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Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll

Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll (Louisa Caroline Alberta; 18 March 1848 – 3 December 1939), was the sixth child and fourth daughter of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.

Princess Louise
Duchess of Argyll (more)
Princess Louise in 1881
Born(1848-03-18)18 March 1848
Buckingham Palace, London, United Kingdom
Died3 December 1939(1939-12-03) (aged 91)
Kensington Palace, London, United Kingdom
Burial12 December 1939
Spouse
(m. 1871; died 1914)
Names
Louisa Caroline Alberta
HouseSaxe-Coburg and Gotha (until 1917)
Windsor (from 1917)
FatherPrince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha
MotherQueen Victoria
Signature
Viceregal consort of Canada
In role
25 November 1878 – 23 October 1883
MonarchVictoria
Governor GeneralJohn Campbell, Marquess of Lorne
Preceded byHariot Rowan-Hamilton
Succeeded byLady Maud Hamilton

In her public life, she was a strong proponent of the arts and higher education and of the feminist cause. She was an influential supporter of the Edinburgh College of Domestic Science, the forerunner to Queen Margaret University, becoming the institution’s first Patron in 1891 until 1939. Her early life was spent moving among the various royal residences in the company of her family. When her father died in December 1861, the court went into a long period of mourning, to which with time Louise became unsympathetic. She was an able sculptor and artist, and several of her sculptures remain today. She was also a supporter of the feminist movement, corresponding with Josephine Butler, and visiting Elizabeth Garrett.

Before her marriage, Louise served as an unofficial secretary to the Queen from 1866 to 1871. The question of Louise's marriage was discussed in the late 1860s. Suitors from the royal houses of Prussia and Denmark were suggested, but Victoria did not want her to marry a foreign prince, and therefore suggested a high-ranking member of the British aristocracy. Despite opposition from members of the royal family, Louise fell in love with John Campbell, Marquess of Lorne, the heir of the Duke of Argyll. Victoria consented to the marriage,[1] which took place on 21 March 1871.[2] After a happy beginning, the two drifted apart, possibly because of their childlessness and the Queen's constraints on their activities.[3]

In 1878, Lorne was appointed Governor General of Canada, a post he held 1878–1884. Louise was viceregal consort, starting a lasting interest in Canada. Her names were used to name many features in Canada, including Lake Louise and the province of Alberta. Following her mother's death in 1901, she entered the social circle established by her elder brother, the new king, Edward VII. Louise's marriage with Lorne survived thanks to long periods of separation; they reconciled in 1911, and Louise was devastated by Lorne's death in 1914. After the First World War she began to retire from public life, undertaking few public duties outside Kensington Palace, where she died at the age of 91.

Early life edit

Louise was born on 18 March 1848 at Buckingham Palace, London.[4] She was the fourth daughter and sixth child of the reigning British monarch, Queen Victoria, and her husband, Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. Her birth coincided with revolutions which swept across Europe, prompting the queen to remark that Louise would turn out to be "something peculiar".[5] The queen's labour with Louise was the first to be aided with chloroform.[5]

 
Queen Victoria painted a portrait of Princess Louise after an original by Franz Xaver Winterhalter

Albert and Victoria chose the names Louisa Caroline Alberta. She was baptized on 13 May 1848 in Buckingham Palace's private chapel by John Bird Sumner, the Archbishop of Canterbury. Though she was christened Louisa at the service, she was invariably known as Louise throughout her life.[6] Her godparents were Duke Gustav of Mecklenburg-Schwerin (her paternal great-great-uncle, for whom Prince Albert stood proxy); the Duchess of Saxe-Meiningen (for whom her great-aunt Queen Adelaide stood proxy); and the Hereditary Grand Duchess of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (her first cousin once-removed, for whom the Duchess of Cambridge stood proxy).[6] During the ceremony, the Duchess of Gloucester, one of the few children of King George III who was still alive, forgot where she was, and suddenly got up in the middle of the service and knelt at the queen's feet, much to the queen's horror.[5]

