Westminster Hall.[77]

Edward VIII edit

On the night of his father's death, Edward VIII summarily ordered that the clocks at Sandringham be returned to Greenwich Mean Time, ending the tradition of Sandringham time begun by his grandfather over 50 years earlier.[78] Edward had rarely enjoyed his visits to Sandringham, either in his father's time or that of his grandfather. He described a typical dinner at the house in a letter to his then mistress Freda Dudley Ward, dated 26 December 1919; "it's too dull and boring for words. Christ how any human beings can ever have got themselves into this pompous secluded and monotonous groove I just can't imagine". In another letter, evenings at the "big house"—Edward stayed at York Cottage with his father—were recorded as "sordidly dull and boring".[l][80] His antipathy to the house was unlikely to have been lessened by his late father's will, which was read to the family in the saloon at the house. His brothers were each left £750,000 while Edward was bequeathed no monetary assets beyond the revenues from the Duchy of Cornwall. A codicil also prevented him from selling the late King's personal possessions; Lascelles described the inheritance as "the Kingship without the cash".[81][m]

Edward's concerns regarding his income led him immediately to focus on the expense associated with running his late father's private homes. Sandringham he described as a "voracious white elephant",[83] and he asked his brother, the Duke of York to undertake a review of the management of the estate,[84] which had been costing his father £50,000 annually in subsidies at the time of his death.[85] The review recommended significant retrenchments, and its partial implementation caused considerable resentment among the dismissed staff. After the night of his father's death at Sandringham, Edward spent only one further night of his reign at the house, bringing Wallis Simpson for a shooting party in October 1936.[86] The party was interrupted by a request to meet with prime minister Stanley Baldwin, and having arrived on a Sunday, the King returned to Fort Belvedere the next day.[87] He never returned to Sandringham; and, his attention diverted by the impending crisis arising from his attachment to Simpson, within two months of his only visit to the house as king, he had abdicated.[88] On his abdication, as Sandringham and Balmoral Castle were the private property of the monarch, it was necessary for King George VI to purchase both properties. The price paid, £300,000, was a cause of friction between the new King and his brother.[89][90]

George VI edit

 
The statue of Father Time, visible from the bedroom in which George VI died, was purchased by his wife, Queen Elizabeth.

George VI had been born at Sandringham on 14 December 1895.[91] A keen follower of country pursuits, he was as devoted to the estate as his father, writing to his mother, Queen Mary, "I have always been so happy here".[92] The deep retrenchment he had proposed when commissioned by his brother to review the estate was not enacted, but economies were still made.[93] His mother was at church at Sandringham on Sunday 3 September 1939, when the outbreak of the Second World War was declared.[94] The house was shut up during the war, but occasional visits were made to the estate, with the family staying at outlying cottages. After the war the King made improvements to the gardens surrounding the house but, as traditionalist as his father, he made few other changes.[95] December 1945 saw the first celebration of Christmas at the house since 1938.[96] Lady Airlie recorded her impressions at dinner: "I sat next to the King. His face was tired and strained and he ate practically nothing. Looking at him I felt the cold fear of the probability of another short reign".[97]

George was a heavy smoker throughout his life and had an operation to remove part of his lung in September 1951.[98] He was never fully well again and died at Sandringham during the early morning of 6 February 1952. He had gone out after hares on 5 February, "shooting conspicuously well",[99] and had planned the next day's shoot before retiring at 10.30 p.m. He was discovered at 7.30 a.m. in his bedroom by his valet, having died of a coronary thrombosis at the age of 56.[100] His body was placed in the Church of St Mary Magdalene, before being taken to Wolferton Station and transported by train to London, to lie in state at Westminster Hall.[101]

Elizabeth II edit

As with her predecessors, the house remained one of the two homes owned by the Sovereign in her private capacity, rather than as head of state, the other being Balmoral Castle.[102] Following King George VI's death, Queen Elizabeth II's custom was to spend the anniversary of that and of her own accession privately with her family at Sandringham House, and, toward the end of her reign, to use it as her official base from Christmas until February.[n][104] In celebrating Christmas at Sandringham, the Queen followed the tradition of her last three predecessors, whereas her great-great-grandmother, Queen Victoria, held her celebrations at Windsor Castle.[105] The taxation arrangements of the monarch meant that no inheritance tax was paid on the Sandringham or Balmoral estates when they passed to the Queen, at a time when it was having a deleterious effect on other country estates.[106] On her accession, the Queen asked her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, to take on the responsibility for the management of the estate.[107] The Duke worked to move towards self-sufficiency,[108] generating additional income streams, taking more of the land in hand, and amalgamating many of the smaller tenant farms.[109]

 
Queen Elizabeth II at Sandringham in 2014

In January 1957 the Queen received the resignation of the Prime Minister Anthony Eden at the house. Eden's wife, Clarissa, recorded the event in her diary, "8 January – Anthony has to go through a Cabinet and listening to Harold prosing for half an hour. Then by train to Sandringham. Many photographers. We arrive into the hall where everyone is looking at the television."[110] At the end of that year, the Queen made her first televised Christmas broadcast from Sandringham.[111] In the 1960s, plans were initiated to demolish the house and replace it with a modern residence by David Roberts, an architect who worked mainly at the University of Cambridge.[35] The plans were not taken forward, but modernisation of the interior of the house and the removal of a range of ancillary buildings were carried out by Hugh Casson, who also decorated the Royal Yacht, Britannia.[35] In 1977, for her silver jubilee, the Queen opened the house to the public.[6]

Sandringham continued to operate as a sporting estate.[107] Pheasants and partridge are no longer reared for this purpose, and Sandringham is now one of the few wild shoots in England.[112] Along with her equestrian interest in the Sandringham Stud, where she bred several winning horses, the Queen developed a successful gun dog breeding programme at Sandringham.[113] Following the tradition of a kennels at Sandringham established by her great grandfather, when Queen Alexandra kept over 100 dogs on the estate, the Queen preferred black labrador retrievers,[114] over the yellow type favoured by her father, and the terriers bred by her earlier predecessors.[115]

From his retirement from official duties in August 2017 until his death in April 2021, the Duke of Edinburgh spent much of his time at Wood Farm, a large farmhouse on the Sandringham Estate used by the Duke and the Queen when not hosting guests at the main house.[116] In February 2022 the Queen celebrated the 70th anniversary of her accession at Sandringham.[117] The Queen made her last visit to Sandringham in early July 2022, for five days after completing her Platinum Jubilee celebrations.[118]

Charles III edit

On the death of his mother, the Sandringham estate passed to King Charles. In 2022, the King spent Christmas at Sandringham, continuing the tradition followed by Elizabeth II until 2020.[119][120][121] The King has stayed at Sandringham since he began treatment for cancer in February 2024.[122]

Architecture and description edit

 
The porte-cochère to the saloon, with the entrance to Edis's ballroom on the left

The house is mainly constructed of red brick with limestone dressings; Norfolk Carrstone is also prevalent, particularly in Edis's additions.[123] The tiled roof contains nine separate clusters of chimneystacks.[124] The style is Jacobethan, with inspiration drawn principally from nearby Blickling Hall.[34][o] Construction was undertaken by Goggs Brothers of Swaffham.[92] The principal rooms of the house are the saloon, the drawing room, the dining room and the ballroom, together with rooms devoted to sports, such as the gun room, or leisure, such as the bowling alley, now a library, and the billiard room.[126] The walls of the corridors connecting the principal rooms display a collection of Oriental and Indian arms and armour,[127] gathered by Edward VII on his tour of the East in 1875–1876.[128] Decoration of the house and the provision of furniture and fittings was undertaken by Holland and Sons in the 1870 rebuilding.[92]

Saloon edit

The largest room in the house, the saloon is used as the main reception room.[126] The arrangement of entry under the porte-cochère direct into the saloon proved problematic, with no ante-room in which guests could remove their hats and coats.[32] Jenkins describes the decorative style, here and elsewhere in the house, as "Osbert Lancaster's Curzon Street Baroque".[2] The room contains portraits of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert by their favourite artist Franz Xaver Winterhalter.[126] The saloon functioned as a venue for dances, until the construction of the new ballroom by Edis,[129] and has a minstrels' gallery to accommodate musicians.[32] The room contains a weighing machine; Edward VII was in the habit of requiring his guests to be weighed on their arrival, and again on their departure, to establish that his lavish hospitality had caused them to put on weight.[32]

Drawing room edit

The drawing room is described by Jenkins as "the nearest Sandringham gets to pomp".[2] On one of her two visits to the house, Victoria recorded in her journal that, after dinner, the party adjourned to "the very long and handsome drawing room with painted ceiling and two fireplaces".[128] The room contains portraits of Queen Alexandra and her daughters, Princess Louise, Princess Victoria, and Princess Maud of Wales, by Edward Hughes.[130] White marble statues complete what has been described as a "tour de force of fashionable late-Victorian decoration".[92]

