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Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom

Princess Beatrice (Beatrice Mary Victoria Feodore; 14 April 1857 – 26 October 1944), later Princess Henry of Battenberg, was the fifth daughter and youngest child of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert. Beatrice was also the last of Queen Victoria's children to die, nearly 66 years after the first, her elder sister Alice.

Princess Beatrice
Princess Henry of Battenberg
Princess Beatrice in 1886
Born(1857-04-14)14 April 1857
Buckingham Palace, London, England
Died26 October 1944(1944-10-26) (aged 87)
Brantridge Park, Sussex, England
Burial3 November 1944
Spouse
(m. 1885; died 1896)
Issue
Names
Beatrice Mary Victoria Feodore
HouseSaxe-Coburg and Gotha (until 1917)
Windsor (from 1917)
FatherPrince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
MotherQueen Victoria
Signature

Beatrice's childhood coincided with Queen Victoria's grief following the death of her husband on 14 December 1861. As her elder sisters married and left their mother, the Queen came to rely on the company of her youngest daughter, whom she called "Baby" for most of her childhood. Beatrice was brought up to stay with her mother always and she soon resigned herself to her fate. The Queen was so set against her youngest daughter marrying that she refused to discuss the possibility. Nevertheless, many suitors were put forward, including Louis Napoléon, Prince Imperial, the son of the exiled Emperor Napoleon III of France, and Louis IV, Grand Duke of Hesse, the widower of Beatrice's older sister Alice. She was attracted to the Prince Imperial and there was talk of a possible marriage, but he was killed in the Anglo-Zulu War in 1879.

Beatrice fell in love with Prince Henry of Battenberg, the son of Prince Alexander of Hesse and by Rhine and Julia von Hauke and brother-in-law of her niece Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine. After a year of persuasion, the Queen, whose consent was required pursuant to the Royal Marriages Act, finally agreed to the marriage, which took place at Whippingham on the Isle of Wight on 23 July 1885. Queen Victoria consented on condition that Beatrice and Henry make their home with her and that Beatrice continue her duties as the Queen's unofficial secretary. The Prince and Princess had four children, but 10 years into their marriage, on 20 January 1896, Prince Henry died of malaria while fighting in the Anglo-Asante War. Beatrice remained at her mother's side until Queen Victoria died on 22 January 1901. Beatrice devoted the next 30 years to editing Queen Victoria's journals as her designated literary executor and continued to make public appearances. She died aged 87 in 1944.

Early life edit

 
Queen Victoria holding Princess Beatrice in 1862

Princess Beatrice was born on 14 April 1857 at Buckingham Palace, London.[1] She was the fifth daughter and youngest of the nine children of the reigning British monarch, Queen Victoria, and her husband, Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (later the Prince Consort). The birth caused controversy when it was announced that Queen Victoria would seek relief from the pains of delivery through the use of chloroform administered by Dr John Snow. Chloroform was considered dangerous to mother and child and was frowned upon by the Church of England and the medical authorities.[2] Queen Victoria was undeterred and used "that blessed chloroform" for her last pregnancy.[3] A fortnight later, Queen Victoria reported in her journal, "I was amply rewarded and forgot all I had gone through when I heard dearest Albert say 'It's a fine child, and a girl!'"[4] Albert and Queen Victoria chose the names Beatrice Mary Victoria Feodore: Mary after Princess Mary, Duchess of Gloucester, the last surviving child of King George III of the United Kingdom; Victoria after the Queen; and Feodore after Feodora, Princess of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, the Queen's older half-sister. She was baptised in the private chapel at Buckingham Palace on 16 June 1857. Her godparents were the Duchess of Kent (maternal grandmother); the Princess Royal (eldest sister); and the Prince Frederick of Prussia (her future brother-in-law).[5]

 
The daughters of Queen Victoria mourn the loss of their father. Beatrice is standing in the centre.

From birth, Beatrice became a favoured child.[6] The elder favourite daughter of Prince Albert, the Princess Royal, was about to take up residence in Germany with her new husband, Frederick ("Fritz") of Prussia. At the same time, the newly arrived Beatrice showed promise. Albert wrote to Augusta, Fritz's mother, that "Baby practises her scales like a good prima donna before a performance and has a good voice!"[7] Although Queen Victoria was known to dislike most babies, she liked Beatrice, whom she considered attractive. This provided Beatrice with an advantage over her elder siblings. Queen Victoria once remarked that Beatrice was "a pretty, plump and flourishing child ... with fine large blue eyes, [a] pretty little mouth and very fine skin".[8] Her long, golden hair was the focus of paintings commissioned by Queen Victoria, who enjoyed giving Beatrice her bath, in marked contrast to her bathing preferences for her other children. Beatrice showed intelligence, which further endeared her to the Prince Consort, who was amused by her childhood precociousness.[6]

He wrote to Baron Stockmar that Beatrice was "the most amusing baby we have had." Despite sharing the rigorous education programme designed by Prince Albert and his close adviser, Baron Stockmar, Beatrice had a more relaxed infancy than her siblings because of her relationship with her parents.[9] By four years of age, the youngest, and the acknowledged last royal child, Beatrice was not forced to share her parents' attention the way her siblings had, and her amusing ways provided comfort to her faltering father.

Queen Victoria's devoted companion edit

 
Princess Beatrice in 1868

In March 1861, Queen Victoria's mother Victoria, Duchess of Kent, died at Frogmore. The Queen broke down in grief and guilt over their estrangement at the beginning of her reign.[10] Beatrice tried to console her mother by reminding her that the Duchess of Kent was "in heaven, but Beatrice hopes she will return".[11] This comfort was significant because Queen Victoria had isolated herself from her children except the eldest unmarried daughter, Princess Alice, and Beatrice.[12] Queen Victoria again relied on Beatrice and Alice after the death of Albert, of typhoid fever, on 14 December.[13]

The depth of the Queen's grief over the death of her husband surprised her family, courtiers, politicians and general populace. As when her mother died, she shut herself off from her family—most particularly, the Prince of Wales, (whom she blamed for her husband's death),[14] with the exception of Alice and Beatrice. Queen Victoria often took Beatrice from her cot, hurried to her bed and "lay there sleepless, clasping to her child, wrapped in the nightclothes of a man who would wear them no more."[15] After 1871, when the last of Beatrice's elder sisters married,[16] Queen Victoria came to rely upon her youngest daughter, who had declared from an early age: "I don't like weddings at all. I shall never be married. I shall stay with my mother."[17] As her mother's secretary, she performed duties such as writing on the Queen's behalf and helping with political correspondence.[18] These mundane duties mirrored those that had been performed in succession by her sisters, Alice, Helena and Louise.[19] However, to these the Queen soon added more personal tasks. During a serious illness in 1871, the Queen dictated her journal entries to Beatrice, and in 1876 she allowed Beatrice to sort the music she and the Prince Consort had played, unused since his death fifteen years earlier.[19]

The devotion that Beatrice showed to her mother was acknowledged in the Queen's letters and journals, but her constant need for Beatrice grew stronger.[20][21] The Queen suffered another bereavement in 1883, when her highland servant, John Brown, died at Balmoral.[22] Once again, the Queen plunged into public mourning and relied on Beatrice for support. Unlike her siblings, Beatrice had not shown dislike for Brown, and the two had often been seen in each other's company; indeed, they had worked together to carry out the Queen's wishes.[23]

Marriage edit

Possible suitors edit

Although the Queen was set against Beatrice marrying anyone in the expectation that she would always stay at home with her, a number of possible suitors were put forward before Beatrice's marriage to Prince Henry of Battenberg. One of these was Napoléon Eugéne, the French Prince Imperial, son and heir of the exiled Emperor Napoleon III of France and his wife, Empress Eugénie. After Prussia defeated France in the Franco-Prussian War, Napoleon was deposed and moved his family to England in 1870.[24] After the Emperor's death in 1873, Queen Victoria and Empress Eugénie formed a close attachment, and the newspapers reported the imminent engagement of Beatrice to the Prince Imperial.[25] These rumours ended with the death of the Prince Imperial in the Anglo-Zulu War on 1 June 1879. Queen Victoria's journal records their grief: "Dear Beatrice, crying very much as I did too, gave me the telegram ... It was dawning and little sleep did I get ... Beatrice is so distressed; everyone quite stunned."[26]

 
Louis Napoléon, Prince Imperial, to whom Beatrice was romantically attached in the 1870s

After the death of the Prince Imperial, the Prince of Wales suggested that Beatrice marry their sister Alice's widower, Louis IV, Grand Duke of Hesse. Alice had died in 1878, and the Prince argued that Beatrice could act as replacement mother for Louis's young children and spend most of her time in England looking after her mother.[27] He further suggested the Queen could oversee the upbringing of her Hessian grandchildren with greater ease.[27] However, at the time, it was forbidden by law for Beatrice to marry her sister's widower.[28] This was countered by the Prince of Wales, who vehemently supported passage by the Houses of Parliament of the Deceased Wife's Sister Bill, which would have removed the obstacle.[27] Despite popular support for this measure and although it passed in the House of Commons, it was rejected by the House of Lords because of opposition from the Lords Spiritual.[29] Although the Queen was disappointed that the bill had failed, she was happy to keep her daughter at her side.[27]

Other candidates, including two of Prince Henry's brothers, Prince Alexander ("Sandro") and Prince Louis of Battenberg, were put forward to be Beatrice's husband, but they did not succeed. Although Alexander never formally pursued Beatrice, merely claiming that he "might even at one time have become engaged to the friend of my childhood, Beatrice of England",[30] Louis was more interested. Queen Victoria invited him to dinner but sat between him and Beatrice, who had been told by the Queen to ignore Louis to discourage his suit.[31] Louis, not realising for several years the reasons for this silence, married Beatrice's niece, Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine. Although her marriage hopes had been dealt another blow, while attending Louis's wedding at Darmstadt, Beatrice fell in love with Prince Henry, who returned her affections.[32]

Engagement and wedding edit

 
Princess Beatrice in her wedding dress, Osborne, 1885. Beatrice wore her mother's wedding veil of Honiton lace.