Like her siblings, Louise was brought up with the strict programme of education devised by her father, Prince Albert, and his friend and confidant, Baron Stockmar. The young children were taught practical tasks, such as cooking, farming, household tasks and carpentry.[7]

From her early years, Louise was a talented and intelligent child, and her artistic talents were quickly recognised.[8] On his visit to Osborne House in 1863, Hallam Tennyson, the son of the poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson, remarked that Louise could "draw beautifully".[9] Because of her royal rank, an artistic career was not considered. However, the queen first allowed her to attend art school under the tutelage of the sculptor Mary Thornycroft, and later (1863) allowed her to study at the National Art Training School, now The Royal College of Art.[3] Louise also became an able dancer, and Victoria wrote, after a dance, that Louise "danced the sword dance with more verve and accuracy than any of her sisters".[10] Her wit and intelligence made her a favourite with her father,[11] with her inquisitive nature earning her the nickname "Little Miss Why" from other members of the royal family.[10]

Secretary edit

 
Princess Louise in the 1860s

Louise's father, Prince Albert, died at Windsor on 14 December 1861. The queen was devastated, and ordered her household to move from Windsor to Osborne House on the Isle of Wight. The atmosphere of the royal court became gloomy and morbid in the wake of the prince's death, and entertainments became dry and dull.[12] Louise quickly became dissatisfied with her mother's prolonged mourning.[12] For her seventeenth birthday in 1865, Louise requested the ballroom to be opened for a debutante dance, the like of which had not been performed since Prince Albert's death. Her request was refused, and her boredom with the mundane routine of travelling between the different royal residences at set times irritated her mother, who considered Louise to be indiscreet and argumentative.[3]

The queen comforted herself by rigidly continuing with Prince Albert's plans for their children. Princess Alice was married to Prince Louis, the future Grand Duke of Hesse, at Osborne House on 1 July 1862. In 1863, Edward, the Prince of Wales, married Princess Alexandra of Denmark. The queen made it a tradition that the eldest unmarried daughter become her unofficial secretary, a position which Louise filled in 1866 following the marriage of her elder sister Helena, despite the queen's concern that she was indiscreet.[12]

Louise, however, proved to be good at the job: Victoria wrote shortly afterwards: "She is (and who would some years ago have thought it?) a clever dear girl with a fine strong character, unselfish and affectionate."[13] However, when Louise fell in love with her brother Leopold's tutor, the Reverend Robinson Duckworth (14 years her senior), between 1866 and 1870, the queen reacted by dismissing Duckworth in 1870. He later became Canon of Westminster Abbey.[14]

Louise was bored at court, and by fulfilling her duties, which were little more than minor secretarial tasks, such as writing letters on the queen's behalf; dealing with political correspondence; and providing the queen with company, she had more responsibilities.[15] She also undertook her share of public and philanthropic duties, for example inaugurating the new North Eastern Hospital for Children in 1867 [16] and launching the ship HMS Druid in 1869.

Marriage edit

Suitors edit

As a daughter of the queen, Louise was a desirable bride; more so as she is regarded as the queen's most beautiful daughter by both contemporary and modern biographers.[3][17][18] However, she was accused by the press, without substantiation, of romantic affairs.[3] This, coupled with her liberalism and feminism, prompted the queen to find her a husband. The choice had to suit Victoria as well as Louise, and the queen insisted that her daughter's husband should live near her, a promise which had also been extracted from the husband of Helena, Louise's sister. Various suitors were proposed by the leading royal houses of Europe: Princess Alexandra proposed her brother, the Crown Prince of Denmark, but the queen was strongly opposed to another Danish marriage that could antagonise Prussia at a time of diplomatic tension over the Schleswig-Holstein question. Victoria, Louise's eldest sister, proposed the tall and rich Prince Albert of Prussia, but Queen Victoria disapproved of another Prussian marriage that would have been unpopular in England.[19] Prince Albert was also reluctant to settle in England as required. William, Prince of Orange, was also considered a suitor, but because of his extravagant lifestyle in Paris, where he lived openly with a lover, the queen quickly vetoed the idea.[20]