Ballroom edit

The ballroom was added by Edis in 1884, to overcome the inconvenience of having only the saloon as the major room for entertaining. As this was also the main family living room, it had previously been necessary to remove the furniture when the saloon was required for dances and large entertainments. Alexandra recorded her delight at the result, "Our new ballroom is beautiful I think & a great success & avoids pulling the hall to pieces each time there is a ball or anything".[131] At the time of Queen Victoria's visit in 1889, the room was used for a theatrical performance given by Sir Henry Irving and Ellen Terry.[132] Queen Elizabeth II used the room for entertainments and as a cinema.[131]

Dining room edit

 
The dining room

The walls of the dining room are decorated with Spanish tapestries including some by Goya which were a gift from Alfonso XII of Spain.[133] The walls are panelled in oak, painted light green for Queen Mary who had been inspired by a visit to a Scottish castle.[85][p] Jill Franklin's study of the planning of Victorian country houses includes a photograph of the dining room at Sandringham with the table laid for dinner for twenty-four, a "very usual" number to seat for dinner in a major country house of the time.[134]

Appreciation edit

Sandringham House has not been admired by critics. Its chief fault is the lack of harmony between Humbert's original building and Edis's extensions, "a contrast between the northern and southern halves of the house (that) has been much criticised ever since".[37] The architectural historian John Martin Robinson wrote in 1982, "Sandringham, the latest in date of the houses of the British monarchy, is the least distinguished architecturally".[34] In his biography of Queen Mary, James Pope-Hennessy compared the house unfavourably to "a golf-hotel at St Andrews or a station-hotel at Strathpeffer".[46] Simon Jenkins considered Sandringham "unattractive", with a "grim, institutional appearance".[2] Nikolaus Pevsner described the architectural style as "frenetic";[28] Girouard expressed himself perplexed as to the preference shown by the royal family for A. J. Humbert,[29] a patronage the writer Adrian Tinniswood described as "the Victorian Royal Family's knack for choosing second-rate architects".[135] An article on the house in the June 1902 edition of Country Life opined, "of mere splendour there is not much, but of substantial comfort a good deal".[19] The writer Clive Aslet suggests that the sporting opportunities offered by the estate were the main attraction for its royal owners, rather than "the house itself, which even after rebuilding was never beguiling".[q][61]

The fittings and furnishings were also criticised; the biographer of George V, Kenneth Rose, wrote that, "except for some tapestries given by Alfonso XII,[r] Sandringham had not a single good picture, piece of furniture or other work of art".[137] Neither Edward VII nor his heir were noted for their artistic appreciation; writing of the redevelopments at Buckingham Palace undertaken by George V, and previously by Edward VII, John Martin Robinson wrote that, "the King had no more aesthetic sensibility than his father and expressed impatience with his wife's keen interest in furniture and decoration".[138] In the series of articles on the house and estate published in 1902 by Country Life to celebrate Edward VII's accession, the author noted the royal family's "set policy of preferring those pictures that have associations to those which have merely artistic merit".[46] Exceptions came to include works from the collection of mainly 20th-century English art assembled by the Queen Mother, including pieces by Edward Seago and John Piper, who produced a view of Sandringham.[139][140] John Piper's sombre palette did not always find favour with Queen Elizabeth or her husband, George VI remarking, "You seem to have very bad luck with your weather, Mr Piper".[140] The house also has an extensive holding of works by Fabergé, the world's largest, assembled by Queen Alexandra and later members of the family,[141] which includes representations of farm animals from the Sandringham estate commissioned by Edward VII as presents for his wife.[141]

Although not highly regarded as architecture, Sandringham is a rare extant example of a full-scale Victorian country house, described in the magazine Country Life as "lived in and beautifully maintained, complete with its original contents, gardens and dependent estate buildings".[92] The house, the landscaped gardens, park and woodlands are listed Grade II* on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens, Grade II* being the second-highest listing, reserved for "particularly important buildings of more than special interest".[124]

Gardens edit

 
The Upper Lake and The Nest

The gardens and country park comprise 600 acres (240 ha) of the estate[142] with the gardens extending to 49 acres (20 ha).[143] They were predominantly laid out from the 1860s, with later alterations and simplifications. Edward VII sought advice from William Broderick Thomas and Ferdinand de Rothschild, a friend and adviser to the King throughout his life. The original lake was filled and replaced with the elaborate parterres fashionable at the time.[144] These have since been removed.[145] Two new lakes were dug further from the house, and bordered by rockeries constructed of Pulhamite stone.[146] A summerhouse, called The Nest, stands above the Upper Lake, a gift in 1913 to Queen Alexandra from the comptroller of her household, General Sir Dighton Probyn.[147][s] The gardens to the north of the house, which are overlooked by the suite of rooms used by George VI, were remodelled and simplified by Geoffrey Jellicoe for the King and his wife after the Second World War.[148][149] A statue of Father Time, dating from the 18th century, was purchased by the Queen Mother and installed in 1951.[150][t] Further areas of the gardens were remodelled by Sir Eric Savill in the 1960s for Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip.[154] The extensive kitchen gardens, which in Edward VII's time included carriage drives to allow guests to view the "highly ornamental" arrangements,[124][u] were also laid to lawn during Queen Elizabeth II's reign, having proved uneconomic to maintain.[156]

Wider estate edit

 
The Museum housed in the former coach house and stables

The 20,000 acre (8,100 ha)[142] Sandringham estate has some of the finest shoots in England, and is used for royal shooting parties.[61] Covering seven villages, the estate's other main activities, aside from tourism, are arable crops and forestry.[157] The grounds provided room for Queen Alexandra's menagerie of horses, dogs, cats, and other animals.[158] In 1886 a racing pigeon loft was constructed for birds given to the Duke of York by King Leopold II of Belgium and one or more lofts for pigeons have been maintained ever since. The Norwich Gates, designed by Thomas Jeckyll[159] and made by the local firm of Barnard, Bishop and Barnard, were a wedding present for Edward and Alexandra from "the gentry of Norfolk".[29]

In 2007 Sandringham House and its grounds were designated a protected site under Section 128 of the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005. This makes it a criminal offence to trespass in the house or its grounds.[160] The Sandringham estate has a museum in the former coach house with displays of royal life and estate history.[142] The museum also houses an extensive collection of royal motor vehicles including a 1900 Daimler owned by Edward VII and a 1939 Merryweather & Sons fire engine, made for the Sandringham fire brigade which was founded in 1865 and operated independently on the estate until 1968.[161] The coach house stables and garaging were designed by A. J. Humbert at the same time as his construction of the main house.[124] The estate contains several houses with close links to the royal family.

Anmer Hall edit

Anmer Hall is a Georgian house on the grounds, purchased by the Prince of Wales in 1896.[162] Formerly occupied by the Duke of Kent,[163] it was the main country home of the Prince and Princess of Wales,[164] until their move to Adelaide Cottage at Windsor.[165]

Appleton House edit

When Prince Carl of Denmark (later King Haakon VII of Norway) and Princess Maud were married in July 1896, Appleton House was a wedding gift to them from the bride's parents, the Prince and Princess of Wales. Queen Maud became fond of Appleton, "our little house is a perfect paradise",[166] and their son, Prince Alexander (the future King Olav V of Norway), was born at the house in 1903.[167] After Queen Maud died in 1938, King Haakon returned the property.[166] The last inhabitants were King George VI and Queen Elizabeth who stayed there during a visit to Norfolk during World War II, when Sandringham was closed.[166] Lascelles considered it "an ugly villa, but not uncomfortable".[168] The house was demolished in 1984.[166]

Park House edit

Constructed by Edward VII,[169] Park House has been owned by the royal family for many years.[170] The birthplace of Diana, Princess of Wales,[171] when the house was let to her father, it was subsequently run as a hotel managed by the Leonard Cheshire charity.[172] In 2019, the charity developed plans for a £2.3m refurbishment programme, which were deferred because of the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic. The charity has since decided to discontinue the redevelopment and work with the Sandringham Estate to exit the lease.[173]

Wood Farm edit

Wood Farm has been part of the Sandringham Estate since the time of Edward VII. In the early 20th century, it was home to Prince John, the youngest of the six children of King George V and Queen Mary. Born in 1905, the Prince was epileptic, and spent much of his short life in relative seclusion at Sandringham.[174] He died at Wood Farm, his home for the last two years of his life, on 18 January 1919.[175] Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, lived at Wood Farm after retiring from royal duties.[176][177]

