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Prince George, Duke of Kent

Prince George, Duke of Kent (George Edward Alexander Edmund; 20 December 1902 – 25 August 1942), was a member of the British royal family, the fourth son of King George V and Queen Mary. He was a younger brother of kings Edward VIII and George VI. Prince George served in the Royal Navy in the 1920s and then briefly as a civil servant. He became Duke of Kent in 1934. In the late 1930s he served as an RAF officer, initially as a staff officer at RAF Training Command and then, from July 1941, as a staff officer in the Welfare Section of the RAF Inspector General's Staff. He was killed in Dunbeath air crash on 25 August 1942.

Prince George
Duke of Kent (more)
George in 1934
BornPrince George of Wales
(1902-12-20)20 December 1902
York Cottage, Sandringham, Norfolk, United Kingdom
Died25 August 1942(1942-08-25) (aged 39)
Morven, Caithness, United Kingdom
Cause of deathDunbeath air crash
Burial29 August 1942
Spouse
(m. 1934)
Issue
Names
George Edward Alexander Edmund
House
FatherGeorge V
MotherMary of Teck
Signature
Education
Military career
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service/branch
Years of active service1916–1942
Rank
Battles/wars

Early life edit

 
Prince George (far right) with his siblings in 1912

Prince George was born on 20 December 1902 at York Cottage on the Sandringham Estate in Norfolk, England.[1] His father was the Prince of Wales (later King George V), the only surviving son of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra.

His mother was the Princess of Wales, later Queen Mary, the only daughter and eldest child of the Duke and Duchess of Teck. At the time of his birth, he was fifth in the line of succession to the throne, behind his father and three older brothers: Edward, Albert and Henry.

George was baptised in the Private Chapel at Windsor Castle on 26 January 1903 by Francis Paget, Bishop of Oxford. His godparents were King Edward VII (his paternal grandfather), Prince Valdemar of Denmark (his paternal granduncle, represented by Prince Carl of Denmark, his paternal uncle), Prince Louis of Battenberg (husband of his father's cousin), Queen Alexandra (his paternal grandmother), Empress Dowager Maria Feodorovna (his paternal grandaunt, represented by Princess Victoria of the United Kingdom, his paternal aunt), and Princess Christian of Schleswig-Holstein (his paternal grandaunt)[2][3]

Education and career edit

 
George (centre) with his brothers the Prince of Wales and Prince Henry on Time magazine's cover, 8 August 1927

Prince George received his early education from a tutor and then followed his elder brother, Prince Henry, to St Peter's Court, a preparatory school at Broadstairs, Kent. At the age of 13, like his brothers, the Prince of Wales, later King Edward VIII and Prince Albert, later King George VI, before him, he went to naval college, first at Osborne and later, at Dartmouth.[1] He was promoted to sub-lieutenant on 15 February 1924,[4] and was promoted to lieutenant on 15 February 1926.[5] He remained on active service in the Royal Navy until March 1929, serving on HMS Iron Duke and later on the flagship of the Atlantic Fleet (renamed the Home Fleet in 1932), HMS Nelson.[1] He served on the latter as a lieutenant on the admiral's staff before transferring in 1928 to HMS Durban on the America and West Indies Station, based at the Royal Naval Dockyard at Bermuda. His father had previously served at Bermuda on HMS Canada and HMS Thrush, as a watch-keeping lieutenant.[6]

After leaving the navy, he briefly held posts at the Foreign Office and later the Home Office, becoming the first member of the royal family to work as a civil servant.[1] He continued to receive promotions after leaving active service: to commander on 15 February 1934[7] and to captain on 1 January 1937.[8]

From January to April 1931, Prince George and his elder brother the Prince of Wales travelled 18,000 miles on a tour of South America. Their outward voyage was on the ocean liner Oropesa.[9] In Buenos Aires they opened a British Empire Exhibition.[10] They continued from Río de la Plata to Rio de Janeiro on the liner Alcantara and returned from Brazil to Europe on the liner Arlanza, landing at Lisbon.[11] The princes returned via Paris and an Imperial Airways flight from Paris–Le Bourget Airport that landed specially in Windsor Great Park.[12][13]

On 23 June 1936, George was appointed a personal aide-de-camp to his eldest brother, the new king, Edward VIII.[14] Following the abdication of Edward VIII, he was appointed a personal naval aide-de-camp to his elder brother, now George VI.[15] On 12 March 1937, he was commissioned as a colonel in the British Army and in the equivalent rank of group captain in the Royal Air Force (RAF).[16] He was also appointed as the Colonel-in-Chief of the Royal Fusiliers from the same date.[17]

In October 1938 George was appointed Governor-General of Australia in succession to Lord Gowrie with effect from November 1939.[18][19] On 11 September 1939 it was announced that, owing to the outbreak of the Second World War, the appointment was postponed.[20]

On 8 June 1939, George was promoted to the ranks of rear admiral in the Royal Navy, major-general in the British Army and air vice-marshal in the Royal Air Force.[21] At the start of the Second World War, George returned to active naval service with the rank of rear admiral, briefly serving in the Intelligence Division of the Admiralty.