When Beatrice, after returning from Darmstadt, told her mother she planned to marry, the Queen reacted with frightening silence. Although they remained side by side, the Queen did not talk to her for seven months, instead communicating by note.[33] Queen Victoria's behaviour, unexpected even by her family, seemed prompted by the threatened loss of her daughter. The Queen regarded Beatrice as her "Baby" – her innocent child – and viewed the physical sex that would come with marriage as an end to innocence.[34]

Subtle persuasions by the Princess of Wales and the Crown Princess of Prussia, who reminded her mother of the happiness that Beatrice had brought the Prince Consort, induced the Queen to resume talking to Beatrice. Queen Victoria consented to the marriage on condition that Henry give up his German commitments and live permanently with Beatrice and the Queen.[35]

Beatrice and Henry were married at Saint Mildred's Church at Whippingham, near Osborne,[36] on 23 July 1885.[35] Beatrice, who wore her mother's wedding veil of Honiton lace, was escorted by the Queen and Beatrice's eldest brother, the Prince of Wales.[37] Princess Beatrice was attended by ten royal bridesmaids from among her nieces: Princesses Louise (18), Victoria and Maud of Wales; Princesses Irene and Alix of Hesse and by Rhine; Princesses Marie, Victoria Melita and Alexandra of Edinburgh; and Princesses Helena Victoria and Marie Louise of Schleswig-Holstein. The bridegroom's supporters were his brothers, Prince Alexander of Bulgaria and Prince Francis Joseph of Battenberg.[38]

The ceremony – which was not attended by her eldest sister and brother-in-law, the Crown Prince and Princess of Prussia, who were detained in Germany; William Ewart Gladstone; or Beatrice's cousin, Princess Mary Adelaide, Duchess of Teck, who was in mourning for her father-in-law[39] – ended with the couple's departure for their honeymoon at Quarr Abbey House, a few miles from Osborne. The Queen, taking leave of them, "bore up bravely till the departure and then fairly gave way", as she later admitted to the Crown Princess.[40]

Queen Victoria's last years edit

 
Prince Henry of Battenberg, who was married to Beatrice from 1885 until his death in 1896

After a short honeymoon, Beatrice and her husband fulfilled their promise and returned to the Queen's side. The Queen made it clear that she could not cope on her own and that the couple could not travel without her.[41] Although the Queen relaxed this restriction shortly after the marriage, Beatrice and Henry travelled only to make short visits with his family. Beatrice's love for Henry, like that of the Queen's for the Prince Consort, seemed to increase the longer they were married. When Henry travelled without Beatrice, she appeared happier when he returned.[41]

The addition of Prince Henry to the family gave new reasons for Beatrice and the Queen to look forward, and the court was brighter than it had been since the Prince Consort's death.[42] Even so, Henry, supported by Beatrice, was determined to take part in military campaigns, and this annoyed the Queen, who opposed his participation in life-threatening warfare.[43] Conflicts also arose when Henry attended the Ajaccio carnival and kept "low company",[44] and Beatrice sent a Royal Navy officer to remove him from temptation.[44] On one occasion, Henry slipped away to Corsica with his brother Louis;[35] the Queen sent a warship to bring him back.[35] Henry was feeling oppressed by the Queen's constant need for his and his wife's company.[44]

Despite being married, Beatrice fulfilled her promise to the Queen by continuing as her full-time confidante and secretary. Queen Victoria warmed to Henry.[45] However, the Queen criticised Beatrice's conduct during her first pregnancy. When Beatrice stopped coming to the Queen's dinners a week before giving birth, preferring to eat alone in her room, the Queen wrote angrily to her physician, Dr James Reid, that, "I [urged the Princess to continue] coming to dinner, and not simply moping in her own room, which is very bad for her. In my case I regularly came to dinner, except when I was really unwell (even when suffering a great deal) up to the very last day."[46] Beatrice, aided by chloroform, gave birth the following week to her first son, Alexander.[46] Despite suffering a miscarriage in the early months of her marriage,[47] Beatrice gave birth to four children: Alexander, called "Drino", was born in 1886; Victoria Eugenie, called "Ena", in 1887; Leopold in 1889; and Maurice in 1891. Following this, she took a polite and encouraging interest in social issues, such as conditions in the coal mines. However, this interest did not extend to changing the conditions of poverty, as it had done with her brother, the Prince of Wales.[42]

Although court entertainments were few after the Prince Consort's death, Beatrice and the Queen enjoyed tableau vivant photography, which was often performed at the royal residences.[42] Henry, increasingly bored by the lack of activity at court, longed for employment, and in response, the Queen made him Governor of the Isle of Wight in 1889.[35] However, he yearned for military adventure and pleaded with his mother-in-law to let him join the Ashanti expedition fighting in the Anglo-Asante war. Despite misgivings, the Queen consented, and Henry and Beatrice parted on 6 December 1895; they would not meet again. Henry contracted malaria and was sent home. On 22 January 1896, Beatrice, who was waiting for her husband at Madeira, received a telegram informing her of Henry's death two days earlier.[43]

Devastated, she left court for a month of mourning before returning to her post at her mother's side.[43] The Queen's journal reports that Queen Victoria "[w]ent over to Beatrice's room and sat a while with her. She is so piteous in her misery."[48] Despite her grief, Beatrice remained her mother's faithful companion,[43] and as Queen Victoria aged, she relied more heavily on Beatrice for dealing with correspondence. However, realising that Beatrice needed a place of her own, she gave her the Kensington Palace apartments once occupied by the Queen and her mother.[49] The Queen appointed Beatrice to the governorship of the Isle of Wight, vacated by Prince Henry's death.[35] In response to Beatrice's interest in photography, the Queen had a darkroom installed at Osborne House.[18] The changes in the family, including Beatrice's preoccupation with her mother, may have affected her children, who rebelled at school. Beatrice wrote that Ena was "troublesome and rebellious", and that Alexander was telling "unwarrantable untruths".[50]

Later life edit

 
Princess Beatrice with her mother, Queen Victoria

Beatrice's life was overturned by the death of Queen Victoria on 22 January 1901. She wrote to the Principal of the University of Glasgow in March, "... you may imagine what the grief is. I, who had hardly ever been separated from my dear mother, can hardly realise what life will be like without her, who was the centre of everything."[51] Beatrice's public appearances continued, but her position at court was diminished. She, unlike her sister Louise, was not close to her brother, now Edward VII, and was not included in the King's inner circle. Although their relationship did not break down completely, it was occasionally strained, for example when she accidentally (but noisily) dropped her service book from the royal gallery onto a table of gold plate during his coronation.[52]

After inheriting Osborne, the King had his mother's personal photographs and belongings removed and some of them destroyed, especially material relating to John Brown, whom he detested.[53] Queen Victoria had intended the house to be a private, secluded residence for her descendants, away from the pomp and ceremony of mainland life.[54] However, the new king had no need for the house and consulted his lawyers about disposing of it, transforming the main wing into a convalescent home, opening the state apartments to the public, and constructing a Naval College on the grounds. His plans met with strong disapproval from Beatrice and Louise. Queen Victoria had bequeathed them houses on the estate, and the privacy promised to them by their mother was threatened. When Edward discussed the fate of the house with them, Beatrice argued against allowing the house to leave the family, citing its importance to their parents.[54]