York Cottage edit

 
York Cottage

York Cottage, originally known as Bachelors' Cottage, was built by Edward, Prince of Wales, soon after he acquired Sandringham to provide further accommodation for guests.[178] It was home to George V from 1893 until his mother's death enabled him to move into the main house in 1925.[147] Edward VIII, by then Duke of Windsor, told his father's biographer Harold Nicolson, "Until you have seen York Cottage you will never understand my father".[179] The cottage was no more highly regarded architecturally than the main house; James Pope-Hennessy, the official biographer of Queen Mary, called it, "tremendously vulgar and emphatically, almost defiantly hideous".[v][181] Nicolson described it as a "glum little villa (with) rooms indistinguishable from those of any Surbiton or Upper Norwood home".[182] He was particularly dismissive of the royal bathing arrangements: "Oh my God! what a place. The King's and Queen's baths had lids that shut down so that when not in use they could be used as tables".[65] "It is almost incredible that the heir to so vast a heritage lived in this horrible little house."[179] Nicolson's strictures did not appear in his official biography of the King. York Cottage as of 2000 is the estate office for the Sandringham Estate.[183]

Public access edit

The country park and the visitors' centre are normally open throughout the year. The house, gardens and museum were usually opened annually from the end of March until the end of October,[184] but COVID-19 led to the closure of much of the estate. Staged re-opening took place from February 2022.[185] Following the death of Elizabeth II, Sandringham was closed for a period of official mourning.[186] The country park subsequently reopened, but the house and garden remained closed to the public until April 2023.[187]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The Marlborough House set consisted of a group of Edward's friends, many of whose backgrounds or Jewish religion made them socially unacceptable in mid-Victorian England. The Countess of Warwick, a mistress of Edward, recalled her class's dislike of the Prince's many Jewish friends: "We resented the introduction of the Jews into the social circle of the Prince of Wales ... because they had brains. As a class, we did not like brains."[12]
  2. ^ The architectural historian John Cornforth suggests that the purchase was funded by the Prince himself, "out of the capital skilfully built up for him during his minority by his father".[19][20] A. N. Wilson, in his biography of Queen Victoria, is clear that the Queen paid the bill.[21]
  3. ^ While exact comparisons are difficult, the Bank of England's inflation calculator suggests a 2017 equivalent value in the order of £25M.[25]
  4. ^ Humbert's involvement may have begun somewhat earlier. A pencil study dated circa 1862, shows a design with a massive new extension, in a Jacobethan style, standing at a right angle to the 18th-century hall.[27]
  5. ^ The damage, through the collapse of the roof and by smoke and water, was considerable, but Humbert's efforts during construction to make the house fire-proof, combined with the actions of the estate fire brigade, averted greater loss.[37]
  6. ^ Both Pevsner[35] and Messent[41] record the Appleton Water Tower as being designed by Martin ffolkes, a civil engineer and friend of the prince who lived at Hillington near Sandringham. The tower, now restored, is managed by the Landmark Trust.[42]
  7. ^ The clocks were reset to Greenwich Mean Time during the two visits to the house made by Queen Victoria who considered the practice "a wicked lie".[49]
  8. ^ Edward’s addiction to shooting led to friction with the tenant farmers on the Sandringham estate. They were forbidden from shooting rabbits and hares, a privilege reserved for the prince’s guests. The consequent damage caused to the farmers’ crops was compensated for by the estate paying “game damages”.[52] One tenant, Louisa Mary Cresswell, who farmed at Appleton, recorded her fifteen-year feud with estate staff in a memoir Eighteen Years on Sandringham Estate, published under the pseudonym ‘The Lady Farmer’ in 1877.[53]
  9. ^ James Lees-Milne, biographer of Harold Nicolson, who was in turn the biographer of George V, recorded Nicolson's despair at how he would cover the period in the King's life between his retirement from the Navy and his accession: "How was he to deal with the long blank of the King's life..? During this time the Prince, as he then was, merely shot partridges and stuck stamps into albums. For seventeen years ...he did absolutely nothing worthwhile at all".[65]
  10. ^ John Betjeman referenced both, and Sandringham House, in the first stanza of his poem, The Death of King George V:
    Spirit of well-shot woodcock, partridge, snipe
    Flutter and bear him up the Norfolk sky:
    In that red house in a red mahogany bookcase
    The stamp collection waits with mounts long dry.[66]
  11. ^ The Kaiser's visit, in November 1902, was neither a social nor a political success, King Edward commenting on his guest's departure, "Thank God he's gone".[70]
  12. ^ Edward described Christmases at Sandringham as “Dickens in a Cartier setting”.[79]
  13. ^ Lascelles's final verdict on the man he had served as Prince of Wales and King was damning, "I wasted the best years of my life in (his) service".[82]
  14. ^ The COVID-19 pandemic led to the Queen’s cancellation of her Christmas at Sandringham in both 2020 and 2021.[103]
  15. ^ There are also similarities with Somerleyton Hall, built some 30 years before in neighbouring Suffolk. That house was used as the stand-in for Sandringham House in the 2003 television drama The Lost Prince, about the life of Prince John.[125]
  16. ^ A 2008 article in the magazine Country Life suggests that the decoration was undertaken for Queen Elizabeth in 1938, following a visit to Braemar Castle.[92]
  17. ^ Queen Elizabeth II had a more ambivalent attitude to the house's merits than either her father or her grandfather. James Pope-Hennessy recorded a conversation with the Queen's aunt, Princess Alice, Duchess of Gloucester, in May 1957. "[We] discussed Sandringham and how ugly it is. Princess Alice said that she had 'once asked Lilibet shall I burn the house down for you? I'm quite ready to. Would you mind?' To which the Queen had answered 'I am not sure whether I should mind'."[136]
  18. ^ These were the Goya tapestries hung in the dining room.[133]
  19. ^ Sir Dighton was devoted to Queen Alexandra and the summerhouse bears an inscribed plaque: "The Queen's Nest – A small offering to The Blessed Lady from Her Beloved Majesty's very devoted old servant General Probyn 1913 – Today, tomorrow and every day, God bless her and guard her I fervently pray".[147]
  20. ^ Sir Robin Mackworth-Young's 1993 guide suggests the statue was purchased by Queen Mary.[151] George Plumptre follows Mackworth-Young,[152] but both Walch and Titchmarsh disagree.[153]
  21. ^ The Prince of Wales liked to claim that the development of the kitchen gardens was entirely funded from his racing winnings. When showing guests around, the Prince would murmur, "Persimmon, all Persimmon".[155]
  22. ^ Pope-Hennessy was often no more impressed by the courtiers and staff he encountered during his research visits to Sandringham. Of Lady Willans, widow of one of the royal doctors, he wrote: "She told me several totally pointless anecdotes ...[she] is one of those numerous and obeisant throng of royal snobs which flourish like fungi in the shadow of royalty."[180]

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Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Sandringham Estate website
  • Sandringham House entry from the English Monarchs website
  • Recording of King George V giving the first Royal Christmas Message from Sandringham in 1932
  • Pathé News footage of the transportation of the coffin of George V to Wolferton Station at the start of its journey to London