He was patron of the Society for Nautical Research between 1926 and 1942.[22]

Personal life edit

Marriage and children edit

 
The Duke and Duchess of Kent in 1934

On 9 October 1934, in anticipation of his forthcoming marriage to his second cousin, Princess Marina of Greece and Denmark, he was created Duke of Kent, Earl of St Andrews, and Baron Downpatrick.[23] The couple married on 29 November 1934 at Westminster Abbey.[24] The wedding was followed by a Greek ceremony in the private chapel at Buckingham Palace, which was converted into an Orthodox chapel for the ceremony.[25] They had three children:

Relationships edit

There were rumours that he had affairs with musical star Jessie Matthews,[26] writer Cecil Roberts,[27] and Noël Coward,[28] a relationship which Coward's long-term partner, Graham Payn, denied.[29] While married, he had an affair with Margaret Whigham, later known as Margaret Campbell, Duchess of Argyll.[30]

George was also rumoured to have been addicted to drugs, especially morphine and cocaine, an allegation which reputedly originated from his friendship with Kiki Preston (née Alice Gwynne, 1898–1946), whom he first met in the mid-1920s.[31][32][33] Known as "the girl with the silver syringe" due to her addiction to heroin, Preston – a cousin of railroad heiress Gloria Vanderbilt – was married first to Horace R. B. Allen and then, in 1925, to banker Jerome Preston.[34] She died after jumping out of a window of the Stanhope Hotel in New York City.

His other alleged sexual liaisons include a ménage à trois with Preston and José Uriburu, bisexual son of Argentine ambassador to the UK José Uriburu Tezanos.[35]

In addition to his legitimate children, he was said to have had a son by Kiki Preston.[36] According to the memoirs of a friend, Loelia, Duchess of Westminster, Prince George's brother, the Duke of Windsor, believed that the son was Michael Temple Canfield (1926–1969), the adopted son of American publisher Cass Canfield – and the first husband of Lee Radziwill, sister of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis.[37]

The only survivor to the deadly plane crash that took his life was Andrew Jack, who was never allowed to testify regarding the crash and an alleged anonymous person who’d also been on board. After Jack’s death, his niece stated "Everything points to the person being the boyfriend of the Duke..."

RAF career edit

 
The Duke of Kent before he crossed the Atlantic by air

As a young man the Duke came to the opinion that the future lay in aviation. It became his passion, and in 1929, the Duke earned his pilot's licence. He was the first of the royal family to cross the Atlantic Ocean by air. Before his flying days, he entered the Royal Navy, and was trained in intelligence work while stationed at Rosyth.[38]

In March 1937, he was granted a commission in the Royal Air Force as a group captain.[39] He was also made the Honorary Air Commodore of No. 500 (County of Kent) Squadron Auxiliary Air Force in August 1938.[40][41] He was promoted to air vice-marshal in June 1939, along with promotions to flag and general officer rank in the other two services.[21]

In 1939 he returned to active service as a rear admiral in the Royal Navy, but in April 1940, transferred to the Royal Air Force. He temporarily relinquished his rank as an air officer to assume the post of staff officer at RAF Training Command in the rank of group captain,[42] so that he would not be senior to more experienced officers. On 28 July 1941, he assumed the rank of air commodore in the Welfare Section of the RAF Inspector General's Staff.[43] In this role, he went on official visits to RAF bases to help boost wartime morale.[44]

Freemasonry edit

Prince George was initiated into freemasonry on 12 April 1928 in Navy Lodge No 2612. He subsequently served as master of Navy Lodge in 1931, and was also a member of Prince of Wales's Lodge No 259, and Royal Alpha Lodge No 16, of which he served as master in 1940. He was appointed senior grand warden of the United Grand Lodge of England in 1933, and served as provincial grand master of Wiltshire from 1934, until he was elected grand master of the United Grand Lodge of England in 1939; a position he held until his death in 1942.[45]

Death edit

On 25 August 1942, George and 14 others took off in a RAF Short Sunderland flying boat W4026 from Invergordon, Ross and Cromarty, to fly to Iceland on non-operational duties. The aircraft crashed on Eagle's Rock, a hillside near Dunbeath, Caithness, Scotland. George and all but one of those on board were killed. He was 39 years old.[46]

Lynn Picknett and Clive Prince have written about the crash in their book Double Standards, which, however, has been criticised for its "implausible inaccuracy".[47] They alleged that Kent had a briefcase full of 100 Swedish krona notes, worthless in Iceland, handcuffed to his wrist, leading to speculation the flight was a military mission to Sweden, the only place where Swedish notes were of value.[48]

His death in RAF service marked the first time in more than 450 years that a member of the royal family died on active service.[49] The prince's body was transferred initially to St George's Chapel, Windsor, and he was buried in the Royal Burial Ground, Frogmore, directly behind Queen Victoria's mausoleum.[50] His elder son, six-year-old Prince Edward, succeeded him as Duke of Kent. Princess Marina, his wife, had given birth to their third child, Prince Michael, only seven weeks before Prince George's death. His will was sealed in Llandudno in 1943. His estate was valued at £157,735 (or £5 million in 2022 when adjusted for inflation).[51]

One RAF crew member survived the crash: Flight Sergeant Andrew Jack, the Sunderland's rear gunner.[52] Flight Sergeant Jack's niece has claimed that Jack told his brother that the Duke had been at the controls of the plane; that Jack had dragged him from the pilot's seat after the crash; and that there was an additional person on board the plane whose identity has never been revealed.[53]

In popular culture edit

 
Portrait by Philip de László, 1934

The Duke's early life is dramatised in Stephen Poliakoff's television serial The Lost Prince (2003), a biography of the life of the Duke's younger brother John. In the film, the teenage Prince 'Georgie' is portrayed as sensitive, intelligent, artistic and almost uniquely sympathetic to his brother's plight. He is shown as detesting his time at the Royal Naval College and as having a difficult relationship with his austere father.