However, the King did not want the house himself, and he offered it to his heir-apparent, Beatrice's nephew George, who declined, objecting to the high cost of maintenance. Edward subsequently extended the grounds of Beatrice's home, Osborne Cottage, to compensate her for the impending loss of her privacy. Shortly afterwards, the King declared to Arthur Balfour, the prime minister, that the main house would go to the nation as a gift. An exception was made for the private apartments, which were closed to all but the royal family members, who made it a shrine to their mother's memory.[55]

Queen Victoria's journals edit

Upon Queen Victoria's death, Beatrice began the momentous task of transcribing and editing her mother's journals. The hundreds of volumes from 1831 onwards contained the Queen's personal views of the day-to-day business of her life and included personal and family matters as well as matters of state.[56]

Queen Victoria had given Beatrice the task of editing the journals for publication, which meant removing private material as well as passages that, if published, might be hurtful to living people. Beatrice deleted so much material that the edited journals are only a third as long as the originals.[56] The destruction of such large passages of Queen Victoria's diaries distressed Beatrice's nephew, George V, and his wife Queen Mary, who were powerless to intervene.[57] Beatrice copied a draft from the original and then copied her draft into a set of blue notebooks. Both the originals and her first drafts were destroyed as she progressed.[57] The task took thirty years and was finished in 1931. The surviving 111 notebooks are kept in the Royal Archives at Windsor Castle.[58]

Retirement from public life edit

Beatrice continued to appear in public after her mother's death. The public engagements she carried out were often related to her mother, Queen Victoria, as the public had always associated Beatrice with the deceased monarch.[59]

 
Prince Maurice of Battenberg. After his death during the First World War, Beatrice began to retire from public life.

The beauty of Beatrice's daughter, Ena, was known throughout Europe, and, despite her low rank, she was a desirable bride.[60] Her chosen suitor was Alfonso XIII of Spain. However, the marriage caused controversy in Britain, since it required Ena to convert to Catholicism.[61] This step was opposed by Beatrice's brother, Edward VII, and Spanish ultra-conservatives were against the King's marriage to a Protestant of low birth, as her father, Prince Henry, was the son of a morganatic marriage. Thus, they considered Ena to be only partly royal and thus unfit to be Queen of Spain.[60] Nonetheless, the couple wed on 31 May 1906. The marriage began inauspiciously when an anarchist attempted to bomb them on their wedding day.[60] Apparently close at first, the couple grew apart. Ena became unpopular in Spain and grew more so when it was discovered that her son, the heir-apparent to the throne, suffered from haemophilia. Alfonso held Beatrice responsible [62] for having brought the disease to the Spanish royal house and turned bitterly against Ena.[62]

During her time as Queen of Spain, Ena returned many times to visit her mother in Britain, but always without Alfonso and usually without her children. Meanwhile, Beatrice lived at Osborne Cottage in East Cowes until she sold it in 1913, when Carisbrooke Castle, home of the Governor of the Isle of Wight, became vacant.[63] She moved into the Castle while keeping an apartment at Kensington Palace in London. She had been much involved in collecting material for the Carisbrooke Castle museum, which she opened in 1898.[64]

 
Portrait by Philip de László, 1912

Her presence at court further decreased as she aged. Devastated by the death of her favourite son, Maurice, during the First World War in 1914, she began to retire from public life.[65] In response to war with Germany, George V changed the name of the royal house from Saxe-Coburg and Gotha to Windsor and at the same time adopted it as the family surname, to downplay their German origins. Subsequently, Beatrice and her family renounced their German titles; Beatrice stopped using the style Princess Henry of Battenberg, reverting to only using her birth style, HRH The Princess Beatrice. Her sons gave up their style, Prince of Battenberg. Alexander, the eldest, became Sir Alexander Mountbatten and was later given the title Marquess of Carisbrooke in the Peerage of the United Kingdom.[66] Her younger son, Leopold, became Lord Leopold Mountbatten and was given the rank of a younger son of a marquess.[35] He was a haemophiliac, having inherited the "royal disease" from his mother, and died during a knee operation in 1922 one month short of his 33rd birthday.

Following the war, Beatrice was one of several members of the royal family who became patrons of The Ypres League, a society founded for veterans of the Ypres Salient and bereaved relatives of those killed in fighting in the Salient.[67] She was herself a bereaved mother, as her son, Prince Maurice of Battenberg, had been killed in action during the First Battle of Ypres. Rare public appearances after his death included commemorations, including laying wreaths at the Cenotaph in 1930 and 1935 to mark the 10th and 15th anniversaries of the founding of the League.[68][69]

Last years edit

 
Princess Beatrice in later life

Even in her seventies, Beatrice continued to correspond with her friends and relatives and to make rare public appearances, such as when, pushed in a wheelchair, she viewed the wreaths laid after the death of George V in 1936.[70] She published her last work of translation in 1941. Entitled "In Napoleonic Days", it was the personal diary of Queen Victoria's maternal grandmother, Augusta, Duchess of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld. She corresponded with the publisher, John Murray, who greatly approved of the work.[71] She made her last home at Brantridge Park in West Sussex, which was owned by Queen Mary's brother, Alexander Cambridge, 1st Earl of Athlone, and his wife, Princess Alice,[72] who was Beatrice's niece; the Athlones were at the time in Canada where the Earl was governor-general. There, Beatrice died in her sleep on 26 October 1944, aged eighty-seven (the day before the 30th anniversary of her son, Prince Maurice's death).[35] After her funeral service in St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle, her coffin was placed in the royal vault on 3 November. On 27 August 1945, her body was transferred and placed inside a joint tomb, alongside her husband, in St Mildred's Church, Whippingham.[63][73] Beatrice's final wish, to be buried with her husband on the island most familiar to her, was fulfilled in a private service at Whippingham attended only by her son, the Marquess of Carisbrooke, and his wife.[63]

Legacy edit

Beatrice was the shyest of all of Queen Victoria's children. However, because she accompanied Queen Victoria almost wherever she went, she became among the best known.[74] Despite her shyness, she was an able actress and dancer as well as a keen artist and photographer.[75] She was devoted to her children and was concerned when they misbehaved at school. To those who enjoyed her friendship, she was loyal and had a sense of humour,[76] and as a public figure she was driven by a strong sense of duty.[77] She was Patron of the Isle of Wight Branch of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution from 1920 until her death.[78] Music, a passion that was shared by her mother and the Prince Consort, was something in which Beatrice excelled. She played the piano to professional standards and was an occasional composer.[79][80] Like her mother, she was a devout Christian, fascinated by theology until her death.[81] With her calm temperament and personal warmth, the princess won wide approval.[82]

The demands made on Beatrice during her mother's reign were high. Despite suffering from rheumatism, Beatrice was forced to endure her mother's love of cold weather.[83] Beatrice's piano playing suffered as her rheumatism got gradually worse, eliminating an enjoyment in which she excelled; however, this did not change her willingness to cater to her mother's needs.[83] Her effort did not go unnoticed by the British public.

 
Tomb of Prince Henry of Battenberg and Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom in St Mildred's Church, Whippingham, Isle of Wight

In 1886, when she agreed to open the Show of the Royal Horticultural Society of Southampton, the organisers sent her a proclamation of thanks, expressing their "admiration of the affectionate manner in which you have comforted and assisted your widowed mother our Gracious Sovereign the Queen".[84] As a wedding present, Sir Moses Montefiore, a banker and philanthropist, presented Beatrice and Henry with a silver tea service inscribed: "Many daughters have acted virtuously, but thou excellest them all."[85] The Times newspaper, shortly before Beatrice's marriage, wrote: "The devotion of your Royal Highness to our beloved Sovereign has won our warmest admiration and our deepest gratitude. May those blessings which it has hitherto been your constant aim to confer on others now be returned in full measure to yourself."[86] The sentence was, as far as it dared, criticising the Queen's hold over her daughter.[85]

She died at Brantridge Park, the home of her niece, Princess Alice, and her husband, the Earl of Athlone, at the time serving as Governor General of Canada. Osborne House, her mother's favourite home, is accessible to the public.[87] Her Osborne residences, Osborne and Albert Cottages, remain in private ownership after their sale in 1912.[88]

Titles, styles, honours and arms edit

Titles and styles edit

  • 14 April 1857 – 23 July 1885: Her Royal Highness The Princess Beatrice
  • 23 July 1885 – 14 July 1917: Her Royal Highness The Princess Beatrice, Princess Henry of Battenberg[89]
  • 17 July 1917 – 26 October 1944: Her Royal Highness The Princess Beatrice[90]

Honours edit

British honours
Foreign honours

Arms edit

In 1858, Beatrice and the three younger of her sisters were granted use of the royal arms, with an inescutcheon of the shield of Saxony and differenced by a label of three points argent. On Beatrice's arms, the outer points bore roses gules, and the centre a heart gules. In 1917, the inescutcheon was dropped by royal warrant from George V.[100]

 
 
Princess Beatrice's coat of arms (1858–1917) Princess Beatrice's coat of arms as a Dame of the Order of Queen Maria Luisa

Issue edit

Portrait Name Birth Death Notes
  Prince Alexander of Battenberg
later Alexander Mountbatten, 1st Marquess of Carisbrooke
23 November 1886 23 February 1960 married Lady Irene Denison (4 July 1890 – 16 July 1956) on 19 July 1917.
1 daughter (Lady Iris Mountbatten, 1920–1982).
  Princess Victoria Eugénie of Battenberg
later Queen of Spain
24 October 1887 15 April 1969 married Alfonso XIII of Spain (17 May 1886 – 28 February 1941) on 31 May 1906
2 daughters, 5 sons (1 stillborn), (including Infante Juan, Count of Barcelona, 1913–1993, father of Juan Carlos I of Spain).
  Prince Leopold of Battenberg
later Lord Leopold Mountbatten
21 May 1889 23 April 1922 Suffered from haemophilia; died unmarried and without issue during a knee operation.
  Prince Maurice of Battenberg 3 October 1891 27 October 1914 Died of wounds from action during World War I.