sandringham, house, country, house, parish, sandringham, norfolk, england, royal, residences, charles, whose, grandfather, george, great, grandfather, george, both, died, there, house, stands, acre, estate, norfolk, coast, area, outstanding, natural, beauty, h. Sandringham House is a country house in the parish of Sandringham Norfolk England It is one of the royal residences of Charles III whose grandfather George VI and great grandfather George V both died there The house stands in a 20 000 acre 8 100 ha estate in the Norfolk Coast Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty The house is listed as Grade II and the landscaped gardens park and woodlands are on the National Register of Historic Parks and Gardens Sandringham House The most comfortable house in England 1 TypeCountry houseLocationNear Sandringham Norfolk EnglandCoordinates52 49 47 N 0 30 50 E 52 82972 N 0 51389 E 52 82972 0 51389Built1870 1892Built forAlbert Edward Prince of WalesArchitectA J HumbertRobert William EdisArchitectural style s JacobethanOwnerCharles III personally National Register of Historic Parks and GardensOfficial nameSandringham HouseTypeGrade II Designated18 September 1987Reference no 1001017Location in Norfolk EnglandShow map of NorfolkSandringham House the United Kingdom Show map of the United KingdomThe site has been occupied since Elizabethan times when a large manor house was constructed This was replaced in 1771 by a Georgian mansion for the owners the Hoste Henleys In 1836 Sandringham was bought by John Motteux a London merchant who already owned property in Norfolk and Surrey Motteux had no direct heir and on his death in 1843 his entire estate was left to Charles Spencer Cowper the son of Motteux s close friend Emily Temple Viscountess Palmerston Cowper sold the Norfolk and the Surrey estates and embarked on rebuilding at Sandringham He led an extravagant life and by the early 1860s the estate was mortgaged and he and his wife spent most of their time on the Continent In 1862 Sandringham and just under 8 000 acres of land were purchased for 220 000 for Albert Edward Prince of Wales later Edward VII as a country home for him and his future wife Princess Alexandra of Denmark Between 1870 and 1900 the house was almost completely rebuilt in a style described by Pevsner as frenetic Jacobean Albert Edward also developed the estate creating one of the finest shoots in England Following his death in 1910 the estate passed to Edward s son and heir George V who described the house as dear old Sandringham the place I love better than anywhere else in the world 2 It was the setting for the first Christmas broadcast in 1932 George died at the house on 20 January 1936 The estate passed to his son Edward VIII and at his abdication as the private property of the monarch it was purchased by Edward s brother George VI George was as devoted to the house as his father writing to his mother Queen Mary I have always been so happy here and I love the place He died at Sandringham on 6 February 1952 On the King s death Sandringham passed to his daughter Elizabeth II The Queen spent about two months each winter on the Sandringham Estate including the anniversary of her father s death and of her own accession in early February In 1957 she broadcast her first televised Christmas message from Sandringham In the 1960s plans were drawn up to demolish the house and replace it with a modern building but these were not carried out In 1977 to mark her Silver Jubilee the Queen opened the house and grounds to the public for the first time Unlike the royal palaces owned by the Crown such as Buckingham Palace Holyrood Palace and Windsor Castle Sandringham along with Balmoral Castle in Scotland is owned personally by the monarch In 2022 following the Queen s death Sandringham passed to her son and heir Charles III Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Edward VII 1 3 George V 1 4 Edward VIII 1 5 George VI 1 6 Elizabeth II 1 7 Charles III 2 Architecture and description 2 1 Saloon 2 2 Drawing room 2 3 Ballroom 2 4 Dining room 2 5 Appreciation 3 Gardens 4 Wider estate 4 1 Anmer Hall 4 2 Appleton House 4 3 Park House 4 4 Wood Farm 4 5 York Cottage 5 Public access 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksHistory editEarly history edit nbsp The East frontSandringham is recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as sant Dersingham the sandy part of Dersingham and the land was awarded to a Norman knight Robert Fitz Corbun after the Norman Conquest 3 The local antiquarian Claude Messent in his study The Architecture on the Royal Estate of Sandringham records the discovery of evidence of the pavements of a Roman villa near Appleton farm 4 In the 15th century it was held by Anthony Woodville Lord Scales brother in law to Edward IV In the Elizabethan era a manor was built on the site of the present house which by the 18th century came into the possession of the Hoste Henley family descendants of Dutch refugees 5 In 1771 Cornish Henley cleared the site to build a Georgian mansion Sandringham Hall 6 In 1834 Henry Hoste Henley died without issue and the estate was bought at auction by John Motteux a London merchant 7 Motteux was also without heirs and bequeathed Sandringham together with another Norfolk estate and a property in Surrey to the third son of his close friend Emily Lamb the wife of Lord Palmerston 8 At the time of his inheritance in 1843 Charles Spencer Cowper was a bachelor diplomat resident in Paris On succeeding to Motteux s estates he sold the other properties and based himself at Sandringham 9 He undertook extensions to the hall employing Samuel Sanders Teulon to add an elaborate porch and conservatory 10 Cowper s style of living was extravagant he and his wife spent much of their time on the Continent and within 10 years the estate was mortgaged for 89 000 9 The death of their only child Mary Harriette from cholera in 1854 led the couple to spend even more time abroad mainly in Paris and by the early 1860s Cowper was keen to sell the estate 11 Edward VII edit In 1861 Queen Victoria s eldest son and heir Albert Edward was approaching his twentieth birthday Edward s dissipated lifestyle had been disappointing to his parents and his father Prince Albert thought that marriage and the purchase of a suitable establishment were necessary to ground the prince in country life and pursuits and lessen the influence of the Marlborough House set a with which he was involved 13 Albert had his staff investigate 18 possible country estates that might be suitable including Newstead Abbey in Nottinghamshire and Houghton Hall in Norfolk 14 The need to act quickly was reinforced by the Nellie Clifden affair when Edward s fellow officers smuggled the actress into his quarters The possibility of a scandal was deeply concerning to his parents 13 Sandringham Hall was on the list of the estates considered and a personal recommendation to the Prince Consort from the prime minister Lord Palmerston stepfather to the owner swayed Prince Albert Negotiations were only slightly delayed by Albert s death in December 1861 his widow declared His wishes his plans about everything are to be my law 15 Edward visited in February 1862 and a sale was agreed for the house and just under 8 000 acres of land 16 which was finalised that October 17 Queen Victoria only twice visited the house she had paid for 18 b Over the course of the next forty years and with considerable expenditure Edward was to create a house and country estate that his friend Charles Carington 1 called the most comfortable in England 22 The price paid for Sandringham 220 000 has been described as exorbitant 23 24 c This is questioned by Helen Walch author of the estate s recent 2012 history who shows the detailed analysis undertaken by the Prince Consort s advisers and suggests that the cost was reasonable 17 However the house was soon found to be too small to accommodate the Prince of Wales s establishment following his marriage in March 1863 and the many guests he wished to entertain In 1865 two years after moving in the prince commissioned A J Humbert 26 to raze the original hall and create a much larger building d 28 Humbert was an architect favoured by the royal family for no good reason according to the architectural historian Mark Girouard and had previously undertaken work for Queen Victoria at Osborne House 29 and at Frogmore House 10 The new red brick house was complete by late 1870 the only element of the original house of the Henley Hostes and the Cowpers that was retained was the elaborate conservatory designed by Teulon in the 1830s 30 Edward had this room converted into a billiard room 30 A plaque in the entrance hall records that This house was built by Albert Edward Prince of Wales and Alexandra his wife in the year of our Lord 1870 31 The building was entered through a large porte cochere straight into the main living room the saloon an arrangement that was subsequently found to be inconvenient The house provided living and sleeping accommodation over three storeys with attics and a basement 32 The Norfolk countryside surrounding the house appealed to Alexandra as it reminded her of her native Denmark 33 nbsp The Norwich Gates a wedding present to Edward and Alexandra from the gentry of NorfolkWithin a decade the house was again found to be too small 2 and in 1883 a new extension the Bachelors Wing 2 was constructed to the designs of a Norfolk architect Colonel R W Edis 28 Edis also built a new billiard room and converted the old conservatory into a bowling alley 28 The Prince of Wales had been impressed by one he had seen at Trentham Hall in Staffordshire 18 and the alley at Sandringham was modelled on an example from Rumpenheim Castle Germany 34 In 1891 during preparations for Edward s fiftieth birthday 35 a serious fire broke out when maids lit all the fires in the second floor bedrooms to warm them in advance of the prince s arrival 36 e Edis was recalled to undertake rebuilding and further construction As he had with the Bachelors Wing Edis tried to harmonise these additions with Humbert s house by following the original Jacobethan style and by using matching brickwork and Ketton stone 28 The house was up to date in its facilities the modern kitchens and lighting running on gas from the estate s own plant 38 and water being supplied from the Appleton Water Tower constructed at the highest point on the estate 39 The tower was designed in an Italianate style by Robert Rawlinson and Alexandra laid the foundation stone in 1877 40 f The Prince s efforts as a country gentleman were approved by the press