In May 2008, the BBC aired its Radio 4 comedy, Hut 33, Series 2, Episode 1, titled "The Royal Visit". The main guest character for this episode was Duke of Kent, played by Michael Fenton-Stevens. The show is set at Bletchley Park with a team of code breakers. The Duke has been chosen to make an impromptu visit, and the code breakers have been told to hide all evidence of their real work and invent a story. On no account should the Duke be told what really happens at Bletchley because he is a Nazi spy. He is also portrayed as promiscuous and bisexual, as he tries to gain sexual favours from one of the male staff, and one of the female characters recalls a previous liaison with the Duke.[54]

Much of George's later life was outlined in the documentary film The Queen's Lost Uncle.[55] He is a recurring character in the revival of Upstairs, Downstairs (2010/2012), played by Blake Ritson.[56] He is portrayed as a caring brother, terrified of the mistakes that his family is making; later, he is portrayed as an appeaser of the German regime, but also as a supportive friend of Hallam Holland.[56]

George and his eldest brother the Prince of Wales, later Edward VIII, are shown in Stephen Poliakoff's BBC television serial Dancing on the Edge (2013), in which they are portrayed as supporters of jazz and encouragers of Louis Lester's Jazz Band. A sexual attraction to Louis on George's part is also insinuated.[57]

Honours and arms edit

Appointments edit

Military edit

Canada
New Zealand
United Kingdom

Arms edit

Around the time of his elder brother Prince Henry's twenty-first birthday, Prince George was granted the use of the Royal Arms, differenced by a label argent of three points, each bearing an anchor azure.

 
 
 
Prince George's coat of arms
George's banner of arms
George's personal banner of arms in Scotland

Ancestry edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Duke of Kent once called sailor prince". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. 26 August 1945. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  2. ^ a b . users.uniserve.com. Archived from the original on 6 August 2011. Retrieved 27 December 2010.
  3. ^ Unlike many previous royal baptisms, George was christened using local water, rather than water from the River Jordan.[2]
  4. ^ "No. 33004". The London Gazette. 23 December 1924. p. 9333.
  5. ^ "No. 33133". The London Gazette. 16 February 1926. p. 1160.
  6. ^ "Our London Letter", The Gloucester Journal, Gloucester, England. 21 July 1928, p. 13
  7. ^ "No. 34024". The London Gazette. 16 February 1934. p. 1074.
  8. ^ "No. 34356". The London Gazette. 1 January 1937. p. 10.
  9. ^ Erskine, Barry, "Oropesa (II)", Pacific Steam Navigation Company, retrieved 15 December 2013
  10. ^ Nicol, Stuart (2001). MacQueen's Legacy; Ships of the Royal Mail Line. Vol. Two. Brimscombe Port and Charleston, SC: Tempus Publishing. p. 130. ISBN 0-7524-2119-0.
  11. ^ Nicol, Stuart (2001). MacQueen's Legacy; A History of the Royal Mail Line. Vol. One. Brimscombe Port and Charleston, SC: Tempus Publishing. p. 158. ISBN 0-7524-2118-2.
  12. ^ "Arrival at Windsor by Air", The Straits Times, National Library, Singapore, 30 April 1931, retrieved 18 December 2013
  13. ^ "Princes Home", The Advertiser and Register, National Library of Australia, 1 May 1931, retrieved 18 December 2013
  14. ^ "No. 34365". The London Gazette (Supplement). 19 June 1936. p. 4012.
  15. ^ "No. 34365". The London Gazette (Supplement). 29 January 1937. p. 687.
  16. ^ "No. 34379". The London Gazette. 12 March 1937. p. 1646.
  17. ^ a b "No. 34379". The London Gazette. 12 March 1937. p. 1642.
  18. ^ "The Duke of Kent: Appointment in Australia", The Times (26 October 1938): 14.
  19. ^ "Marina, a tragic but well-loved Princess". The Sydney Morning Herald. London. 28 August 1968. Retrieved 24 July 2013.
  20. ^ "Duke of Kent and Australia", The Times (12 September 1939): 6.
  21. ^ a b "No. 34633". The London Gazette (Supplement). 6 June 1939. p. 3851.
  22. ^ Hugh Murphy & Derek J. Oddy (2010) The Mirror of the Seas; A Centenary History of the Society for Nautical Research London, Society for Nautical Research, p.191. ISBN 978-0-902387-01-0
  23. ^ "No. 34094". The London Gazette. 9 October 1934. p. 6365.
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  27. ^ King, Francis Henry. Yesterday Came Suddenly, Constable (London) 1993, p278
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  29. ^ Brandreth, Gyles (2004). Philip and Elizabeth: Portrait of a Marriage. London: Century. ISBN 0-7126-6103-4, p. 94
  30. ^ MacIntyre, Ben (2 February 2019). "The Dirty Duchess of Argyll was ahead of her time". The Times. Retrieved 2 February 2019.