Ancestry edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Dennison, p. 2
  2. ^ Dennison, p. 3
  3. ^ Longford, (Victoria R. I.), p. 234
  4. ^ Quoted in Dennison, p. 3
  5. ^ Dennison, p. 8
  6. ^ a b Dennison, p. 13
  7. ^ Jagow, p. 272
  8. ^ Quoted in Dennison, p. 11
  9. ^ Dennison, p. 22
  10. ^ Longford, (Victoria, Duchess of Kent) Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  11. ^ Quoted in Epton, p. 92
  12. ^ Bolitho, p. 104
  13. ^ Bolitho, pp. 195–196
  14. ^ Matthew, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  15. ^ Duff, p. 10
  16. ^ Victoria, Princess Royal in 1858; Alice in 1862; Helena in 1866; Louise in 1871
  17. ^ Quoted in Dennison, p. 38
  18. ^ a b Dennison, p. 204
  19. ^ a b Dennison, p. 92
  20. ^ Bolitho, p. 301
  21. ^ After a failed assassination attempt on the Queen in 1882, she wrote of Beatrice: "Nothing can exceed dearest Beatrice's courage and calmness, for she saw the whole thing, the man take aim, and fire straight into the carriage, but she never said a word, observing that I was not frightened."
  22. ^ Buckle, p. 418
  23. ^ Dennison, pp. 95–101
  24. ^ Corley, p. 349
  25. ^ Dennison, pp. 86–87
  26. ^ Quoted in Dennison, p. 89
  27. ^ a b c d Dennison, pp. 103–106
  28. ^ McFarland, Cynthia; Reid, Brian (17 August 2003). "Anglican Online archives". Anglican Online. Retrieved 8 November 2007.
  29. ^ . New York Times. 6 February 1902. Archived from the original on 21 November 2007. Retrieved 8 November 2007.
  30. ^ Quoted in Dennison, p. 126
  31. ^ Dennison, p. 116
  32. ^ Dennison, p. 124
  33. ^ Dennison, p. 130
  34. ^ Dennison, pp. 127–129
  35. ^ a b c d e f g h Purdue, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  36. ^ Beatrice and her siblings were confirmed here
  37. ^ Dennison, pp. 152–153
  38. ^ "Prince and Princess Henry of Battenberg with their bridesmaids and others on their wedding day". National Portrait Gallery, London, UK.
  39. ^ Dennison, p. 153
  40. ^ Hibbert, p. 294
  41. ^ a b Dennison, pp. 179–180
  42. ^ a b c Dennison, p. 171
  43. ^ a b c d Dennison, p. 190
  44. ^ a b c Dennison, pp. 185–186
  45. ^ Bolitho, p. 27
  46. ^ a b Quoted in Dennison, p. 164
  47. ^ Dennison, p. 161
  48. ^ Quoted in Dennison, p. 192
  49. ^ Dennison, p. 203
  50. ^ Dennison, pp. 210–212
  51. ^ Quoted in Dennison, p. 213
  52. ^ Dennison, pp. 233–234
  53. ^ Magnus, p. 290
  54. ^ a b Benson, p. 302
  55. ^ Dennison, pp. 225–228
  56. ^ a b "Extracts from Queen Victoria's journals" (PDF). Official website of the British Monarchy. 2005. Retrieved 11 November 2007.
  57. ^ a b Magnus, p. 461
  58. ^ "Collections in the Royal Archives". Official website of the British Monarchy. 2008–2009. Retrieved 14 August 2013.
  59. ^ Dennison, p. 215
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References edit

  • Aspinall-Oglander, C. F., "Princess Beatrice (1857–1944)", Dictionary of National Biography (archive), Oxford University Press, 1959; accessed 26 December 2007
  • Beatrice, HRH The Princess, A Birthday Book (Smith, Elder & Co. London, 1881)
    • The Adventures of Count Georg Albert of Erbach (John Murray, London, 1890)
    • In Napoleonic Days: Extracts from the private diary of Augusta, Duchess of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, Queen Victoria's maternal grandmother, 1806 to 1821 (John Murray, London, 1941)
  • Benson, E. F., Queen Victoria's Daughters (Appleton and Company, 1938)
  • Bolitho, Hector, Reign of Queen Victoria (Macmillan, London, 1948)
  • Buckle, George Earle, The Letters of Queen Victoria (Second Series [3rd volume]) (John Murray, London, 1928)
  • Corley, T. A. B., Democratic Despot: A Life of Napoleon III (Barrie and Rockliff, London, 1961)
  • Dennison, Matthew, The Last Princess: The Devoted Life of Queen Victoria's Youngest Daughter (Weidenfeld and Nicolson, Great Britain, 2007); ISBN 978-0-297-84794-6
  • Duff, David, The Shy Princess (Evans Brothers, Great Britain, 1958)
  • Epton, Nina, Victoria and her Daughters (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, Great Britain, 1971)
  • Jagow, Kurt, Letters of the Prince Consort 1831–1861 (John Murray, London, 1938)
  • Hibbert, Christopher, Queen Victoria in her letters and journals (Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000); ISBN 978-0-7509-2349-1
  • Lee, Sir Sidney, King Edward VII: A Biography (Volume I) (Macmillan company, 1925)
  • Longford, Elizabeth Victoria R. I. (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, Great Britain, 1964)
  • Longford, Elizabeth (2004). "Victoria, Princess [Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld], duchess of Kent (1786–1861)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/28273. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Magnus, Philip, Edward the Seventh (John Murray, London, 1964)
  • Matthew, H. C. G. (2016) [2004]. "Edward VII (1841–1910) profile". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/32975. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Noel, Gerard, Ena: Spain's English Queen (Constable, London, 1985); ISBN 978-0-09-479520-4
  • Noel, Gerard (2004). "Ena, princess of Battenberg (1887–1969)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/36656. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Purdue, A. W. (2008) [2004]. "Beatrice, Princess [married name Princess Henry of Battenberg] (1857–1944)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/30658. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

External links edit

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Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom
Cadet branch of the House of Wettin
Born: 14 April 1857 Died: 25 October 1944
Honorary titles
Preceded by Governor of the Isle of Wight
1896–1944
Succeeded by