 
Louise and Lorne's engagement photo (W & D Downey, 1870)

Louise viewed marriage to any prince as undesirable, and announced that she wished to marry John Campbell, Marquess of Lorne, heir to the Dukedom of Argyll. No marriage between a daughter of a monarch and a British subject had been given official recognition since 1515, when Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk, married King Henry VIII's sister Mary.[3] Louise's eldest brother, the Prince of Wales, was strongly opposed to a marriage with a non-mediatized noble.[21] Furthermore, Lorne's father, George Campbell, was an ardent supporter of William Ewart Gladstone, and the Prince of Wales was worried that he would drag the royal family into political disputes.[19] Nevertheless, the opposition was crushed by the queen, who wrote to the Prince of Wales in 1869:

That which you object to [that Louise should marry a subject] I feel certain will be for Louise's happiness and for the peace and quiet of the family ... Times have changed; great foreign alliances are looked on as causes of trouble and anxiety, and are of no good. What could be more painful than the position in which our family were placed during the wars with Denmark, and between Prussia and Austria? ... You may not be aware, as I am, with what dislike the marriages of Princesses of the Royal Family with small German Princes (German beggars as they most insultingly were called) ... As to position, I see no difficulty whatever; Louise remains what she is, and her husband keeps his rank ... only being treated in the family as a relation when we are together ...[22]

The queen averred that Louise's marriage to a subject would bring "new blood" into the family,[22] while all European princes were related to each other. She was convinced that this would strengthen the royal family morally and physically.[23]

Engagement and wedding edit

 
Princess Louise in her wedding dress

Louise became engaged to the Marquess of Lorne on 3 October 1870 while they were visiting Balmoral.[1] Lorne was invited to Balmoral Castle in Scotland, and accompanied Louise, the Lord Chancellor, Lord Hatherley and Queen Victoria's lady-in-waiting Lady Ely on a drive. Later that day, Louise returned and announced to the queen that Lorne had "spoken of his devotion" to Louise, and she accepted his proposal in the knowledge of the queen's approval.[24] The queen later gave Lady Ely a bracelet to mark the occasion.[25]

The Queen found it difficult to let go of her daughter, confiding in her journal that she "felt painfully the thought of losing her".[24] The new breach in royal tradition caused surprise, especially in Germany, and Queen Victoria wrote to the Queen of Prussia that princes of small impoverished German houses were "very unpopular" in Britain and that Lord Lorne, a "person of distinction at home" with "an independent fortune" was "really no lower in rank than minor German Royalty".[26]

Victoria settled an annuity on Louise shortly before her marriage.[27] The ceremony was conducted at St George's Chapel at Windsor Castle on 21 March 1871,[2][28] and the crowd outside was so large that, for the first time, policemen had to form chain barriers to keep control.[29] Louise wore a wedding veil of Honiton lace that she designed herself, and was escorted into the chapel by her mother, and her two eldest brothers, the Prince of Wales and the Duke of Edinburgh. On this occasion, the usually severe black of the queen's mourning dress was relieved by the crimson rubies and blues of the Garter star. Following the ceremony, the queen kissed Louise, and Lorne – now a member of the royal family, but still a subject – kissed the queen's hand.

The couple then journeyed to Claremont in Surrey for the honeymoon, but the presence of attendants on the journey, and at meal times, made it impossible for them to talk privately.[30] The short four-day visit did not pass without an interruption from the queen, who was curious about her daughter's thoughts on married life. Among their wedding gifts was a maplewood desk from Queen Victoria, now at Inveraray Castle.[31]

Following her marriage, Louise continued her charitable and artistic interests. In 1871, the Ladies Work Society was founded in South Audley Street, promoting the making and sale of needlework and embroidery for poverty relief: Louise became its president, and designed some of their products.[32]

The couple's official place of residence was Rosneath House in Dumbartonshire.[33]