  31. ^ Lynn Kear and John Rossman. Kay Francis: A Passionate Life and Career. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, 2006. p. 28
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  33. ^ McLeod, Kirsty. Battle Royal: Edward VIII & George VI, Brother Against Brother. Constable, 1999. p 122
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  35. ^ Bazán, Osvaldo (2004). Historia de la homosexualidad en la Argentina: de la conquista de América al siglo XXI. (in Spanish), p. 180. Marea Editorial.
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  37. ^ Westminster, Loelia, Duchess of. Grace and Favour, Weidenfeld Nicholson, 1961
  38. ^ Macwhirter, Robin, 'The Tragedy at Eagle's Rock', Scotsman, 24 August 1985
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  40. ^ Hunt 1972, p. 314.
  41. ^ a b "No. 35342". The London Gazette. 16 August 1938. p. 5294.
  42. ^ "No. 34844". The London Gazette. 7 May 1940. p. 2722.
  43. ^ "No. 35292". The London Gazette. 30 September 1941. p. 5659.
  44. ^ "Royal family; aircraft engineer; 1942". Flight Archive. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  45. ^ (PDF). The Library & Museum of Freemasonry. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 January 2019. Retrieved 21 January 2019.
  46. ^ "Duke of Kent Dies in an R.A.F. Crash on way to Iceland" (PDF). The New York Times. 26 August 1942. Retrieved 11 September 2012.
  47. ^ Rubinstein, William D. (2008). "7: The Mysteries of Rudolf Hess". Shadow Pasts: History's Mysteries. Harlow, England: Pearson/Longman. p. 147. ISBN 9780582505971. Retrieved 18 February 2017. ... probably the strangest book ever written on the Hess affair is Double Standards... The thesis of Double Standards is that Rudolf Hess ... died in the plane crash in northern Scotland in August 1942 which also killed the Duke of Kent ... Hess was being transported to neutral Sweden (not Iceland, given in the official story as the plane's destination) to be handed over to the Germans as the first step in a settlement of the war between Britain and Germany. ... Double Standards seems breathtaking in its implausible inaccuracy.
  48. ^ Double Standards p.424
  49. ^ "Aviation – Newbattle at war". newbattleatwar.wordpress.com. 9 April 2013.
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  54. ^ "BBC Radio 4 Extra – Hut 33, Series 2, Royal Visit".
  55. ^ "The Queen's Lost Uncle". Channel 4. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
  56. ^ a b "Upstairs life of a royal rogue". Daily Express. 26 February 2012. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  57. ^ Furness, Hannah (1 February 2013). "New BBC drama to show the scandalous stories of the playboy princes". The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022. Retrieved 23 March 2013.
  58. ^ List of the Knights of the Garter – via heraldica.org
  59. ^ "No. 34045". The London Gazette. 27 April 1934. p. 2703.
  60. ^ P. Galloway, D. Stanley, D. Martin (1996), Royal Service, volume 1, pp. 209–212 (London: Victorian Publishing, ISBN 0-9528527-0-5)
  61. ^ "No. 34238". The London Gazette. 31 December 1935. p. 7.
  62. ^ "Personal Aide de Camp Appointments 23 June 1936". The London Gazette. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  63. ^ Bille-Hansen, A. C.; Holck, Harald, eds. (1933) [1st pub.:1801]. Statshaandbog for Kongeriget Danmark for Aaret 1933 [State Manual of the Kingdom of Denmark for the Year 1933] (PDF). Kongelig Dansk Hof- og Statskalender (in Danish). Copenhagen: J.H. Schultz A.-S. Universitetsbogtrykkeri. p. 17. Retrieved 5 March 2020 – via da:DIS Danmark.
  64. ^ "Den kongelige norske Sanct Olavs Orden", Norges Statskalender for Aaret 1930 (in Norwegian), Oslo: Forlagt av H. Aschehoug & Co. (w. Nygaard), 1930, pp. 995–996 – via runeberg.org
  65. ^ Per Nordenvall (1998). "Kungl. Maj:ts Orden". Kungliga Serafimerorden: 1748–1998 (in Swedish). Stockholm. ISBN 91-630-6744-7.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  66. ^ Bortrick, William. . Burke's Peerage and Gentry. Archived from the original on 1 December 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
  67. ^ M. & B. Wattel (2009). Les Grand'Croix de la Légion d'honneur de 1805 à nos jours. Titulaires français et étrangers (in French). Paris: Archives & Culture. p. 463. ISBN 978-2-35077-135-9.
  68. ^ The Essex and Kent Scottish, Key Appointments, The Scottish Borderers Foundation, retrieved 15 November 2023
  69. ^ Cooke, P. (2019). Won by the Spade: How the Royal New Zealand Engineers Built a Nation. Dunedin: Exisle Publishing. p. 233. ISBN 9781775593645.
  70. ^ "No. 34142". The London Gazette. 15 March 1935. p. 1807.