of the day a contemporary newspaper expressed a wish to Sandringhamize Marlborough House as a landlord agriculturist and country gentleman the Prince sets an example which might be followed with advantage 43 The royal couple s developments at Sandringham were not confined to the house over the course of their occupation the wider estate was also transformed Ornamental and kitchen gardens were established employing over 100 gardeners at their peak 44 Many estate buildings were constructed including cottages for staff kennels a school a rectory and a staff clubhouse the Babingley 45 Edward also made Sandringham one of the best sporting estates in England to provide a setting for the elaborate weekend shooting parties that became Sandringham s defining rationale 46 To increase the amount of daylight available during the shooting season which ran from October to February 47 the prince introduced the tradition of Sandringham Time whereby all the clocks on the estate were set half an hour ahead of GMT This tradition was maintained until 1936 48 g Edward s entertaining was legendary 50 and the scale of the slaughter of game birds predominantly pheasants and partridges was colossal The meticulously maintained game books recorded annual bags of between 6 000 and 8 000 birds in the 1870s rising to bags of over 20 000 a year by 1900 51 The game larder constructed for the storage of the carcasses was inspired by that at Holkham Hall and was the largest in Europe 49 h nbsp Wolferton Station now closed it was used by the royal family and their guests to reach Sandringham House for over 100 yearsGuests for Sandringham house parties generally arrived at Wolferton railway station 2 5 miles from the house travelling in royal trains that ran from St Pancras Station to King s Lynn and then on to Wolferton The station served the house from 1862 until its closure in 1969 54 Thereafter the Queen and others staying at the house have generally travelled by car from King s Lynn 55 Edward VII established the Sandringham stud in 1897 achieving considerable success with the racehorses Persimmon and Diamond Jubilee 56 Neither his son nor his grandsons evinced as much interest in horses although the stud was maintained but his great granddaughter Elizabeth II tried to match Edward s equestrian achievements and bred several winners at the Sandringham Stud 57 On 14 January 1892 Edward s eldest son and heir Prince Albert Victor Duke of Clarence and Avondale died of pneumonia at the house 58 He is commemorated in the clock tower which bears an inscription in Latin that translates as the hours perish and will be charged to our account 59 George V edit In his will Edward VII left his widow 200 000 and a lifetime interest in the Sandringham estate 60 Queen Alexandra s continued occupancy of the big house compelled George V his wife Queen Mary and their expanding family to remain at York Cottage in the grounds in rather cramped conditions 61 Suggestions from courtiers that Queen Alexandra might move out were firmly rebuffed by the King It is my mother s house my father built it for her 62 The King also lacked the sociability of his father and the shortage of space at York Cottage enabled him to limit the entertaining he undertook with the small rooms reportedly reminding him of the onboard cabins of his naval career 63 nbsp Memorial plaque to George V in the Church of St Mary MagdaleneThe new King s primary interests aside from his constitutional duties were shooting and stamp collecting 64 i He was considered one of the best shots in England and his collections of shotguns and stamps were among the finest in the world j 67 Deeply conservative by nature George sought to maintain the traditions of Sandringham estate life established by his father and life at York Cottage provided respite from the constitutional and political struggles that overshadowed the early years of George s reign Even greater upheaval was occasioned by the outbreak of the First World War a dynastic struggle that involved many of his relatives including the German Kaiser and the Russian Emperor both of whom had previously been guests at Sandringham 68 69 k The estate and village of Sandringham suffered a major loss when all but two members of the King s Own Sandringham Company a territorial unit of the Fifth Battalion of the Royal Norfolk Regiment were killed at Suvla Bay during the Gallipoli Campaign 71 The story of the battalion was the subject of a BBC drama All the King s Men 72 A memorial to the dead was raised on the estate the names of those killed in the Second World War were added subsequently 73 Following Queen Alexandra s death at Sandringham on 20 November 1925 the King and his family moved to the main house 74 In 1932 George V gave the first of the royal Christmas messages from a studio erected at Sandringham The speech written by Rudyard Kipling began I speak now from my home and from my heart to you all 75 George V died in his bedroom at Sandringham at 11 55 p m on 20 January 1936 his death hastened by injections of morphine and cocaine to maintain the King s dignity and to enable the announcement of his death to be made in the following day s Times 76 The King s body was moved to St Mary Magdalene s Church a scene described by the late King s assistant private secretary Tommy Lascelles Next evening we took him over to the little church at the end of the garden We saw the lych gate brilliantly lit and the guardsmen slung the coffin on their shoulders and laid it before the altar After a brief service we left it to be watched over by the men of the Sandringham Estate 77 Two days later George s body was transported by train from Wolferton to London and to its lying in state at Westminster Hall 77 Edward VIII edit On the night of his father s death Edward VIII summarily ordered that the clocks at Sandringham be returned to Greenwich Mean Time ending the tradition of Sandringham time begun by his grandfather over 50 years earlier 78 Edward had rarely enjoyed his visits to Sandringham either in his father s time or that of his grandfather He described a typical dinner at the house in a letter to his then mistress Freda Dudley Ward dated 26 December 1919 it s too dull and boring for words Christ how any human beings can ever have got themselves into this pompous secluded and monotonous groove I just can t imagine In another letter evenings at the big house Edward stayed at York Cottage with his father were recorded as sordidly dull and boring l 80 His antipathy to the house was unlikely to have been lessened by his late father s will which was read to the family in the saloon at the house His brothers were each left 750 000 while Edward was bequeathed no monetary assets beyond the revenues from the Duchy of Cornwall A codicil also prevented him from selling the late King s personal possessions Lascelles described the inheritance as the Kingship without the cash 81 m Edward s concerns regarding his income led him immediately to focus on the expense associated with running his late father s private homes Sandringham he described as a voracious white elephant 83 and he asked his brother the Duke of York to undertake a review of the management of the estate 84 which had been costing his father 50 000 annually in subsidies at the time of his death 85 The review recommended significant retrenchments and its partial implementation caused considerable resentment among the dismissed staff After the night of his father s death at Sandringham Edward spent only one further night of his reign at the house bringing Wallis Simpson for a shooting party in October 1936 86 The party was interrupted by a request to meet with prime minister Stanley Baldwin and having arrived on a Sunday the King returned to Fort Belvedere the next day 87 He never returned to Sandringham and his attention diverted by the impending crisis arising from his attachment to Simpson within two months of his only visit to the house as king he had abdicated 88 On his abdication as Sandringham and Balmoral Castle were the private property of the monarch it was necessary for King George VI to purchase both properties The price paid 300 000 was a cause of friction between the new King and his brother 89 90 George VI edit nbsp The statue of Father Time visible from the bedroom in which George VI died was purchased by his wife Queen Elizabeth George VI had been born at Sandringham on 14 December 1895 91 A keen follower of country pursuits he was as devoted to the estate as his father writing to his mother Queen Mary I have always been so happy here 92 The deep retrenchment he had proposed when commissioned by his brother to review the estate was not enacted but economies were still made 93 His mother was at church at Sandringham on Sunday 3 September 1939 when the outbreak of the Second World War was declared 94 The house was shut up during the war but occasional visits were made to the estate with the family staying at outlying cottages After the war the King made improvements to the gardens surrounding the house but as traditionalist as his father he made few other changes 95 December 1945 saw the first celebration of Christmas at the house since 1938 96 Lady Airlie recorded her impressions at dinner I sat next to the King His face was tired and strained and he ate practically nothing Looking at him I felt the cold fear of the probability of another short reign 97 George was a heavy smoker throughout his life and had an operation to remove part of his lung in September 1951 98 He was never fully well again and died at Sandringham during the early morning of 6 February 1952 He had gone out after hares on 5 February shooting conspicuously well 99 and had planned the next day s shoot before retiring at 10 30 p m He was discovered at 7 30 a m in his bedroom by his valet having died of a coronary thrombosis at the age of 56 100 His body was placed in the Church of St Mary Magdalene before being taken to Wolferton Station and transported by train to London to lie in state at Westminster Hall 101 Elizabeth II edit As with her predecessors the house remained one of the two homes owned by the Sovereign in her private capacity rather than as head of state the other being Balmoral Castle 102 Following King George VI s death Queen Elizabeth II s custom was to spend the anniversary of that and of her own accession privately with her family at Sandringham House and toward the end of her reign to use it as her official base from Christmas until February n 104 In celebrating Christmas at Sandringham the Queen followed the tradition of her last three predecessors whereas her