princess, beatrice, united, kingdom, daughter, current, duke, york, princess, beatrice, other, people, named, princess, beatrice, princess, beatrice, disambiguation, princess, beatrice, beatrice, mary, victoria, feodore, april, 1857, october, 1944, later, prin. For the daughter of the current Duke of York see Princess Beatrice For other people named Princess Beatrice see Princess Beatrice disambiguation Princess Beatrice Beatrice Mary Victoria Feodore 14 April 1857 26 October 1944 later Princess Henry of Battenberg was the fifth daughter and youngest child of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert Beatrice was also the last of Queen Victoria s children to die nearly 66 years after the first her elder sister Alice Princess BeatricePrincess Henry of BattenbergPrincess Beatrice in 1886Born 1857 04 14 14 April 1857Buckingham Palace London EnglandDied26 October 1944 1944 10 26 aged 87 Brantridge Park Sussex EnglandBurial3 November 1944St George s Chapel Windsor 27 August 1945St Mildred s Church WhippinghamSpousePrince Henry of Battenberg m 1885 died 1896 wbr IssueAlexander Mountbatten 1st Marquess of Carisbrooke Victoria Eugenie Queen of Spain Lord Leopold Mountbatten Prince Maurice of BattenbergNamesBeatrice Mary Victoria FeodoreHouseSaxe Coburg and Gotha until 1917 Windsor from 1917 FatherPrince Albert of Saxe Coburg and GothaMotherQueen VictoriaSignature Beatrice s childhood coincided with Queen Victoria s grief following the death of her husband on 14 December 1861 As her elder sisters married and left their mother the Queen came to rely on the company of her youngest daughter whom she called Baby for most of her childhood Beatrice was brought up to stay with her mother always and she soon resigned herself to her fate The Queen was so set against her youngest daughter marrying that she refused to discuss the possibility Nevertheless many suitors were put forward including Louis Napoleon Prince Imperial the son of the exiled Emperor Napoleon III of France and Louis IV Grand Duke of Hesse the widower of Beatrice s older sister Alice She was attracted to the Prince Imperial and there was talk of a possible marriage but he was killed in the Anglo Zulu War in 1879 Beatrice fell in love with Prince Henry of Battenberg the son of Prince Alexander of Hesse and by Rhine and Julia von Hauke and brother in law of her niece Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine After a year of persuasion the Queen whose consent was required pursuant to the Royal Marriages Act finally agreed to the marriage which took place at Whippingham on the Isle of Wight on 23 July 1885 Queen Victoria consented on condition that Beatrice and Henry make their home with her and that Beatrice continue her duties as the Queen s unofficial secretary The Prince and Princess had four children but 10 years into their marriage on 20 January 1896 Prince Henry died of malaria while fighting in the Anglo Asante War Beatrice remained at her mother s side until Queen Victoria died on 22 January 1901 Beatrice devoted the next 30 years to editing Queen Victoria s journals as her designated literary executor and continued to make public appearances She died aged 87 in 1944 Contents 1 Early life 2 Queen Victoria s devoted companion 3 Marriage 3 1 Possible suitors 3 2 Engagement and wedding 4 Queen Victoria s last years 5 Later life 5 1 Queen Victoria s journals 5 2 Retirement from public life 5 3 Last years 6 Legacy 7 Titles styles honours and arms 7 1 Titles and styles 7 2 Honours 7 3 Arms 8 Issue 9 Ancestry 10 Notes 11 References 12 External linksEarly life edit nbsp Queen Victoria holding Princess Beatrice in 1862 Princess Beatrice was born on 14 April 1857 at Buckingham Palace London 1 She was the fifth daughter and youngest of the nine children of the reigning British monarch Queen Victoria and her husband Prince Albert of Saxe Coburg and Gotha later the Prince Consort The birth caused controversy when it was announced that Queen Victoria would seek relief from the pains of delivery through the use of chloroform administered by Dr John Snow Chloroform was considered dangerous to mother and child and was frowned upon by the Church of England and the medical authorities 2 Queen Victoria was undeterred and used that blessed chloroform for her last pregnancy 3 A fortnight later Queen Victoria reported in her journal I was amply rewarded and forgot all I had gone through when I heard dearest Albert say It s a fine child and a girl 4 Albert and Queen Victoria chose the names Beatrice Mary Victoria Feodore Mary after Princess Mary Duchess of Gloucester the last surviving child of King George III of the United Kingdom Victoria after the Queen and Feodore after Feodora Princess of Hohenlohe Langenburg the Queen s older half sister She was baptised in the private chapel at Buckingham Palace on 16 June 1857 Her godparents were the Duchess of Kent maternal grandmother the Princess Royal eldest sister and the Prince Frederick of Prussia her future brother in law 5 nbsp The daughters of Queen Victoria mourn the loss of their father Beatrice is standing in the centre From birth Beatrice became a favoured child 6 The elder favourite daughter of Prince Albert the Princess Royal was about to take up residence in Germany with her new husband Frederick Fritz of Prussia At the same time the newly arrived Beatrice showed promise Albert wrote to Augusta Fritz s mother that Baby practises her scales like a good prima donna before a performance and has a good voice 7 Although Queen Victoria was known to dislike most babies she liked Beatrice whom she considered attractive This provided Beatrice with an advantage over her elder siblings Queen Victoria once remarked that Beatrice was a pretty plump and flourishing child with fine large blue eyes a pretty little mouth and very fine skin 8 Her long golden hair was the focus of paintings commissioned by Queen Victoria who enjoyed giving Beatrice her bath in marked contrast to her bathing preferences for her other children Beatrice showed intelligence which further endeared her to the Prince Consort who was amused by her childhood precociousness 6 He wrote to Baron Stockmar that Beatrice was the most amusing baby we have had Despite sharing the rigorous education programme designed by Prince Albert and his close adviser Baron Stockmar Beatrice had a more relaxed infancy than her siblings because of her relationship with her parents 9 By four years of age the youngest and the acknowledged last royal child Beatrice was not forced to share her parents attention the way her siblings had and her amusing ways provided comfort to her faltering father Queen Victoria s devoted companion edit nbsp Princess Beatrice in 1868 In March 1861 Queen Victoria s mother Victoria Duchess of Kent died at Frogmore The Queen broke down in grief and guilt over their estrangement at the beginning of her reign 10 Beatrice tried to console her mother by reminding her that the Duchess of Kent was in heaven but Beatrice hopes she will return 11 This comfort was significant because Queen Victoria had isolated herself from her children except the eldest unmarried daughter Princess Alice and Beatrice 12 Queen Victoria again relied on Beatrice and Alice after the death of Albert of typhoid fever on 14 December 13 The depth of the Queen s grief over the death of her husband surprised her family courtiers politicians and general populace As when her mother died she shut herself off from her family most particularly the Prince of Wales whom she blamed for her husband s death 14 with the exception of Alice and Beatrice Queen Victoria often took Beatrice from her cot hurried to her bed and lay there sleepless clasping to her child wrapped in the nightclothes of a man who would wear them no more 15 After 1871 when the last of Beatrice s elder sisters married 16 Queen Victoria came to rely upon her youngest daughter who had declared from an early age I don t like weddings at all I shall never be married I shall stay with my mother 17 As her mother s secretary she performed duties such as writing on the Queen s behalf and helping with political correspondence 18 These mundane duties mirrored those that had been performed in succession by her sisters Alice Helena and Louise 19 However to these the Queen soon added more personal tasks During a serious illness in 1871 the Queen dictated her journal entries to Beatrice and in 1876 she allowed Beatrice to sort the music she and the Prince Consort had played unused since his death fifteen years earlier 19 The devotion that Beatrice showed to her mother was acknowledged in the Queen s letters and journals but her constant need for Beatrice grew stronger 20 21 The Queen suffered another bereavement in 1883 when her highland servant John Brown died at Balmoral 22 Once again the Queen plunged into public mourning and relied on Beatrice for support Unlike her siblings Beatrice had not shown dislike for Brown and the two had often been seen in each other s company indeed they had worked together to carry out the Queen s wishes 23 Marriage editPossible suitors edit Although the Queen was set against Beatrice marrying anyone in the expectation that she would always stay at home with her a number of possible suitors were put forward before Beatrice s marriage to Prince Henry of Battenberg One of these was Napoleon Eugene the French Prince Imperial son and heir of the exiled Emperor Napoleon III of France and his wife Empress Eugenie After Prussia defeated France in the Franco Prussian War Napoleon was deposed and moved his family to England in 1870 24 After the Emperor s death in 1873 Queen Victoria and Empress Eugenie formed a close attachment and the newspapers reported the imminent engagement of Beatrice to the Prince Imperial 25 These rumours ended with the death of the Prince Imperial in the Anglo Zulu War on 1 June 1879 Queen Victoria s journal records their grief Dear Beatrice crying very much as I did too gave me the telegram It was dawning and little sleep did I get Beatrice is so distressed everyone quite stunned 26 nbsp Louis Napoleon Prince Imperial to whom Beatrice was romantically attached in the 1870s After the death of the Prince Imperial the Prince of Wales suggested that Beatrice marry their sister Alice s widower Louis