Viceregal consort of Canada edit

In 1878, British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli nominated Lorne to be Canada's Governor General, and he was duly appointed by Queen Victoria.[34] Louise thus became his viceregal consort. As viceregal consort, she used her position to support the arts and higher education and the cause of female equality, although she said "the subject of Domestic Economy lies at the root of the – highest life of every true woman."[35] But her stay in Canada was unhappy as a result of homesickness, dislike of Ottawa and a bad sleighing accident.[3]

Inauspicious arrival edit

 
Princess Louise in Canada

On 15 November 1878, the couple left Liverpool and arrived in Canada for the inauguration at Halifax on 25 November.[36]

Louise became the first royal to take up residence in Rideau Hall, officially the queen's royal residence in Ottawa. However, the hall was far from the splendour of British royal residences, and, as each viceregal couple decorated the hall with their own furnishings, and thus took them when they departed, the Lornes found the palace sparse in décor upon their arrival. Louise put her artistic talents to work and hung many of her watercolour and oil paintings around the hall, also installing her sculpted works. Though the news that a daughter of the queen would be viceregal consort of Canada first saw a "thrill of joy burst upon the Dominion", it being felt that the princess would be a strong link between Canadians and their sovereign,[37] the arrival of the new governor general and his wife was not initially welcomed by the Canadian press, which complained about the imposition of royalty on the country's hitherto un-regal society.[38]

Relations with the press further deteriorated when Lorne's private secretary, Francis de Winton, threw four journalists off the royal train. Although the Lornes had no knowledge of de Winton's action, it was assumed by the press that they did, and they earned an early reputation for haughtiness.[39] Louise was horrified by the negative press, and when she heard about reports of "a nation of flunkies" at the viceregal court, taking lessons in "the backward walk," Louise declared that she "wouldn't care if they came in blanket coats!"[40] (A reference to the ubiquitous capote.) Eventually the worries of a rigid court at Rideau Hall and the "feeble undercurrent of criticism" turned out to be unfounded as the royal couple proved to be more relaxed than their predecessors.[41]

Canadian entertainments edit

 
The Marquess of Lorne, accompanied by Princess Louise, opening the Canadian Parliament in 1879

Louise's first few months in Canada were tinged with sadness as her favourite sister Alice, Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine, died on 14 December 1878. Although homesick over that first Christmas, Louise soon grew accustomed to the winter climate. Sleighing and skating were two of her favourite pastimes. In Canada, as the monarch's direct representative, Lorne always took precedence over his wife, so that at the Opening of the Parliament of Canada on 13 February 1879, Louise was ranked no differently from others in attendance. She had to remain standing with the MPs, until Lorne asked them to be seated.[42] In order for Lorne to meet every Canadian member of Parliament, he held bi-weekly dinners for 50 people. However, some of the Canadian ladies responded negatively to the British party. One of her ladies-in-waiting reported that some had an "'I'm as good as you' sort of manner when one begins a conversation."[43] Court entertainments were open; anyone who could afford the clothing to attend functions was simply asked to sign the visitor's book.[44] Louise's first state ball was given on 19 February 1879, and she made a good impression on her guests when she ordered the silk cordon, separating the viceregal party from the guests, be removed. However, the ball was marred by various mishaps, including a drunken bandsman nearly starting a fire by pulling a curtain over a gas lamp.[44] The open house practice was criticized by guests who complained about the low social status of other guests. One attendee was horrified to find the attendee's grocer dancing in the same set.[44]

One of her works as a sculptor is the statue of Queen Victoria, which now stands in front of the Royal Victoria College, Montreal,[35] now the Strathcona Music Building of McGill University. Lorne's father, The Duke of Argyll, arrived with two of his daughters in June, and in the presence of the family, Louise caught a 28-pound (13 kg) salmon.[45] The women's success at fishing prompted the Duke to remark that fishing in Canada required no skill.[45]

Sleigh accident and Bermuda visit edit

 
The arrival of Princess Louise in Hamilton, Bermuda (29 January 1883)