great great grandmother Queen Victoria held her celebrations at Windsor Castle 105 The taxation arrangements of the monarch meant that no inheritance tax was paid on the Sandringham or Balmoral estates when they passed to the Queen at a time when it was having a deleterious effect on other country estates 106 On her accession the Queen asked her husband the Duke of Edinburgh to take on the responsibility for the management of the estate 107 The Duke worked to move towards self sufficiency 108 generating additional income streams taking more of the land in hand and amalgamating many of the smaller tenant farms 109 nbsp Queen Elizabeth II at Sandringham in 2014In January 1957 the Queen received the resignation of the Prime Minister Anthony Eden at the house Eden s wife Clarissa recorded the event in her diary 8 January Anthony has to go through a Cabinet and listening to Harold prosing for half an hour Then by train to Sandringham Many photographers We arrive into the hall where everyone is looking at the television 110 At the end of that year the Queen made her first televised Christmas broadcast from Sandringham 111 In the 1960s plans were initiated to demolish the house and replace it with a modern residence by David Roberts an architect who worked mainly at the University of Cambridge 35 The plans were not taken forward but modernisation of the interior of the house and the removal of a range of ancillary buildings were carried out by Hugh Casson who also decorated the Royal Yacht Britannia 35 In 1977 for her silver jubilee the Queen opened the house to the public 6 Sandringham continued to operate as a sporting estate 107 Pheasants and partridge are no longer reared for this purpose and Sandringham is now one of the few wild shoots in England 112 Along with her equestrian interest in the Sandringham Stud where she bred several winning horses the Queen developed a successful gun dog breeding programme at Sandringham 113 Following the tradition of a kennels at Sandringham established by her great grandfather when Queen Alexandra kept over 100 dogs on the estate the Queen preferred black labrador retrievers 114 over the yellow type favoured by her father and the terriers bred by her earlier predecessors 115 From his retirement from official duties in August 2017 until his death in April 2021 the Duke of Edinburgh spent much of his time at Wood Farm a large farmhouse on the Sandringham Estate used by the Duke and the Queen when not hosting guests at the main house 116 In February 2022 the Queen celebrated the 70th anniversary of her accession at Sandringham 117 The Queen made her last visit to Sandringham in early July 2022 for five days after completing her Platinum Jubilee celebrations 118 Charles III edit On the death of his mother the Sandringham estate passed to King Charles In 2022 the King spent Christmas at Sandringham continuing the tradition followed by Elizabeth II until 2020 119 120 121 The King has stayed at Sandringham since he began treatment for cancer in February 2024 122 Architecture and description edit nbsp The porte cochere to the saloon with the entrance to Edis s ballroom on the leftThe house is mainly constructed of red brick with limestone dressings Norfolk Carrstone is also prevalent particularly in Edis s additions 123 The tiled roof contains nine separate clusters of chimneystacks 124 The style is Jacobethan with inspiration drawn principally from nearby Blickling Hall 34 o Construction was undertaken by Goggs Brothers of Swaffham 92 The principal rooms of the house are the saloon the drawing room the dining room and the ballroom together with rooms devoted to sports such as the gun room or leisure such as the bowling alley now a library and the billiard room 126 The walls of the corridors connecting the principal rooms display a collection of Oriental and Indian arms and armour 127 gathered by Edward VII on his tour of the East in 1875 1876 128 Decoration of the house and the provision of furniture and fittings was undertaken by Holland and Sons in the 1870 rebuilding 92 Saloon edit The largest room in the house the saloon is used as the main reception room 126 The arrangement of entry under the porte cochere direct into the saloon proved problematic with no ante room in which guests could remove their hats and coats 32 Jenkins describes the decorative style here and elsewhere in the house as Osbert Lancaster s Curzon Street Baroque 2 The room contains portraits of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert by their favourite artist Franz Xaver Winterhalter 126 The saloon functioned as a venue for dances until the construction of the new ballroom by Edis 129 and has a minstrels gallery to accommodate musicians 32 The room contains a weighing machine Edward VII was in the habit of requiring his guests to be weighed on their arrival and again on their departure to establish that his lavish hospitality had caused them to put on weight 32 Drawing room edit The drawing room is described by Jenkins as the nearest Sandringham gets to pomp 2 On one of her two visits to the house Victoria recorded in her journal that after dinner the party adjourned to the very long and handsome drawing room with painted ceiling and two fireplaces 128 The room contains portraits of Queen Alexandra and her daughters Princess Louise Princess Victoria and Princess Maud of Wales by Edward Hughes 130 White marble statues complete what has been described as a tour de force of fashionable late Victorian decoration 92 Ballroom edit The ballroom was added by Edis in 1884 to overcome the inconvenience of having only the saloon as the major room for entertaining As this was also the main family living room it had previously been necessary to remove the furniture when the saloon was required for dances and large entertainments Alexandra recorded her delight at the result Our new ballroom is beautiful I think amp a great success amp avoids pulling the hall to pieces each time there is a ball or anything 131 At the time of Queen Victoria s visit in 1889 the room was used for a theatrical performance given by Sir Henry Irving and Ellen Terry 132 Queen Elizabeth II used the room for entertainments and as a cinema 131 Dining room edit nbsp The dining roomThe walls of the dining room are decorated with Spanish tapestries including some by Goya which were a gift from Alfonso XII of Spain 133 The walls are panelled in oak painted light green for Queen Mary who had been inspired by a visit to a Scottish castle 85 p Jill Franklin s study of the planning of Victorian country houses includes a photograph of the dining room at Sandringham with the table laid for dinner for twenty four a very usual number to seat for dinner in a major country house of the time 134 Appreciation edit Sandringham House has not been admired by critics Its chief fault is the lack of harmony between Humbert s original building and Edis s extensions a contrast between the northern and southern halves of the house that has been much criticised ever since 37 The architectural historian John Martin Robinson wrote in 1982 Sandringham the latest in date of the houses of the British monarchy is the least distinguished architecturally 34 In his biography of Queen Mary James Pope Hennessy compared the house unfavourably to a golf hotel at St Andrews or a station hotel at Strathpeffer 46 Simon Jenkins considered Sandringham unattractive with a grim institutional appearance 2 Nikolaus Pevsner described the architectural style as frenetic 28 Girouard expressed himself perplexed as to the preference shown by the royal family for A J Humbert 29 a patronage the writer Adrian Tinniswood described as the Victorian Royal Family s knack for choosing second rate architects 135 An article on the house in the June 1902 edition of Country Life opined of mere splendour there is not much but of substantial comfort a good deal 19 The writer Clive Aslet suggests that the sporting opportunities offered by the estate were the main attraction for its royal owners rather than the house itself which even after rebuilding was never beguiling q 61 The fittings and furnishings were also criticised the biographer of George V Kenneth Rose wrote that except for some tapestries given by Alfonso XII r Sandringham had not a single good picture piece of furniture or other work of art 137 Neither Edward VII nor his heir were noted for their artistic appreciation writing of the redevelopments at Buckingham Palace undertaken by George V and previously by Edward VII John Martin Robinson wrote that the King had no more aesthetic sensibility than his father and expressed impatience with his wife s keen interest in furniture and decoration 138 In the series of articles on the house and estate published in 1902 by Country Life to celebrate Edward VII s accession the author noted the royal family s set policy of preferring those pictures that have associations to those which have merely artistic merit 46 Exceptions came to include works from the collection of mainly 20th century English art assembled by the Queen Mother including pieces by Edward Seago and John Piper who produced a view of Sandringham 139 140 John Piper s sombre palette did not always find favour with Queen Elizabeth or her husband George VI remarking You seem to have very bad luck with your weather Mr Piper 140 The house also has an extensive holding of works by Faberge the world s largest assembled by Queen Alexandra and later members of the family 141 which includes representations of farm animals from the Sandringham estate commissioned by Edward VII as presents for his wife 141 Although not highly regarded as architecture Sandringham is a rare extant example of a full scale Victorian country house described in the magazine Country Life as lived in and beautifully maintained complete with its original contents gardens and dependent estate buildings 92 The house the landscaped gardens park and woodlands are listed Grade II on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens Grade II being the second highest listing reserved for particularly important buildings of more than special interest 124 Gardens edit nbsp The Upper Lake and The NestThe gardens and country park comprise 600 acres 240 ha of the estate 142 with the gardens extending to 49 acres 20 ha 143 They were predominantly laid out from the 1860s with later alterations and simplifications Edward VII sought advice from William Broderick Thomas and Ferdinand de Rothschild a friend and adviser to the King throughout his life The original lake was filled and replaced with the elaborate parterres fashionable