IV Grand Duke of Hesse Alice had died in 1878 and the Prince argued that Beatrice could act as replacement mother for Louis s young children and spend most of her time in England looking after her mother 27 He further suggested the Queen could oversee the upbringing of her Hessian grandchildren with greater ease 27 However at the time it was forbidden by law for Beatrice to marry her sister s widower 28 This was countered by the Prince of Wales who vehemently supported passage by the Houses of Parliament of the Deceased Wife s Sister Bill which would have removed the obstacle 27 Despite popular support for this measure and although it passed in the House of Commons it was rejected by the House of Lords because of opposition from the Lords Spiritual 29 Although the Queen was disappointed that the bill had failed she was happy to keep her daughter at her side 27 Other candidates including two of Prince Henry s brothers Prince Alexander Sandro and Prince Louis of Battenberg were put forward to be Beatrice s husband but they did not succeed Although Alexander never formally pursued Beatrice merely claiming that he might even at one time have become engaged to the friend of my childhood Beatrice of England 30 Louis was more interested Queen Victoria invited him to dinner but sat between him and Beatrice who had been told by the Queen to ignore Louis to discourage his suit 31 Louis not realising for several years the reasons for this silence married Beatrice s niece Princess Victoria of Hesse and by Rhine Although her marriage hopes had been dealt another blow while attending Louis s wedding at Darmstadt Beatrice fell in love with Prince Henry who returned her affections 32 Engagement and wedding edit See also Wedding dress of Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom nbsp Princess Beatrice in her wedding dress Osborne 1885 Beatrice wore her mother s wedding veil of Honiton lace When Beatrice after returning from Darmstadt told her mother she planned to marry the Queen reacted with frightening silence Although they remained side by side the Queen did not talk to her for seven months instead communicating by note 33 Queen Victoria s behaviour unexpected even by her family seemed prompted by the threatened loss of her daughter The Queen regarded Beatrice as her Baby her innocent child and viewed the physical sex that would come with marriage as an end to innocence 34 Subtle persuasions by the Princess of Wales and the Crown Princess of Prussia who reminded her mother of the happiness that Beatrice had brought the Prince Consort induced the Queen to resume talking to Beatrice Queen Victoria consented to the marriage on condition that Henry give up his German commitments and live permanently with Beatrice and the Queen 35 Beatrice and Henry were married at Saint Mildred s Church at Whippingham near Osborne 36 on 23 July 1885 35 Beatrice who wore her mother s wedding veil of Honiton lace was escorted by the Queen and Beatrice s eldest brother the Prince of Wales 37 Princess Beatrice was attended by ten royal bridesmaids from among her nieces Princesses Louise 18 Victoria and Maud of Wales Princesses Irene and Alix of Hesse and by Rhine Princesses Marie Victoria Melita and Alexandra of Edinburgh and Princesses Helena Victoria and Marie Louise of Schleswig Holstein The bridegroom s supporters were his brothers Prince Alexander of Bulgaria and Prince Francis Joseph of Battenberg 38 The ceremony which was not attended by her eldest sister and brother in law the Crown Prince and Princess of Prussia who were detained in Germany William Ewart Gladstone or Beatrice s cousin Princess Mary Adelaide Duchess of Teck who was in mourning for her father in law 39 ended with the couple s departure for their honeymoon at Quarr Abbey House a few miles from Osborne The Queen taking leave of them bore up bravely till the departure and then fairly gave way as she later admitted to the Crown Princess 40 Queen Victoria s last years edit nbsp Prince Henry of Battenberg who was married to Beatrice from 1885 until his death in 1896 After a short honeymoon Beatrice and her husband fulfilled their promise and returned to the Queen s side The Queen made it clear that she could not cope on her own and that the couple could not travel without her 41 Although the Queen relaxed this restriction shortly after the marriage Beatrice and Henry travelled only to make short visits with his family Beatrice s love for Henry like that of the Queen s for the Prince Consort seemed to increase the longer they were married When Henry travelled without Beatrice she appeared happier when he returned 41 The addition of Prince Henry to the family gave new reasons for Beatrice and the Queen to look forward and the court was brighter than it had been since the Prince Consort s death 42 Even so Henry supported by Beatrice was determined to take part in military campaigns and this annoyed the Queen who opposed his participation in life threatening warfare 43 Conflicts also arose when Henry attended the Ajaccio carnival and kept low company 44 and Beatrice sent a Royal Navy officer to remove him from temptation 44 On one occasion Henry slipped away to Corsica with his brother Louis 35 the Queen sent a warship to bring him back 35 Henry was feeling oppressed by the Queen s constant need for his and his wife s company 44 Despite being married Beatrice fulfilled her promise to the Queen by continuing as her full time confidante and secretary Queen Victoria warmed to Henry 45 However the Queen criticised Beatrice s conduct during her first pregnancy When Beatrice stopped coming to the Queen s dinners a week before giving birth preferring to eat alone in her room the Queen wrote angrily to her physician Dr James Reid that I urged the Princess to continue coming to dinner and not simply moping in her own room which is very bad for her In my case I regularly came to dinner except when I was really unwell even when suffering a great deal up to the very last day 46 Beatrice aided by chloroform gave birth the following week to her first son Alexander 46 Despite suffering a miscarriage in the early months of her marriage 47 Beatrice gave birth to four children Alexander called Drino was born in 1886 Victoria Eugenie called Ena in 1887 Leopold in 1889 and Maurice in 1891 Following this she took a polite and encouraging interest in social issues such as conditions in the coal mines However this interest did not extend to changing the conditions of poverty as it had done with her brother the Prince of Wales 42 Although court entertainments were few after the Prince Consort s death Beatrice and the Queen enjoyed tableau vivant photography which was often performed at the royal residences 42 Henry increasingly bored by the lack of activity at court longed for employment and in response the Queen made him Governor of the Isle of Wight in 1889 35 However he yearned for military adventure and pleaded with his mother in law to let him join the Ashanti expedition fighting in the Anglo Asante war Despite misgivings the Queen consented and Henry and Beatrice parted on 6 December 1895 they would not meet again Henry contracted malaria and was sent home On 22 January 1896 Beatrice who was waiting for her husband at Madeira received a telegram informing her of Henry s death two days earlier 43 Devastated she left court for a month of mourning before returning to her post at her mother s side 43 The Queen s journal reports that Queen Victoria w ent over to Beatrice s room and sat a while with her She is so piteous in her misery 48 Despite her grief Beatrice remained her mother s faithful companion 43 and as Queen Victoria aged she relied more heavily on Beatrice for dealing with correspondence However realising that Beatrice needed a place of her own she gave her the Kensington Palace apartments once occupied by the Queen and her mother 49 The Queen appointed Beatrice to the governorship of the Isle of Wight vacated by Prince Henry s death 35 In response to Beatrice s interest in photography the Queen had a darkroom installed at Osborne House 18 The changes in the family including Beatrice s preoccupation with her mother may have affected her children who rebelled at school Beatrice wrote that Ena was troublesome and rebellious and that Alexander was telling unwarrantable untruths 50 Later life edit nbsp Princess Beatrice with her mother Queen Victoria Beatrice s life was overturned by the death of Queen Victoria on 22 January 1901 She wrote to the Principal of the University of Glasgow in March you may imagine what the grief is I who had hardly ever been separated from my dear mother can hardly realise what life will be like without her who was the centre of everything 51 Beatrice s public appearances continued but her position at court was diminished She unlike her sister Louise was not close to her brother now Edward VII and was not included in the King s inner circle Although their relationship did not break down completely it was occasionally strained for example when she accidentally but noisily dropped her service book from the royal gallery onto a table of gold plate during his coronation 52 After inheriting Osborne the King had his mother s personal photographs and belongings removed and some of them destroyed especially material relating to John Brown whom he detested 53 Queen Victoria had intended the house to be a private secluded residence for her descendants away from the pomp and ceremony of mainland life 54 However the new king had no need for the house and consulted his lawyers about disposing of it transforming the main wing into a convalescent home opening the state apartments to the public and constructing a Naval College on the grounds His plans met with strong disapproval from Beatrice and Louise Queen Victoria had bequeathed them houses on the estate and the privacy promised to them by their mother was threatened When Edward discussed the fate of the house with them Beatrice argued against allowing the house to leave the family citing its importance to their parents 54 However the King did not want the house himself and he offered it to his heir apparent Beatrice s nephew George who declined objecting to the high cost of maintenance Edward subsequently extended the grounds of Beatrice s