Further reading edit

  • Hunt, Leslie (1972). Twenty-one Squadrons: History of the Royal Auxiliary Air Force, 1925–57. London: Garnstone Press. ISBN 0-85511-110-0.(New edition in 1992 by Crécy Publishing, ISBN 0-947554-26-2.)
  • Millar, Peter. "The Other Prince". The Sunday Times (26 January 2003).
  • Warwick, Christopher. George and Marina, Duke and Duchess of Kent. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1988. ISBN 0-297-79453-1.

External links edit

Prince George, Duke of Kent
Cadet branch of the House of Wettin
Born: 20 December 1902 Died: 25 August 1942
Masonic offices
Preceded by Grand Master of the United Grand Lodge of England
1939–1942
Succeeded by
Peerage of the United Kingdom
New title Duke of Kent
1934–1942
Succeeded by

prince, george, duke, kent, george, edward, alexander, edmund, december, 1902, august, 1942, member, british, royal, family, fourth, king, george, queen, mary, younger, brother, kings, edward, viii, george, prince, george, served, royal, navy, 1920s, then, bri. Prince George Duke of Kent George Edward Alexander Edmund 20 December 1902 25 August 1942 was a member of the British royal family the fourth son of King George V and Queen Mary He was a younger brother of kings Edward VIII and George VI Prince George served in the Royal Navy in the 1920s and then briefly as a civil servant He became Duke of Kent in 1934 In the late 1930s he served as an RAF officer initially as a staff officer at RAF Training Command and then from July 1941 as a staff officer in the Welfare Section of the RAF Inspector General s Staff He was killed in Dunbeath air crash on 25 August 1942 Prince GeorgeDuke of Kent more George in 1934BornPrince George of Wales 1902 12 20 20 December 1902York Cottage Sandringham Norfolk United KingdomDied25 August 1942 1942 08 25 aged 39 Morven Caithness United KingdomCause of deathDunbeath air crashBurial29 August 1942Royal Vault St George s Chapel Windsor Castle29 August 1968Royal Burial Ground FrogmoreSpousePrincess Marina of Greece and Denmark m 1934 wbr IssuePrince Edward Duke of Kent Princess Alexandra The Hon Lady Ogilvy Prince Michael of KentNamesGeorge Edward Alexander EdmundHouseWindsor from 1917 Saxe Coburg and Gotha until 1917 FatherGeorge VMotherMary of TeckSignatureEducationRoyal Naval College Osborne Britannia Royal Naval CollegeMilitary careerAllegiance United KingdomService wbr branch Royal Navy British Army Royal Air ForceYears of active service1916 1942RankRear admiral RN Major general British Army Air commodore RAF Battles warsFirst World War Second World War Contents 1 Early life 2 Education and career 3 Personal life 3 1 Marriage and children 3 2 Relationships 4 RAF career 5 Freemasonry 6 Death 7 In popular culture 8 Honours and arms 8 1 Appointments 8 1 1 Military 8 2 Arms 9 Ancestry 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Prince George far right with his siblings in 1912Prince George was born on 20 December 1902 at York Cottage on the Sandringham Estate in Norfolk England 1 His father was the Prince of Wales later King George V the only surviving son of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra His mother was the Princess of Wales later Queen Mary the only daughter and eldest child of the Duke and Duchess of Teck At the time of his birth he was fifth in the line of succession to the throne behind his father and three older brothers Edward Albert and Henry George was baptised in the Private Chapel at Windsor Castle on 26 January 1903 by Francis Paget Bishop of Oxford His godparents were King Edward VII his paternal grandfather Prince Valdemar of Denmark his paternal granduncle represented by Prince Carl of Denmark his paternal uncle Prince Louis of Battenberg husband of his father s cousin Queen Alexandra his paternal grandmother Empress Dowager Maria Feodorovna his paternal grandaunt represented by Princess Victoria of the United Kingdom his paternal aunt and Princess Christian of Schleswig Holstein his paternal grandaunt 2 3 Education and career edit nbsp George centre with his brothers the Prince of Wales and Prince Henry on Time magazine s cover 8 August 1927Prince George received his early education from a tutor and then followed his elder brother Prince Henry to St Peter s Court a preparatory school at Broadstairs Kent At the age of 13 like his brothers the Prince of Wales later King Edward VIII and Prince Albert later King George VI before him he went to naval college first at Osborne and later at Dartmouth 1 He was promoted to sub lieutenant on 15 February 1924 4 and was promoted to lieutenant on 15 February 1926 5 He remained on active service in the Royal Navy until March 1929 serving on HMS Iron Duke and later on the flagship of the Atlantic Fleet renamed the Home Fleet in 1932 HMS Nelson 1 He served on the latter as a lieutenant on the admiral s staff before transferring in 1928 to HMS Durban on the America and West Indies Station based at the Royal Naval Dockyard at Bermuda His father had previously served at Bermuda on HMS Canada and HMS Thrush as a watch keeping lieutenant 6 After leaving the navy he briefly held posts at the Foreign Office and later the Home Office becoming the first member of the royal family to work as a civil servant 1 He continued to receive promotions after leaving active service to commander on 15 February 1934 7 and to captain on 1 January 1937 8 From January to April 1931 Prince George and his elder brother the Prince of Wales travelled 18 000 miles on a tour of South America Their outward voyage was on the ocean liner Oropesa 9 In Buenos Aires they opened a British Empire Exhibition 10 They continued from Rio de la Plata to Rio de Janeiro on the liner Alcantara and returned from Brazil to Europe on the liner Arlanza landing at Lisbon 11 The princes returned via Paris and an Imperial Airways flight from Paris Le Bourget Airport that landed specially in Windsor Great Park 12 13 On 23 June 1936 George was appointed a personal aide de camp to his eldest brother the new king Edward VIII 14 Following the abdication of Edward VIII he was appointed a personal naval aide de camp to his elder brother now George VI 15 On 12 March 1937 he was commissioned as a colonel in the British Army and in the equivalent rank of group captain in the Royal Air Force RAF 16 He was also appointed as the Colonel in Chief of the Royal Fusiliers from the same date 17 In October 1938 George was appointed Governor