Louise, Lorne, and two attendants, were hurt in a sleigh accident on 14 February 1880.[46] The winter was particularly severe, and the carriage in which they were traveling overturned, throwing the coachman and footman from the sleigh. The horses then panicked, and dragged the overturned carriage over more than 400 yards (370 m) of ground. Louise was knocked unconscious when she hit her head on the iron bar supporting the roof, and Lorne was trapped underneath her, expecting "the sides of the carriage to give way at any moment".[47][48] Eventually, as they overtook the sleigh ahead, the horses calmed, and the occupant of that sleigh, Princess Louise's aide-de-camp, ordered an empty carriage to convey the injured party back to Rideau Hall.[49]

The doctors who attended Louise reported she was severely concussed and in shock, and that "it was a wonder her skull was not fractured".[49] Louise's ear had been injured when her earring caught on the side of the sleigh, tearing her ear lobe in two.[49] The press played down the story on instructions from Lorne's private secretary, an act that was described by contemporaries as "stupid and ill advised".[50] For example, one New Zealand newspaper reported, "Excepting immediately after the blow, the princess was perfectly sensible during the whole time..."[48] Knowledge of Louise's true condition might have elicited sympathy from the Canadian people. As it was, one Member of Parliament wrote: "Except the cut in the lower part of the ear I think there was no injury done worth mentioning."[50] Therefore, when Louise cancelled her immediate engagements, people thought she was malingering. News of the accident was also played down in Britain and in letters home to the anxious Queen Victoria.[50] Princess Louise left Canada for England in 1881 while her husband remained in Canada until 1883.

She played a major role in the development of the nascent tourism industry of the colony of Bermuda, 770 nautical miles (1,430 km) south-east of Nova Scotia. In 1883, because of her fragile health, she spent the winter in Bermuda (arriving on 29 January 1883 from Charleston, South Carolina, aboard HMS Dido, popularising a trend for wealthy North Americans to escape to Bermuda's relatively mild climate during the winter months. Her visit brought such attention to Bermuda that a palatial hotel, which opened in 1885, intended to cater to these new visitors, was named after her; the Princess Hotel was built on the shore of Hamilton Harbour, in the parish of Pembroke (the Princess herself having occupied Inglewood, the home of JH Timingham, in Paget Parish, during her visit).[51][52][53][54][55][56]

Continued interest in Canada edit

After returning to Britain in 1883, Louise continued to take an interest in Canada. During the North-West Rebellion of 1885 she sent a certain Dr. Boyd medical supplies and a large fund of money for distribution. Her express instructions were that assistance was to be rendered to friend and foe indiscriminately. To fulfill her wishes, Boyd accompanied the Militia Medical Staff under Dr. Thomas Roddick to the sites of the Battle of Fish Creek and the Battle of Batoche to help give medical treatment to the wounded, including the Métis opposition.[57]

In 1905, the province of Alberta was named after Princess Louise Caroline Alberta. In the province, there is Lake Louise, and Mount Alberta is named in her honour.[58][59]

Queen Victoria's last years edit

Family conflict edit

 
Princesses Louise and Beatrice riding with their mother

Louise returned to Britain with her husband on 27 October 1883.[60] Queen Victoria had allocated them apartments at Kensington Palace, and the couple took up official residence in the suite that was to remain Louise's home for the rest of her life.

Louise resumed public duties in Britain, for example, opening St George's Gardens, Bloomsbury on 1 July 1884.[61] and Lorne his political career, campaigning unsuccessfully for the Hampstead seat in 1885. In 1896, he won the South Manchester seat, entering parliament as a Liberal. Louise, unlike Lorne and his father, was in favour of Irish Home Rule, and disappointed when he defected from Gladstonian Liberalism to the Liberal Unionists.[62] Relations between Louise and Lorne were strained, and, despite the queen's attempts to keep them under one roof, they often went their separate ways.[63] Even when he accompanied Louise, he was not always received with favour at court, and the Prince of Wales did not take to him.[64] Out of all the royal family, Lorne was the only one to be identified closely with a political party, having been a Gladstonian liberal in the House of Commons.[36]