home Osborne Cottage to compensate her for the impending loss of her privacy Shortly afterwards the King declared to Arthur Balfour the prime minister that the main house would go to the nation as a gift An exception was made for the private apartments which were closed to all but the royal family members who made it a shrine to their mother s memory 55 Queen Victoria s journals edit Upon Queen Victoria s death Beatrice began the momentous task of transcribing and editing her mother s journals The hundreds of volumes from 1831 onwards contained the Queen s personal views of the day to day business of her life and included personal and family matters as well as matters of state 56 Queen Victoria had given Beatrice the task of editing the journals for publication which meant removing private material as well as passages that if published might be hurtful to living people Beatrice deleted so much material that the edited journals are only a third as long as the originals 56 The destruction of such large passages of Queen Victoria s diaries distressed Beatrice s nephew George V and his wife Queen Mary who were powerless to intervene 57 Beatrice copied a draft from the original and then copied her draft into a set of blue notebooks Both the originals and her first drafts were destroyed as she progressed 57 The task took thirty years and was finished in 1931 The surviving 111 notebooks are kept in the Royal Archives at Windsor Castle 58 Retirement from public life edit Beatrice continued to appear in public after her mother s death The public engagements she carried out were often related to her mother Queen Victoria as the public had always associated Beatrice with the deceased monarch 59 nbsp Prince Maurice of Battenberg After his death during the First World War Beatrice began to retire from public life The beauty of Beatrice s daughter Ena was known throughout Europe and despite her low rank she was a desirable bride 60 Her chosen suitor was Alfonso XIII of Spain However the marriage caused controversy in Britain since it required Ena to convert to Catholicism 61 This step was opposed by Beatrice s brother Edward VII and Spanish ultra conservatives were against the King s marriage to a Protestant of low birth as her father Prince Henry was the son of a morganatic marriage Thus they considered Ena to be only partly royal and thus unfit to be Queen of Spain 60 Nonetheless the couple wed on 31 May 1906 The marriage began inauspiciously when an anarchist attempted to bomb them on their wedding day 60 Apparently close at first the couple grew apart Ena became unpopular in Spain and grew more so when it was discovered that her son the heir apparent to the throne suffered from haemophilia Alfonso held Beatrice responsible 62 for having brought the disease to the Spanish royal house and turned bitterly against Ena 62 During her time as Queen of Spain Ena returned many times to visit her mother in Britain but always without Alfonso and usually without her children Meanwhile Beatrice lived at Osborne Cottage in East Cowes until she sold it in 1913 when Carisbrooke Castle home of the Governor of the Isle of Wight became vacant 63 She moved into the Castle while keeping an apartment at Kensington Palace in London She had been much involved in collecting material for the Carisbrooke Castle museum which she opened in 1898 64 nbsp Portrait by Philip de Laszlo 1912 Her presence at court further decreased as she aged Devastated by the death of her favourite son Maurice during the First World War in 1914 she began to retire from public life 65 In response to war with Germany George V changed the name of the royal house from Saxe Coburg and Gotha to Windsor and at the same time adopted it as the family surname to downplay their German origins Subsequently Beatrice and her family renounced their German titles Beatrice stopped using the style Princess Henry of Battenberg reverting to only using her birth style HRH The Princess Beatrice Her sons gave up their style Prince of Battenberg Alexander the eldest became Sir Alexander Mountbatten and was later given the title Marquess of Carisbrooke in the Peerage of the United Kingdom 66 Her younger son Leopold became Lord Leopold Mountbatten and was given the rank of a younger son of a marquess 35 He was a haemophiliac having inherited the royal disease from his mother and died during a knee operation in 1922 one month short of his 33rd birthday Following the war Beatrice was one of several members of the royal family who became patrons of The Ypres League a society founded for veterans of the Ypres Salient and bereaved relatives of those killed in fighting in the Salient 67 She was herself a bereaved mother as her son Prince Maurice of Battenberg had been killed in action during the First Battle of Ypres Rare public appearances after his death included commemorations including laying wreaths at the Cenotaph in 1930 and 1935 to mark the 10th and 15th anniversaries of the founding of the League 68 69 Last years edit nbsp Princess Beatrice in later life Even in her seventies Beatrice continued to correspond with her friends and relatives and to make rare public appearances such as when pushed in a wheelchair she viewed the wreaths laid after the death of George V in 1936 70 She published her last work of translation in 1941 Entitled In Napoleonic Days it was the personal diary of Queen Victoria s maternal grandmother Augusta Duchess of Saxe Coburg Saalfeld She corresponded with the publisher John Murray who greatly approved of the work 71 She made her last home at Brantridge Park in West Sussex which was owned by Queen Mary s brother Alexander Cambridge 1st Earl of Athlone and his wife Princess Alice 72 who was Beatrice s niece the Athlones were at the time in Canada where the Earl was governor general There Beatrice died in her sleep on 26 October 1944 aged eighty seven the day before the 30th anniversary of her son Prince Maurice s death 35 After her funeral service in St George s Chapel Windsor Castle her coffin was placed in the royal vault on 3 November On 27 August 1945 her body was transferred and placed inside a joint tomb alongside her husband in St Mildred s Church Whippingham 63 73 Beatrice s final wish to be buried with her husband on the island most familiar to her was fulfilled in a private service at Whippingham attended only by her son the Marquess of Carisbrooke and his wife 63 Legacy editBeatrice was the shyest of all of Queen Victoria s children However because she accompanied Queen Victoria almost wherever she went she became among the best known 74 Despite her shyness she was an able actress and dancer as well as a keen artist and photographer 75 She was devoted to her children and was concerned when they misbehaved at school To those who enjoyed her friendship she was loyal and had a sense of humour 76 and as a public figure she was driven by a strong sense of duty 77 She was Patron of the Isle of Wight Branch of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution from 1920 until her death 78 Music a passion that was shared by her mother and the Prince Consort was something in which Beatrice excelled She played the piano to professional standards and was an occasional composer 79 80 Like her mother she was a devout Christian fascinated by theology until her death 81 With her calm temperament and personal warmth the princess won wide approval 82 The demands made on Beatrice during her mother s reign were high Despite suffering from rheumatism Beatrice was forced to endure her mother s love of cold weather 83 Beatrice s piano playing suffered as her rheumatism got gradually worse eliminating an enjoyment in which she excelled however this did not change her willingness to cater to her mother s needs 83 Her effort did not go unnoticed by the British public nbsp Tomb of Prince Henry of Battenberg and Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom in St Mildred s Church Whippingham Isle of Wight In 1886 when she agreed to open the Show of the Royal Horticultural Society of Southampton the organisers sent her a proclamation of thanks expressing their admiration of the affectionate manner in which you have comforted and assisted your widowed mother our Gracious Sovereign the Queen 84 As a wedding present Sir Moses Montefiore a banker and philanthropist presented Beatrice and Henry with a silver tea service inscribed Many daughters have acted virtuously but thou excellest them all 85 The Times newspaper shortly before Beatrice s marriage wrote The devotion of your Royal Highness to our beloved Sovereign has won our warmest admiration and our deepest gratitude May those blessings which it has hitherto been your constant aim to confer on others now be returned in full measure to yourself 86 The sentence was as far as it dared criticising the Queen s hold over her daughter 85 She died at Brantridge Park the home of her niece Princess Alice and her husband the Earl of Athlone at the time serving as Governor General of Canada Osborne House her mother s favourite home is accessible to the public 87 Her Osborne residences Osborne and Albert Cottages remain in private ownership after their sale in 1912 88 Titles styles honours and arms editTitles and styles edit 14 April 1857 23 July 1885 Her Royal Highness The Princess Beatrice 23 July 1885 14 July 1917 Her Royal Highness The Princess Beatrice Princess Henry of Battenberg 89 17 July 1917 26 October 1944 Her Royal Highness The Princess Beatrice 90 Honours edit British honours 1 January 1878 Order of the Crown of India 91 8 January 1919 Dame Grand Cross of the British Empire 92 12 June 1926 Dame Grand Cross of St John 93 11 May 1937 Dame Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order 94 Royal Order of Victoria and Albert 95 Royal Red Cross 95 Foreign honours nbsp Grand Cross of St Catherine 95 nbsp 11 September 1875 Dame of the Order of Queen Saint Isabel 96 nbsp 25 April 1885 Dame of the Golden Lion 97 98 nbsp 27 May 1889 Dame of the Order of Queen Maria Luisa 99 Arms edit In 1858 Beatrice and the three younger of her sisters were granted use of the royal arms with an inescutcheon of the shield of Saxony and differenced by a label of three points argent On Beatrice s arms the outer points bore roses gules and the centre a heart gules