at the time 144 These have since been removed 145 Two new lakes were dug further from the house and bordered by rockeries constructed of Pulhamite stone 146 A summerhouse called The Nest stands above the Upper Lake a gift in 1913 to Queen Alexandra from the comptroller of her household General Sir Dighton Probyn 147 s The gardens to the north of the house which are overlooked by the suite of rooms used by George VI were remodelled and simplified by Geoffrey Jellicoe for the King and his wife after the Second World War 148 149 A statue of Father Time dating from the 18th century was purchased by the Queen Mother and installed in 1951 150 t Further areas of the gardens were remodelled by Sir Eric Savill in the 1960s for Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip 154 The extensive kitchen gardens which in Edward VII s time included carriage drives to allow guests to view the highly ornamental arrangements 124 u were also laid to lawn during Queen Elizabeth II s reign having proved uneconomic to maintain 156 Wider estate edit nbsp The Museum housed in the former coach house and stablesThe 20 000 acre 8 100 ha 142 Sandringham estate has some of the finest shoots in England and is used for royal shooting parties 61 Covering seven villages the estate s other main activities aside from tourism are arable crops and forestry 157 The grounds provided room for Queen Alexandra s menagerie of horses dogs cats and other animals 158 In 1886 a racing pigeon loft was constructed for birds given to the Duke of York by King Leopold II of Belgium and one or more lofts for pigeons have been maintained ever since The Norwich Gates designed by Thomas Jeckyll 159 and made by the local firm of Barnard Bishop and Barnard were a wedding present for Edward and Alexandra from the gentry of Norfolk 29 In 2007 Sandringham House and its grounds were designated a protected site under Section 128 of the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005 This makes it a criminal offence to trespass in the house or its grounds 160 The Sandringham estate has a museum in the former coach house with displays of royal life and estate history 142 The museum also houses an extensive collection of royal motor vehicles including a 1900 Daimler owned by Edward VII and a 1939 Merryweather amp Sons fire engine made for the Sandringham fire brigade which was founded in 1865 and operated independently on the estate until 1968 161 The coach house stables and garaging were designed by A J Humbert at the same time as his construction of the main house 124 The estate contains several houses with close links to the royal family Anmer Hall edit Main article Anmer Hall Anmer Hall is a Georgian house on the grounds purchased by the Prince of Wales in 1896 162 Formerly occupied by the Duke of Kent 163 it was the main country home of the Prince and Princess of Wales 164 until their move to Adelaide Cottage at Windsor 165 Appleton House edit When Prince Carl of Denmark later King Haakon VII of Norway and Princess Maud were married in July 1896 Appleton House was a wedding gift to them from the bride s parents the Prince and Princess of Wales Queen Maud became fond of Appleton our little house is a perfect paradise 166 and their son Prince Alexander the future King Olav V of Norway was born at the house in 1903 167 After Queen Maud died in 1938 King Haakon returned the property 166 The last inhabitants were King George VI and Queen Elizabeth who stayed there during a visit to Norfolk during World War II when Sandringham was closed 166 Lascelles considered it an ugly villa but not uncomfortable 168 The house was demolished in 1984 166 Park House edit Constructed by Edward VII 169 Park House has been owned by the royal family for many years 170 The birthplace of Diana Princess of Wales 171 when the house was let to her father it was subsequently run as a hotel managed by the Leonard Cheshire charity 172 In 2019 the charity developed plans for a 2 3m refurbishment programme which were deferred because of the 2020 COVID 19 pandemic The charity has since decided to discontinue the redevelopment and work with the Sandringham Estate to exit the lease 173 Wood Farm edit Main article Wood Farm Wood Farm has been part of the Sandringham Estate since the time of Edward VII In the early 20th century it was home to Prince John the youngest of the six children of King George V and Queen Mary Born in 1905 the Prince was epileptic and spent much of his short life in relative seclusion at Sandringham 174 He died at Wood Farm his home for the last two years of his life on 18 January 1919 175 Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh lived at Wood Farm after retiring from royal duties 176 177 York Cottage edit nbsp York CottageMain article York Cottage York Cottage originally known as Bachelors Cottage was built by Edward Prince of Wales soon after he acquired Sandringham to provide further accommodation for guests 178 It was home to George V from 1893 until his mother s death enabled him to move into the main house in 1925 147 Edward VIII by then Duke of Windsor told his father s biographer Harold Nicolson Until you have seen York Cottage you will never understand my father 179 The cottage was no more highly regarded architecturally than the main house James Pope Hennessy the official biographer of Queen Mary called it tremendously vulgar and emphatically almost defiantly hideous v 181 Nicolson described it as a glum little villa with rooms indistinguishable from those of any Surbiton or Upper Norwood home 182 He was particularly dismissive of the royal bathing arrangements Oh my God what a place The King s and Queen s baths had lids that shut down so that when not in use they could be used as tables 65 It is almost incredible that the heir to so vast a heritage lived in this horrible little house 179 Nicolson s strictures did not appear in his official biography of the King York Cottage as of 2000 update is the estate office for the Sandringham Estate 183 Public access editThe country park and the visitors centre are normally open throughout the year The house gardens and museum were usually opened annually from the end of March until the end of October 184 but COVID 19 led to the closure of much of the estate Staged re opening took place from February 2022 185 Following the death of Elizabeth II Sandringham was closed for a period of official mourning 186 The country park subsequently reopened but the house and garden remained closed to the public until April 2023 187 See also editSt Mary Magdalene Church SandringhamNotes edit The Marlborough House set consisted of a group of Edward s friends many of whose backgrounds or Jewish religion made them socially unacceptable in mid Victorian England The Countess of Warwick a mistress of Edward recalled her class s dislike of the Prince s many Jewish friends We resented the introduction of the Jews into the social circle of the Prince of Wales because they had brains As a class we did not like brains 12 The architectural historian John Cornforth suggests that the purchase was funded by the Prince himself out of the capital skilfully built up for him during his minority by his father 19 20 A N Wilson in his biography of Queen Victoria is clear that the Queen paid the bill 21 While exact comparisons are difficult the Bank of England s inflation calculator suggests a 2017 equivalent value in the order of 25M 25 Humbert s involvement may have begun somewhat earlier A pencil study dated circa 1862 shows a design with a massive new extension in a Jacobethan style standing at a right angle to the 18th century hall 27 The damage through the collapse of the roof and by smoke and water was considerable but Humbert s efforts during construction to make the house fire proof combined with the actions of the estate fire brigade averted greater loss 37 Both Pevsner 35 and Messent 41 record the Appleton Water Tower as being designed by Martin ffolkes a civil engineer and friend of the prince who lived at Hillington near Sandringham The tower now restored is managed by the Landmark Trust 42 The clocks were reset to Greenwich Mean Time during the two visits to the house made by Queen Victoria who considered the practice a wicked lie 49 Edward s addiction to shooting led to friction with the tenant farmers on the Sandringham estate They were forbidden from shooting rabbits and hares a privilege reserved for the prince s guests The consequent damage caused to the farmers crops was compensated for by the estate paying game damages 52 One tenant Louisa Mary Cresswell who farmed at Appleton recorded her fifteen year feud with estate staff in a memoir Eighteen Years on Sandringham Estate published under the pseudonym The Lady Farmer in 1877 53 James Lees Milne biographer of Harold Nicolson who was in turn the biographer of George V recorded Nicolson s despair at how he would cover the period in the King s life between his retirement from the Navy and his accession How was he to deal with the long blank of the King s life During this time the Prince as he then was merely shot partridges and stuck stamps into albums For seventeen years he did absolutely nothing worthwhile at all 65 John Betjeman referenced both and Sandringham House in the first stanza of his poem The Death of King George V Spirit of well shot woodcock partridge snipe Flutter and bear him up the Norfolk sky In that red house in a red mahogany bookcase The stamp collection waits with mounts long dry 66 The Kaiser s visit in November 1902 was neither a social nor a political success King Edward commenting on his guest s departure Thank God he s gone 70 Edward described Christmases at Sandringham as Dickens in a Cartier setting 79 Lascelles s final verdict on the man he had served as Prince of Wales and King was damning I wasted the best years of my life in his service 82 The COVID 19 pandemic led to the Queen s cancellation of her Christmas at Sandringham in both 2020 and 2021 103 There are also similarities with Somerleyton Hall built some 30 years before in neighbouring Suffolk That house was used as the stand in for Sandringham House in the 2003 television drama The Lost Prince about the life of Prince John 125 A 2008 article in the magazine Country Life suggests that the decoration was undertaken for Queen Elizabeth in 1938 following a visit to Braemar Castle 92 Queen Elizabeth II had a more ambivalent attitude to the house s merits than either her father or her grandfather James Pope Hennessy recorded a conversation with the Queen s aunt Princess Alice Duchess of Gloucester in May 1957 We discussed Sandringham