Louise's relationship with the two sisters closest to the queen, Beatrice and Helena, was strained at best. Beatrice had married the tall and handsome Prince Henry of Battenberg in a love match in 1885, and they had four children. Louise, who had a jealous nature, had grown accustomed to treating Beatrice with pity on account of the queen's constant need for her.[65] Beatrice's biographer, Matthew Dennison, claims that in contrast to Beatrice, Louise remained strikingly good looking throughout her forties.[66] Louise and her husband were no longer close, and rumours spread about Lorne's alleged homosexuality.[67] Thus, Beatrice was enjoying a satisfying sexual relationship with her popular husband, which Louise was not.[68] Louise may have considered Prince Henry a more appropriate husband for herself.[65] Certainly, following Prince Henry's death in 1896, Louise wrote that: "he [Henry] was almost the greatest friend I had—I, too, miss him more than I can say".[65] In addition, Louise attempted to champion her late brother-in-law by announcing that she was his confidante and that Beatrice, a mere cipher, meant nothing to him.[69]

Rumours regarding Louise edit

From late 1865 to mid 1866, the royal family was guarded by 150 Scots Fusiliers. Officially, this was to protect the family from Fenian threats, but it was whispered by members of high society that Louise had fallen pregnant by Walter Stirling, the tutor of her brother Leopold.[70][71] According to Louise's biographer, Lucinda Hawksley, her son Henry was born in 1866 and shortly after the Queen's lawyers were summoned to her residence. The Queen's obstetrician Frederick Locock and his wife adopted a son named Henry, immediately after the meeting.[72] The boy supposedly grew up with other royal children and claimed to have been Louise's child. DNA testing has been sanctioned by Henry's descendants, but courts ruled the claims unfounded.[73]

Further rumours spread that Louise was having an affair with Arthur Bigge, later Lord Stamfordham, the queen's assistant private secretary. Beatrice mentioned the rumours to the queen's physician, calling it a "scandal",[66] and Prince Henry claimed to have seen Bigge drinking Louise's health at dinner.[66] Louise denied the rumour, claiming that it was started by Beatrice and Helena to undermine her position at court.[74] However, on Henry's death, relations between the sisters sporadically improved, and it was Louise, rather than the queen, who was the first to arrive at Cimiez to be with the widowed Beatrice.[75] Nevertheless, Louise's jealousy did not evaporate completely. James Reid, the queen's physician, wrote to his wife a few years later: "Louise is as usual much down on her sisters. Hope she won't stay long or she will do mischief!"[76]

Rumours of affairs did not concern only Bigge. In 1890, the sculptor Sir Joseph Edgar Boehm died in Louise's presence at his studio in London, leading to rumours that the two were having an affair.[3] According to historian Lucinda Hawksley, the two had a long-lasting love affair.[77] Boehm's assistant, Alfred Gilbert, who played a central role in comforting Louise after Boehm's death, and supervised the destruction of Boehm's private papers,[78] was rapidly promoted as a royal sculptor.[78] Louise was also romantically linked to fellow artist Edwin Lutyens; her equerry, Colonel William Probert; and an unnamed music master.[79] However, Jehanne Wake, Louise's biographer, argues that there is no substantial evidence to suggest that Louise had sexual relationships with anyone other than her husband.[79]

During Victoria's last years, Louise carried out a range of public duties, such as opening public buildings, laying foundation stones, and officiating at special programmes. Louise, like her eldest sister Victoria, was more liberally minded, and supported the suffragist movement, completely contrary to the queen's views.[64] Louise privately visited Elizabeth Garrett, the first British woman openly to qualify as a physician.[80] Queen Victoria deplored the idea of women joining professions, especially medicine, and described the training of female physicians as a "repulsive subject".[81]

Louise as unconventional royal edit

 
Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll c. 1900 by William James Topley

Louise was determined to be seen as an ordinary person and not as a member of the court. When travelling abroad, she often used the alias "Mrs Campbell".[64] Louise was known for her charity towards servants. On one occasion, the butler approached her and requested permission to dismiss the second footman, who was late getting out of bed. When she advised that the footman be given an alarm clock, the butler informed her that he already had one. She then went so far as to suggest a bed that would throw him out at a specified time, but she was told this was not feasible. Finally, she suggested that he might be ill, and when checked, he was found to have tuberculosis. The footman was therefore sent to New Zealand to recover.[64]