In 1917 the inescutcheon was dropped by royal warrant from George V 100 nbsp nbsp Princess Beatrice s coat of arms 1858 1917 Princess Beatrice s coat of arms as a Dame of the Order of Queen Maria LuisaIssue editPortrait Name Birth Death Notes nbsp Prince Alexander of Battenberg later Alexander Mountbatten 1st Marquess of Carisbrooke 23 November 1886 23 February 1960 married Lady Irene Denison 4 July 1890 16 July 1956 on 19 July 1917 1 daughter Lady Iris Mountbatten 1920 1982 nbsp Princess Victoria Eugenie of Battenberg later Queen of Spain 24 October 1887 15 April 1969 married Alfonso XIII of Spain 17 May 1886 28 February 1941 on 31 May 1906 2 daughters 5 sons 1 stillborn including Infante Juan Count of Barcelona 1913 1993 father of Juan Carlos I of Spain nbsp Prince Leopold of Battenberg later Lord Leopold Mountbatten 21 May 1889 23 April 1922 Suffered from haemophilia died unmarried and without issue during a knee operation nbsp Prince Maurice of Battenberg 3 October 1891 27 October 1914 Died of wounds from action during World War I Ancestry editAncestors of Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom8 Francis Duke of Saxe Coburg Saalfeld 14 101 4 Ernest I Duke of Saxe Coburg and Gotha 101 9 Countess Augusta of Reuss Ebersdorf 15 101 2 Prince Albert of Saxe Coburg and Gotha10 Augustus Duke of Saxe Gotha Altenburg 101 5 Princess Louise of Saxe Gotha Altenburg 101 11 Duchess Louise Charlotte of Mecklenburg Schwerin 101 1 Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom12 George III of the United Kingdom6 Prince Edward Duke of Kent and Strathearn13 Charlotte of Mecklenburg Strelitz3 Victoria of the United Kingdom14 Francis Duke of Saxe Coburg Saalfeld 8 101 7 Princess Victoria of Saxe Coburg Saalfeld15 Countess Augusta of Reuss Ebersdorf 9 101 Notes edit Dennison p 2 Dennison p 3 Longford Victoria R I p 234 Quoted in Dennison p 3 Dennison p 8 a b Dennison p 13 Jagow p 272 Quoted in Dennison p 11 Dennison p 22 Longford Victoria Duchess of Kent Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Quoted in Epton p 92 Bolitho p 104 Bolitho pp 195 196 Matthew Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Duff p 10 Victoria Princess Royal in 1858 Alice in 1862 Helena in 1866 Louise in 1871 Quoted in Dennison p 38 a b Dennison p 204 a b Dennison p 92 Bolitho p 301 After a failed assassination attempt on the Queen in 1882 she wrote of Beatrice Nothing can exceed dearest Beatrice s courage and calmness for she saw the whole thing the man take aim and fire straight into the carriage but she never said a word observing that I was not frightened Buckle p 418 Dennison pp 95 101 Corley p 349 Dennison pp 86 87 Quoted in Dennison p 89 a b c d Dennison pp 103 106 McFarland Cynthia Reid Brian 17 August 2003 Anglican Online archives Anglican Online Retrieved 8 November 2007 Deceased Wife s Sister Bill New York Times 6 February 1902 Archived from the original on 21 November 2007 Retrieved 8 November 2007 Quoted in Dennison p 126 Dennison p 116 Dennison p 124 Dennison p 130 Dennison pp 127 129 a b c d e f g h Purdue Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Beatrice and her siblings were confirmed here Dennison pp 152 153 Prince and Princess Henry of Battenberg with their bridesmaids and others on their wedding day National Portrait Gallery London UK Dennison p 153 Hibbert p 294 a b Dennison pp 179 180 a b c Dennison p 171 a b c d Dennison p 190 a b c Dennison pp 185 186 Bolitho p 27 a b Quoted in Dennison p 164 Dennison p 161 Quoted in Dennison p 192 Dennison p 203 Dennison pp 210 212 Quoted in Dennison p 213 Dennison pp 233 234 Magnus p 290 a b Benson p 302 Dennison pp 225 228 a b Extracts from Queen Victoria s journals PDF Official website of the British Monarchy 2005 Retrieved 11 November 2007 a b Magnus p 461 Collections in the Royal Archives Official website of the British Monarchy 2008 2009 Retrieved 14 August 2013 Dennison p 215 a b c Noel Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Lee p 513 a b Noel Spain s English Queen p 10 a b c The Princess of the Wight The Isle of Wight Beacon 31 July 2007 Archived from the original on 12 February 2009 Retrieved 17 January 2016 Carisbrooke Castle Museum Carisbrooke Castle Museum Trust Retrieved 17 January 2016 Dennison p 245 No 30374 The London Gazette 7 November 1917 p 11594 The Ypres League webpage Archived 12 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Aftermath when the boys came home accessed 16 January 2010 To celebrate the tenth anniversary Reading Eagle 9 December 1930 p 10 Beatrice Lays Wreath Getty Images image number 3294671 from the Hulton Archive accessed 16 January 2010 Princess Beatrice pushed in a chair 23 January 1936 Viewing the Wreaths News broadcast London UK Pathe News Dennison p 262 Brantridge Park 2007 Retrieved 27 December 2007 Royal Burials in the Chapel since 1805 College of St George Windsor Castle Retrieved 5 March 2023 Dennison p 157 Dennison dancing pp 44 53 acting 174 175 musician 232 233 photographer 121 122 Aspinall Oglander C F 1959 Beatrice Princess Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press Retrieved 26 December 2007 Dennison p 112 Hennessy Sue 2010 Hidden Depths Women of the RNLI The History Press ISBN 9780752454436 Dennison p 58 Retrospection published in The Girl s Own Paper 1897 Dennison pp 84 85 Dennison p 193 a b Dennison p 110 Illuminated Proclamation for Princess Beatrice Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America 31 July 1885 Archived from the original on 12 February 2009 Retrieved 28 December 2007 a b Dennison p 134 The Times newspaper 29 July 1885 Osborne House English Heritage 2007 Retrieved 15 November 2007 Dennison p 230 e g No 25751 The London Gazette 25 October 1887 p 5763 e g No 34396 The London Gazette Supplement 7 May 1937 p 3073 No 24539 The London Gazette 4 January 1878 p 114 No 31114 The London Gazette Supplement 7 January 1919 p 447 No 33284 The London Gazette 14 June 1927 p 3836 No 34396 The London Gazette Supplement 11 May 1937 p 3074 a b c The King and the Royal Family The County Families of the United Kingdom Spottiswode Ballantyne and Co 1919 p xvi Retrieved 10 April 2021 Braganca Jose Vicente de 2014 Agraciamentos Portugueses Aos Principes da Casa Saxe Coburgo Gota Portuguese Honours awarded to Princes of the House of Saxe Coburg and Gotha Pro Phalaris in Portuguese 9 10 13 Retrieved 28 November 2019 Sullivan p 224 Goldener Lowen orden Grossherzoglich Hessische Ordensliste in German Darmstadt Staatsverlag 1885 p 35 Real orden de Damas Nobles de la Reina Maria Luisa Guia Oficial de Espana 1918 p 227 Retrieved 21 March 2019 Velde Francois 2007 British Royal Cadency Heraldica Retrieved 18 December 2007 a b c d e f g h Montgomery Massingberd Hugh ed 1977 Burke s Royal Families of the World 1st edition London Burke s PeerageReferences editAspinall Oglander C F Princess Beatrice 1857 1944 Dictionary of National Biography archive Oxford University Press 1959 accessed 26 December 2007 Beatrice HRH The Princess A Birthday Book Smith Elder amp Co London 1881 The Adventures of Count Georg Albert of Erbach John Murray London 1890 In Napoleonic Days Extracts from the private diary of Augusta Duchess of Saxe Coburg Saalfeld Queen Victoria s maternal grandmother 1806 to 1821 John Murray London 1941 Benson E F Queen Victoria s Daughters Appleton and Company 1938 Bolitho Hector Reign of Queen Victoria Macmillan London 1948 Buckle George Earle The Letters of Queen Victoria Second Series 3rd volume John Murray London 1928 Corley T A B Democratic Despot A Life of Napoleon III Barrie and Rockliff London 1961 Dennison Matthew The Last Princess The Devoted Life of Queen Victoria s Youngest Daughter Weidenfeld and Nicolson Great Britain 2007 ISBN 978 0 297 84794 6 Duff David The Shy Princess Evans Brothers Great Britain 1958 Epton Nina Victoria and her Daughters Weidenfeld amp Nicolson Great Britain 1971 Jagow Kurt Letters of the Prince Consort 1831 1861 John Murray London 1938 Hibbert Christopher Queen Victoria in her letters and journals Sutton Publishing Ltd 2000 ISBN 978 0 7509 2349 1 Lee Sir Sidney King Edward VII A Biography Volume I Macmillan company 1925 Longford Elizabeth Victoria R I Weidenfeld amp Nicolson Great Britain 1964 Longford Elizabeth 2004 Victoria Princess Princess Victoria of Saxe Coburg Saalfeld duchess of Kent 1786 1861 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 28273 Subscription or UK public library membership required Magnus Philip Edward the Seventh John Murray London 1964 Matthew H C G 2016 2004 Edward VII 1841 1910 profile Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 32975 Subscription or UK public library membership required Noel Gerard Ena Spain s English Queen Constable London 1985 ISBN 978 0 09 479520 4 Noel Gerard 2004 Ena princess of Battenberg 1887 1969 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 36656 Subscription or UK public library membership required Purdue A W 2008 2004 Beatrice Princess married name Princess Henry of Battenberg 1857 1944 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 30658 Subscription or UK public library membership required External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom Listen to this article 31 minutes source source nbsp This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 19 March 2010 2010 03 19 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles Ceremonial observed at Beatrice s wedding No 25495 The London Gazette 28 July 1885 p 25495 Isle of Wight Beacon on Princess Beatrice Archived from the original on 12 February 2009 Retrieved 14 February 2008 Information about Queen Victoria s journals Carisbrooke Castle Museum Osborne House Princess Beatrice letter MSS SC 1247 at L Tom Perry Special Collections Harold B Lee Library Brigham Young University Portraits of Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Princess Beatrice of the United KingdomHouse of Saxe Coburg and GothaCadet branch of the House of WettinBorn 14 April 1857 Died 25 October 1944 Honorary titles Preceded byPrince Henry of Battenberg Governor of the Isle of Wight1896 1944 Succeeded byThe Duke of Wellington Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom amp oldid 1220825414, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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