and how ugly it is Princess Alice said that she had once asked Lilibet shall I burn the house down for you I m quite ready to Would you mind To which the Queen had answered I am not sure whether I should mind 136 These were the Goya tapestries hung in the dining room 133 Sir Dighton was devoted to Queen Alexandra and the summerhouse bears an inscribed plaque The Queen s Nest A small offering to The Blessed Lady from Her Beloved Majesty s very devoted old servant General Probyn 1913 Today tomorrow and every day God bless her and guard her I fervently pray 147 Sir Robin Mackworth Young s 1993 guide suggests the statue was purchased by Queen Mary 151 George Plumptre follows Mackworth Young 152 but both Walch and Titchmarsh disagree 153 The Prince of Wales liked to claim that the development of the kitchen gardens was entirely funded from his racing winnings When showing guests around the Prince would murmur Persimmon all Persimmon 155 Pope Hennessy was often no more impressed by the courtiers and staff he encountered during his research visits to Sandringham Of Lady Willans widow of one of the royal doctors he wrote She told me several totally pointless anecdotes she is one of those numerous and obeisant throng of royal snobs which flourish like fungi in the shadow of royalty 180 References edit a b Plumptre 1995 p 90 a b c d e f Jenkins 2003 p 530 Walch 2012 p 145 Messent 1974 p 19 Walch 2012 p 146 a b The History of Sandringham The Sandringham Estate Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 29 July 2018 Walch 2012 p 147 Titchmarsh 2014 p 192 a b Titchmarsh 2014 p 193 a b Mackworth Young amp Ransom 1993 p 31 Titchmarsh 2014 p 194 King 2007 p 240 a b Matson 2011 p 17 Walch 2012 pp 13 14 Matson 2011 p 18 Walch 2012 p 17 a b Walch 2012 p 18 a b Mackworth Young amp Ransom 1993 p 32 a b Cornforth 1988 pp 103 105 Gliddon 2002 p 264 Wilson 2016 p 340 Martin Joshua 23 February 2012 Queen s Diamond Jubilee The Queen s houses The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Matson 2011 p 24 Rose 2000 p 38 Inflation Calculator Bank of England Archived from the original on 5 October 2018 Retrieved 5 August 2018 Dixon amp Muthesius 1993 p 260 Physick amp Darby 1973 p 64 a b c d e Pevsner amp Wilson 2002 p 627 a b c Girouard 1979 p 419 a b Titchmarsh 2014 p 196 Walch 2012 p 30 a b c d Walch 2012 p 29 Battiscombe 1969 p 56 a b c Robinson 1982 p 187 a b c d Pevsner amp Wilson 2002 p 628 Matson 2011 p 83 a b Walch 2012 p 53 Banerjee Jacqueline Sandringham House by A J Humbert 1821 1877 The Victorian Web Retrieved 5 July 2018 Messent 1974 p 67 Walch 2012 p 40 Messent 1974 p 93 Appleton Water Tower The Landmark Trust Retrieved 18 August 2018 Girouard 1979b p 35 Walch 2012 p 45 Messent 1974 p 68 a b c Hall 1994 p 168 Quarry Species Shooting Seasons The British Association for Shooting and Conservation Retrieved 5 July 2018 Sandringham House The Royal Household Retrieved 5 July 2018 a b Titchmarsh 2014 p 197 Matson 2011 p 55 Walch 2012 p 64 Walch 2012 pp 63 64 Eighteen Years on Sandringham Estate Royal Collections Trust Retrieved 4 March 2021 Wolferton Station Norfolk Wolferton Royal Station Retrieved 5 July 2018 Blackmore David 20 December 2012 Queen takes train from London to King s Lynn to get Sandringham House ready for Royal Family s Christmas break in Norfolk Eastern Daily Press Walch 2012 p 71 Bishop Chris 9 September 2016 One of Queen s favourite horses immortalised on her Norfolk estate at Sandringham Fakenham amp Wells Times Mackworth Young amp Ransom 1993 p 33 Walch 2012 p 79 Walch 2012 p 57 a b c Aslet 2005 pp 284 285 Jones 2005 p 251 Walch 2012 p 83 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January 2003 Wyatt 1999 p 546 Roberts Andrew 11 May 2002 The bitter row that blighted the Queen Mother s fortune The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 George VI Westminster Abbey Retrieved 5 July 2018 a b c d e f Sandringham The Norfolk home of HM the Queen Country Life 29 May 2008 Walch 2012 pp 96 97 Titchmarsh 2014 p 218 Walch 2012 p 97 Titchmarsh 2014 p 219 Matson 2011 p 168 Roberts Alun Clement Price Thomas Pioneering Surgeon Dictionary of Welsh Biography National Library of Wales Retrieved 5 July 2018 Rhodes James 1998 p 334 The death of King George VI The Guardian 7 February 1952 Cavendish Richard 2 February 2002 The Funeral of King George VI History Today Dunn 2017 Davies Caroline 20 December 2021 Queen cancels Sandringham plans and will celebrate Christmas at Windsor The Guardian Vargas Chanel 13 December 2017 Meghan Markle to join the Queen for Christmas at Sandringham Town and Country Royal Christmas The Royal Collection Trust Retrieved 5 July 2018 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September 2022 Plan your visit The Sandringham Estate Retrieved 20 December 2022 Bibliography editAslet C 2005 Landmarks of Britain London UK Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 978 0 340 73510 7 Battiscombe Georgiana 1969 Queen Alexandra London UK Constable ISBN 978 0 094 56560 9 Cahill Kevin 2001 Who Owns Britain Edinburgh UK Canongate ISBN 978 1 841 95310 6 Cornforth J 1988 The Search for a Style Country Life and Architecture 1897 1935 London UK Andre Deutsch OCLC 987862203 Dixon Roger Muthesius Stefan 1993 Victorian Architecture London UK Thames amp Hudson ISBN 978 0 195 20048 5 Dunn Charlotte 30 August 2017 Royal Residences Sandringham House The Royal Household Eden C 2007 Haste Cate ed Clarissa Eden A Memoir From Churchill to Eden London UK Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 85193 6 OCLC 496921033 Feuchtwanger Edward 2006 Albert and Victoria The Rise and Fall of the House of Saxe Coburg Gotha London UK Hambledon Continuum ISBN 978 1 847 25015 5 Franklin Jill 1981 The Gentleman s Country House and its Plan 1835 1914 London UK Routledge ISBN 978 0 710 00622 6 Girouard M 1979 The Victorian Country House New Haven CT London UK Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 02390 9 Girouard M 1979 Historic Houses of Britain London UK Artus Publishing OCLC 36306478 Gliddon Gerald October 2002 The Aristocracy and the Great War Cecil Hugh foreword Norwich Norfolk UK Gliddon Books ISBN 978 094789335 4 Hall Michael 1994 The English Country House From the Archives of Country Life 1897 1939 London UK Reed International Books ISBN 978 1 857 32530 0 OCLC 832426788 Hattersley R 2006 The Edwardians London UK Abacus ISBN 978 0 349 11662 4 OCLC 494146281 Jenkins S 2003 England s Thousand Best Houses London UK Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 713 99596 1 Jones Nigel 2005 Architecture of England Scotland and Wales Connecticut US Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 313 31850 4 Judd Denis 2012 George VI London UK I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 780 76071 1 OCLC 820617845 King Greg 2007 Twilight of Splendor The Court of Queen Victoria During Her Diamond Jubilee Year New York NY John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 470 04439 1 Lascelles A 2006 Hart Davis D ed King s Counsellor Abdication and War The Diaries of Sir Alan Lascelles London UK Weidenfeld amp Nicolson OCLC 607860040 Lees Milne J 1981 Harold Nicolson A Biography 1930 1968 Vol 2 London UK Chatto amp Windus ISBN 978 0 701 12602 5 OCLC 59990886 Mackworth Young Robin Ransom Roger 1993 Sandringham Norwich UK Jarrold Publishing OCLC 51796971 Matson John 2011 Sandringham Days The Domestic Life of the Royal Family in Norfolk 1862 1952 Stroud UK The History Press ISBN 978 0 752 46582 1 OCLC 751833059 Messent Claude J W 1974 The Architecture on the Royal Estate of Sandringham Norwich UK Self published ISBN 978 0 950 13251 8 OCLC 1092122 Nicolson H 1968 Nicolson N ed Diaries and Letters 1945 62 Vol 3 London UK Collins OCLC 874688390 Palmer Alan 1997 The Kaiser Warlord of the Second Reich London UK Phoenix Books ISBN 978 1 857 99867 2 OCLC 722693714 Pevsner N Wilson Bill 2002 Norfolk 2 North West and South The Buildings of England New Haven CT London UK Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 09657 6 Physick John Darby Michael 1973 Marble Halls Drawings and Models of Victorian Secular Buildings Margate Kent UK Eyre and Spottiswoode Ltd ISBN 978 0 901 48668 4 Plumptre George 1981 Royal Gardens London UK William Collins Sons ISBN 978 0 002 11871 2 OCLC 833434627 Plumptre George 1995 Edward VII Ann Arbor MI University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 1 857 93076 4 Pope Hennessy J 2019 Vickers Hugo ed The Quest for Queen Mary London UK Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 978 1 529 33061 8 OCLC 1049908807 Rhodes James R R 1998 A Spirit Undaunted The Political Role of George VI London UK Abacus ISBN 978 0 349 11118 6 OCLC 59457645 Robinson J M 1982 Royal Residences London UK MacDonald amp Co OCLC 469780876 Rose K 2000 King George V London UK Phoenix Books ISBN 978 1 842 12001 9 Tinniswood Adrian 2016 The Long Weekend Life in the English Country House between the Wars London UK Jonathan Cape ISBN 978 022 409945 5 OCLC 951212805 Titchmarsh Alan 2014 The Queen s House Royal Britain at Home London UK BBC Books ISBN 978 1 849 90217 5 OCLC 980283702 Walch Helen 2012 Sandringham A Royal Estate for 150 Years Sandringham UK The Sandringham Estate Archived from the original on 28 June 2018 Retrieved 27 June 2018 Wilson A N 2016 Victoria A Life London UK Atlantic Books ISBN 978 1 786 49034 6 OCLC 944156927 Windsor Edward Duke of 1951 A King s Story The Memoirs of H R H the Duke of Windsor K G London UK Cassell amp Co OCLC 804387409 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Windsor Edward Duke of 1998 Godfrey Rupert ed Letters from a Prince Edward Prince of Wales to Mrs Freda Dudley Ward March 1918 January 1921 London UK Little Brown and Company ISBN 978 0 316 64677 2 OCLC 64553370 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Wyatt Woodrow 1999 Curtis Sarah ed The Journals of Woodrow Wyatt Vol 2 London UK Macmillan Publishers ISBN 978 0 333 77405 2 OCLC 316647709 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sandringham House Sandringham Estate website Sandringham House entry from The DiCamillo Companion to British amp Irish Country Houses Sandringham House entry from the English Monarchs website Recording of King George V giving the first Royal Christmas Message from Sandringham in 1932 Pathe News footage of the transportation of the coffin of George V to Wolferton Station at the start of its journey to London Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sandringham House amp oldid 1214860112 Park House, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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