On another occasion, when she visited Bermuda, she was invited to a reception and chose to walk rather than be driven. She became thirsty along the way and stopped at a house, where she asked a Black woman named Mrs McCarthy for a glass of water. Owing to the scarcity of water, the woman had to go some distance to obtain it, but was reluctant because she had to finish her ironing. When Louise offered to continue the ironing, the woman refused, adding that she was in a great hurry to finish so that she could go and see Princess Louise. Realising that she had not been recognised, Louise enquired whether McCarthy would recognise her again. When the woman said that she would have thought so, but was admittedly unsure, Louise replied: "Well take a good look at me now, so you can be sure to know me tomorrow at St. Georges."[82] The princess clung to her privacy, and enjoyed not being recognised.[83]

Louise and her sisters had another disagreement after the death of the queen's close friend, Jane Spencer, Baroness Churchill. Determined not to put her mother through more misery, Louise wanted the news to be broken to the queen gradually. When this was not done, Louise voiced sharp criticism of Helena and Beatrice.[84] One month later, on 22 January 1901, Queen Victoria died at Osborne House on the Isle of Wight.[85] In her will, the queen bequeathed Kent House, on the Osborne Estate, to Louise as a country residence,[86] and gave Osborne Cottage to Louise's youngest sister, Beatrice. Louise and Beatrice were now neighbours both at Kensington Palace and Osborne.[87]

Later life edit

Edwardian period edit

 
Portrait by Philip de László, 1915

Upon Queen Victoria's death, Louise entered the social circle of her brother, the new King Edward VII, with whom she had much in common, including smoking.[88] She had an obsession with physical fitness, and if she was sneered at for this, she would retort by saying: "Never mind, I'll outlive you all."[89] Meanwhile, Louise's husband, 9th Duke of Argyll since 1900, took his seat in the House of Lords. The Colonial Secretary, Joseph Chamberlain, offered him the office of Governor-General of Australia that year, but the offer was declined.[36] Louise continued her sculpture, and in 1902, designed a memorial to the colonial soldiers who died in the Boer War.[90] In the same year, she began a nude study of a married woman suggested by the English painter Sir William Blake Richmond.[90]

Louise spent much of her time at Kent House, and she frequently visited Scotland with her husband. Financial pressures did not disappear when Lorne became Duke, and Louise avoided inviting the King to Inveraray, Argyll's ancestral home, because the couple were economising. When Queen Victoria had visited the house before Lorne became Duke of Argyll, there were seventy servants and seventy-four dogs.[88] By the time of Edward VII's accession, there were four servants and two dogs.[88]

 
Princess Louise in later life

The Duke of Argyll's health continued to deteriorate. He became increasingly senile, and Louise nursed him devotedly from 1911. In these years Louise and her husband were closer than they had been before.[3] In spring 1914 Louise stayed at Kensington Palace while her husband remained on the Isle of Wight. He developed bronchial problems followed by double pneumonia. Louise was summoned on 28 April 1914, and he died on 2 May.[91] Following his death, Louise had a nervous breakdown and suffered from intense loneliness, writing to a friend shortly afterwards: "My loneliness without the Duke is quite terrible. I wonder what he does now!"[92]

Last years edit

Louise spent her last years at Kensington Palace, occupying rooms next to her sister Princess Beatrice. She made occasional public appearances with the royal family, such as at the Cenotaph at Whitehall on 11 November 1925. However, her health deteriorated. In 1935, she greeted her nephew, King George V, and his wife, Queen Mary, at Kensington Town Hall during their Silver Jubilee celebrations, and was made an Honorary Freeman of the Borough of Kensington. Her last public appearance occurred in 1937, at the Home Arts and Industries Exhibition. Between these occasions, her great nephew, King Edward VIII, abdicated on 11 December 1936. In December 1936, Louise wrote to the British prime minister, Stanley Baldwin, sympathising with him about the crisis.[93]