General of Australia in succession to Lord Gowrie with effect from November 1939 18 19 On 11 September 1939 it was announced that owing to the outbreak of the Second World War the appointment was postponed 20 On 8 June 1939 George was promoted to the ranks of rear admiral in the Royal Navy major general in the British Army and air vice marshal in the Royal Air Force 21 At the start of the Second World War George returned to active naval service with the rank of rear admiral briefly serving in the Intelligence Division of the Admiralty He was patron of the Society for Nautical Research between 1926 and 1942 22 Personal life editMarriage and children edit nbsp The Duke and Duchess of Kent in 1934On 9 October 1934 in anticipation of his forthcoming marriage to his second cousin Princess Marina of Greece and Denmark he was created Duke of Kent Earl of St Andrews and Baron Downpatrick 23 The couple married on 29 November 1934 at Westminster Abbey 24 The wedding was followed by a Greek ceremony in the private chapel at Buckingham Palace which was converted into an Orthodox chapel for the ceremony 25 They had three children Prince Edward Duke of Kent born 9 October 1935 He married Katharine Worsley on 8 June 1961 They have three children Princess Alexandra The Hon Lady Ogilvy born 25 December 1936 She married the Hon Angus Ogilvy son of David Ogilvy 12th Earl of Airlie and Lady Alexandra Coke on 24 April 1963 They had two children Prince Michael of Kent born 4 July 1942 He married Baroness Marie Christine von Reibnitz on 30 June 1978 They have two children Relationships edit There were rumours that he had affairs with musical star Jessie Matthews 26 writer Cecil Roberts 27 and Noel Coward 28 a relationship which Coward s long term partner Graham Payn denied 29 While married he had an affair with Margaret Whigham later known as Margaret Campbell Duchess of Argyll 30 George was also rumoured to have been addicted to drugs especially morphine and cocaine an allegation which reputedly originated from his friendship with Kiki Preston nee Alice Gwynne 1898 1946 whom he first met in the mid 1920s 31 32 33 Known as the girl with the silver syringe due to her addiction to heroin Preston a cousin of railroad heiress Gloria Vanderbilt was married first to Horace R B Allen and then in 1925 to banker Jerome Preston 34 She died after jumping out of a window of the Stanhope Hotel in New York City His other alleged sexual liaisons include a menage a trois with Preston and Jose Uriburu bisexual son of Argentine ambassador to the UK Jose Uriburu Tezanos 35 In addition to his legitimate children he was said to have had a son by Kiki Preston 36 According to the memoirs of a friend Loelia Duchess of Westminster Prince George s brother the Duke of Windsor believed that the son was Michael Temple Canfield 1926 1969 the adopted son of American publisher Cass Canfield and the first husband of Lee Radziwill sister of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis 37 The only survivor to the deadly plane crash that took his life was Andrew Jack who was never allowed to testify regarding the crash and an alleged anonymous person who d also been on board After Jack s death his niece stated Everything points to the person being the boyfriend of the Duke RAF career edit nbsp The Duke of Kent before he crossed the Atlantic by airAs a young man the Duke came to the opinion that the future lay in aviation It became his passion and in 1929 the Duke earned his pilot s licence He was the first of the royal family to cross the Atlantic Ocean by air Before his flying days he entered the Royal Navy and was trained in intelligence work while stationed at Rosyth 38 In March 1937 he was granted a commission in the Royal Air Force as a group captain 39 He was also made the Honorary Air Commodore of No 500 County of Kent Squadron Auxiliary Air Force in August 1938 40 41 He was promoted to air vice marshal in June 1939 along with promotions to flag and general officer rank in the other two services 21 In 1939 he returned to active service as a rear admiral in the Royal Navy but in April 1940 transferred to the Royal Air Force He temporarily relinquished his rank as an air officer to assume the post of staff officer at RAF Training Command in the rank of group captain 42 so that he would not be senior to more experienced officers On 28 July 1941 he assumed the rank of air commodore in the Welfare Section of the RAF Inspector General s Staff 43 In this role he went on official visits to RAF bases to help boost wartime morale 44 Freemasonry editPrince George was initiated into freemasonry on 12 April 1928 in Navy Lodge No 2612 He subsequently served as master of Navy Lodge in 1931 and was also a member of Prince of Wales s Lodge No 259 and Royal Alpha Lodge No 16 of which he served as master in 1940 He was appointed senior grand warden of the United Grand Lodge of England in 1933 and served as provincial grand master of Wiltshire from 1934 until he was elected grand master of the United Grand Lodge of England in 1939 a position he held until his death in 1942 45 Death editFurther information Dunbeath air crash On 25 August 1942 George and 14 others took off in a RAF Short Sunderland flying boat W4026 from Invergordon Ross and Cromarty to fly to Iceland on non operational duties The aircraft crashed on Eagle s Rock a hillside near Dunbeath Caithness Scotland George and all but one of those on board were killed He was 39 years old 46 Lynn Picknett and Clive Prince have written about the crash in their book Double Standards which however has been criticised for its implausible inaccuracy 47 They alleged that Kent had a briefcase full of 100 Swedish krona notes worthless in Iceland handcuffed to his wrist leading to speculation the flight was a military mission to Sweden the only place where Swedish notes were of value 48 His death in RAF service marked the first time in more than 450 years that a member of the royal family died on active service 49 The prince s body was transferred initially to St George s Chapel Windsor and he was buried in the Royal Burial Ground Frogmore directly behind Queen Victoria s mausoleum 50 His elder son six year old Prince Edward succeeded him as Duke of Kent Princess Marina his wife had given birth to their third child Prince Michael only seven weeks before Prince George s death His will was sealed in Llandudno in 1943 His estate was valued at 157 735 or 5 million in 2022 when adjusted for inflation 51 One RAF crew member survived the crash Flight Sergeant Andrew Jack the Sunderland s rear gunner 52 Flight Sergeant Jack s niece has claimed that Jack told his brother that the Duke had been at the controls of the plane that Jack had dragged him from the pilot s seat after the crash and that there was an additional person on board the plane whose identity has never been revealed 53 In popular culture edit nbsp Portrait by Philip de Laszlo 1934The Duke s early life is dramatised in Stephen Poliakoff s television serial The Lost Prince 2003 a biography of the life of the Duke s younger brother John In the film the teenage Prince Georgie is portrayed as sensitive intelligent artistic and almost uniquely sympathetic to his brother s plight He is shown as detesting his time at the Royal Naval College and as having a difficult relationship with his austere father In May 2008 the BBC aired its Radio 4 comedy Hut 33 Series 2 Episode 1 titled The Royal Visit The main guest character for this episode was Duke of Kent played by Michael Fenton Stevens The show is set at Bletchley Park with a team of code breakers The Duke has been chosen to make an impromptu visit and the code breakers have been told to hide all evidence of their real work and invent a story On no account should the Duke be told what really happens at Bletchley because he is a Nazi spy He is also portrayed as promiscuous and bisexual as he tries to gain sexual favours from one of the male staff and one of the female characters recalls a previous liaison with the Duke 54 Much of George s later life was outlined in the documentary film The Queen s Lost Uncle 55 He is a recurring character in the revival of Upstairs Downstairs 2010 2012 played by Blake Ritson 56 He is portrayed as a caring brother terrified of the mistakes that his family is making later he is portrayed as an appeaser of the German regime but also as a supportive friend of Hallam Holland 56 George and his eldest brother the Prince of Wales later Edward VIII are shown in Stephen Poliakoff s BBC television serial Dancing on the Edge 2013 in which they are portrayed as supporters of jazz and encouragers of Louis Lester s Jazz Band A sexual attraction to Louis on George s part is also insinuated 57 Honours and arms editKG Knight of the Garter 20 December 1923 formally invested in 1924 58 KT Extra Knight of the Thistle 1935 GCMG Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George 1934 59 GCVO Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order 1924 60 Recipient of the Royal Victorian Chain 1936 61 ADC P Personal aide de camp to the King appointed by Edward VIII 23 June 1936 62 Knight of the Order of the Elephant 20 September 1922 63 Knight Grand Cross with Collar of the Order of St Olav 20 December 1924 64 Knight of the Order of the Seraphim 1 October 1932 65 Knight Grand Cross of the Chilean Order of Merit 66 Knight Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour March 1939 67 Appointments edit Military edit Canada nbsp Colonel in Chief The Essex and Kent Scottish 1937 1942 68 New Zealand nbsp Colonel in Chief Corps of New Zealand Engineers 1938 69 United Kingdom nbsp Colonel in Chief Queen s Own Royal West Kent Regiment 1935 70 nbsp Colonel in Chief Royal Fusiliers 1937 17 nbsp Honorary Air Commodore No 500 County of Kent Squadron Auxiliary Air Force 1938 41 Arms edit Around the time of his elder brother Prince Henry s twenty first birthday Prince George was granted the use of the Royal Arms differenced by a label argent of three points each bearing an anchor azure nbsp nbsp nbsp Prince George s coat of arms George s banner of arms George s personal banner of arms in ScotlandAncestry editAncestors of Prince George Duke of Kent8 Prince Albert of Saxe Coburg and Gotha4 Edward VII of the United Kingdom9 Victoria of the United Kingdom2 George V of the United Kingdom10 Christian IX King of Denmark5 Princess Alexandra of Denmark11 Princess Louise of Hesse Kassel1 Prince George Duke of Kent12 Duke Alexander of Wurttemberg6 Francis Duke of Teck13 Countess Claudine Rhedey von Kis Rhede3 Princess Victoria Mary of Teck14 Prince Adolphus Duke of Cambridge7 Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge15 Princess Augusta of Hesse KasselReferences edit a b c d Duke of Kent once called sailor prince Pittsburgh Post Gazette 26 August 1945 Retrieved 23 March 2013 a b Yvonne s Royalty Royal Christenings users uniserve com Archived from the original on 6 August 2011 Retrieved 27 December 2010 Unlike many previous royal baptisms George was christened using local water rather than water from the River Jordan 2 No 33004 The London Gazette 23 December 1924 p 9333 No 33133 The London Gazette 16 February 1926 p 1160 Our London Letter The Gloucester Journal Gloucester England 21 July 1928 p 13 No 34024 The London Gazette 16 February 1934 p 1074 No 34356 The London Gazette 1 January 1937 p 10 Erskine Barry Oropesa II Pacific Steam Navigation Company retrieved 15 December 2013 Nicol Stuart 2001 MacQueen s Legacy Ships of the Royal Mail Line Vol Two Brimscombe Port and Charleston SC Tempus Publishing p 130 ISBN 0 7524 2119 0 Nicol Stuart 2001 MacQueen s Legacy A History of the Royal Mail Line Vol One Brimscombe Port and Charleston SC Tempus Publishing p 158 ISBN 0 7524 2118 2 Arrival at Windsor by Air The Straits Times National Library Singapore 30 April 1931 retrieved 18 December 2013 Princes Home The Advertiser and Register National Library of Australia 1 May 1931 retrieved 18 December 2013 No 34365 The London Gazette Supplement 19 June 1936 p 4012 No 34365 The London Gazette Supplement 29 January 1937 p 687 No 34379 The London Gazette 12 March 1937 p 1646 a b No 34379 The London Gazette 12 March 1937 p 1642 The Duke of Kent Appointment in Australia The Times 26 October 1938 14 Marina a tragic but well loved Princess The Sydney Morning Herald London 28 August 1968 Retrieved 24 July 2013 Duke of Kent and Australia The Times 12 September 1939 6 a b No 34633 The London Gazette Supplement 6 June 1939 p 3851 Hugh Murphy amp Derek J Oddy 2010 The Mirror of the Seas A Centenary History of the Society for Nautical Research London Society for Nautical Research p 191 ISBN 978 0 902387 01 0 No 34094 The London Gazette 9 October 1934 p 6365 King and Queen The Calgary Daily Herald 29 November 1934 Retrieved 23 March 2013 King and Queen see rehearsals The Sydney Morning Herald 29 November 1934 Retrieved 24 July 2013 Kenneth J Panton Historical Dictionary of the British Monarchy Lanham MD Scarecrow Press 2011 p 217 King Francis Henry Yesterday Came Suddenly Constable London 1993 p278 Barry Day ed The Letters of Noel Coward New York Alfred A Knopf 2007 p 691 Brandreth Gyles 2004 Philip and Elizabeth Portrait of a Marriage London Century ISBN 0 7126 6103 4 p 94 MacIntyre Ben 2 February 2019 The Dirty Duchess of Argyll was ahead of her time The Times Retrieved 2 February 2019 Lynn Kear and John Rossman Kay Francis A Passionate Life and Career Jefferson NC McFarland amp Company 2006 p 28 Farrant Leda 1994 Diana Lady Delamere and the Lord Erroll Murder p 77 Publishers Distribution Services McLeod Kirsty Battle Royal Edward VIII amp George VI Brother Against Brother Constable 1999 p 122 Lynn Picknett Clive Prince Stephen Prior and Robert Brydon War of the Windsors A Century of Unconstitutional Monarchy p 58 Bazan Osvaldo 2004 Historia de la homosexualidad en la Argentina de la conquista de America al siglo XXI in Spanish p 180 Marea Editorial Nicholson Stuart 1999 Reminiscing in Tempo A Portrait of Duke Ellington p 146 Northeastern University Press Westminster Loelia Duchess of Grace and Favour Weidenfeld Nicholson 1961 Macwhirter Robin The Tragedy at Eagle s Rock Scotsman 24 August 1985 No 34379 The London Gazette 12 March 1937 p 1646 Hunt 1972 p 314 a b No 35342 The London Gazette 16 August 1938 p 5294 No 34844 The London Gazette 7 May 1940 p 2722 No 35292 The London Gazette 30 September 1941 p 5659 Royal family aircraft engineer 1942 Flight Archive Retrieved 23 March 2013 English Royal Freemasons PDF The Library amp Museum of Freemasonry Archived from the original PDF on 22 January 2019 Retrieved 21 January 2019 Duke of Kent Dies in an R A F Crash on way to Iceland PDF The New York Times 26 August 1942 Retrieved 11 September 2012 Rubinstein William D 2008 7 The Mysteries of Rudolf Hess Shadow Pasts History s Mysteries Harlow England Pearson Longman p 147 ISBN 9780582505971 Retrieved 18 February 2017 probably the strangest book ever written on the Hess affair is Double Standards The thesis of Double Standards is that Rudolf Hess died in the plane crash in northern Scotland in August 1942 which also killed the Duke of Kent Hess was being transported to neutral Sweden not Iceland given in the official story as the plane s destination to be handed over to the Germans as the first step in a settlement of the war between Britain and Germany Double Standards seems breathtaking in its implausible inaccuracy Double Standards p 424 Aviation Newbattle at war newbattleatwar wordpress com 9 April 2013 Royal Burials in the Chapel since 1805 College of St George Windsor Castle Retrieved 5 March 2023 Evans Rob Pegg David 18 July 2022 187m of Windsor family wealth hidden in secret royal wills The Guardian Retrieved 19 July 2022 Ranter Harro ASN Aircraft accident Short Sunderland III W4026 Dunbeath Scotland aviation safety net Retrieved 22 June 2017 Secret of Duke s plane death BBC News Wales 23 December 2003 Retrieved 26 September 2017 BBC Radio 4 Extra Hut 33 Series 2 Royal Visit The Queen s Lost Uncle Channel 4 Retrieved 18 May 2015 a b Upstairs life of a royal rogue Daily Express 26 February 2012 Retrieved 23 March 2013 Furness Hannah 1 February 2013 New BBC drama to show the scandalous stories of the playboy princes The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 23 March 2013 List of the Knights of the Garter via heraldica org No 34045 The London Gazette 27 April 1934 p 2703 P Galloway D Stanley D Martin 1996 Royal Service volume 1 pp 209 212 London Victorian Publishing ISBN 0 9528527 0 5 No 34238 The London Gazette 31 December 1935 p 7 Personal Aide de Camp Appointments 23 June 1936 The London Gazette Retrieved 11 June 2022 Bille Hansen A C Holck Harald eds 1933 1st pub 1801 Statshaandbog for Kongeriget Danmark for Aaret 1933 State Manual of the Kingdom of Denmark for the Year 1933 PDF Kongelig Dansk Hof og Statskalender in Danish Copenhagen J H Schultz A S Universitetsbogtrykkeri p 17 Retrieved 5 March 2020 via da DIS Danmark Den kongelige norske Sanct Olavs Orden Norges Statskalender for Aaret 1930 in Norwegian Oslo Forlagt av H Aschehoug amp Co w Nygaard 1930 pp 995 996 via runeberg org Per Nordenvall 1998 Kungl Maj ts Orden Kungliga Serafimerorden 1748 1998 in Swedish Stockholm ISBN 91 630 6744 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bortrick William The Royal Family HM Queen Elizabeth II Burke s Peerage and Gentry Archived from the original on 1 December 2009 Retrieved 7 January 2021 M amp B Wattel 2009 Les Grand Croix de la Legion d honneur de 1805 a nos jours Titulaires francais et etrangers in French Paris Archives amp Culture p 463 ISBN 978 2 35077 135 9 The Essex and Kent Scottish Key Appointments The Scottish Borderers Foundation retrieved 15 November 2023 Cooke P 2019 Won by the Spade How the Royal New Zealand Engineers Built a Nation Dunedin Exisle Publishing p 233 ISBN 9781775593645 No 34142 The London Gazette 15 March 1935 p 1807 Further reading editHunt Leslie 1972 Twenty one Squadrons History of the Royal Auxiliary Air Force 1925 57 London Garnstone Press ISBN 0 85511 110 0 New edition in 1992 by Crecy Publishing ISBN 0 947554 26 2 Millar Peter The Other Prince The Sunday Times 26 January 2003 Warwick Christopher George and Marina Duke and Duchess of Kent London Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1988 ISBN 0 297 79453 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Prince George Duke of Kent Hansard 1803 2005 contributions in Parliament by the Duke of Kent Portraits of Prince George Duke of Kent at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Newspaper clippings about Prince George Duke of Kent in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWPrince George Duke of KentHouse of WindsorCadet branch of the House of WettinBorn 20 December 1902 Died 25 August 1942Masonic officesPreceded byThe Duke of Connaught and Strathearn Grand Master of the United Grand Lodge of England1939 1942 Succeeded byThe Earl of HarewoodPeerage of the United KingdomNew title Duke of Kent1934 1942 Succeeded byPrince Edward Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Prince George Duke of Kent amp oldid 1188155078, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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