Following the accession of Edward's brother King George VI, she became too ill to move around, and was confined to Kensington Palace, affectionately called the "Auntie Palace" by Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret.[94] She developed neuritis in her arm, inflammation of the nerves between the ribs, fainting fits, and sciatica. Louise occupied herself by drafting prayers, one of which was sent to Neville Chamberlain, reading "Guide our Ministers of State and all who are in authority over us ... "[95]

Death edit

 
Princess Louise's grave (centre) at the Royal Burial Ground at Frogmore

Princess Louise died at Kensington Palace on the morning of 3 December 1939 at the age of 91,[96] wearing the wedding veil she had worn almost 70 years earlier.[97] Following a simple funeral, owing to the war, her remains were cremated at Golders Green Crematorium on 8 December 1939.[98] Her ashes were quietly placed in the Royal Vault at St. George's Chapel on 12 December 1939, with many members of the British royal family and Argyll family present.[98] Her ashes were moved to the Royal Burial Ground, Frogmore near Windsor, on 13 March 1940.[99] Louise's will stated that if she died in Scotland she should be buried at the Campbell mausoleum in Kilmun next to her husband; if in England, at Frogmore near her parents.[98] Her coffin was borne by eight NCOs of her own regiment, The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders.[100] Her estate was probated as £239,260, 18 shillings and sixpence, with her debts including 15 shillings for cigarettes.[101]

Legacy edit

Louise bestowed her name on four Canadian regiments: The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders of Canada (Princess Louise's) in Hamilton, Ontario; the Princess Louise Dragoon Guards in Ottawa, Ontario (later the 4th Princess Louise Dragoon Guards – inactive since 1965); the 8th Canadian Hussars (Princess Louise's) in Moncton, New Brunswick; and the Princess Louise Fusiliers in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Queen Elizabeth II later recalled that Louise and her sister Beatrice would talk until they stunned their audience with their output of words.[102]

The province of Alberta in Canada is named after her. Although the name "Louise" was originally planned, the princess wished to honour her dead father, so the last of her given names was chosen. Lake Louise in Alberta is also named after her, as is Mount Alberta. Although her time in Canada was not always happy, she liked the Canadian people and retained close links with her Canadian regiments.[3] Back at home, she gained a reputation for paying unscheduled visits to hospitals, especially during her later years.[3] Her relationship with her family was generally close. Although at times she bickered with the queen, and her sisters Helena and Beatrice, the relations did not remain strained for long. She retained a lifelong correspondence with her brother Arthur and was one of King Edward VII's favourite sisters.[103] Of all her siblings, she was closest to Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany, and Princess Alice, and she was devastated by their deaths in 1884 and 1878 respectively.[104]

Among the younger generations of the family, Louise's favourite relatives were the Duke and Duchess of Kent, her grandnephew and his wife.[94] At the coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in 1937, Louise lent the Duchess the train that she designed and wore for the coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra in 1902.[105]

A war hospital in Erskine, Scotland, is named after Louise. It took her name as she was the first patron of the unit. It was originally called Princess Louise Scottish Hospital for Limbless Sailors and Soldiers. The name changed over the years to Erskine Hospital and then just Erskine. The charity has grown to become the biggest ex-service establishment in the country.

Art practice edit

 
Louise's statue of Queen Victoria at Kensington Palace

Louise had artistic training from childhood, first with Susan Durant from 1864, then Mary Thornycroft from 1867, and further lessons with Sir Joseph Edgar Boehm.[106] She also then attended National Art Training School. Like many women artists in the nineteenth century, Louise had to make do with training intended for industrial designers and art teachers rather than fine artists. There was no training from the nude model, as there was for male art students.

Louise was the most artistically talented of Queen Victoria's daughters and was a prolific artist and sculptor. When Louise sculpted a statue of the queen, portraying her in Coronation robes, the press claimed that her tutor, Sir Edgar Boehm, was the true creator of the work. The claim was denied by Louise's friends, who asserted her effort and independence.[107] The work was intended to be exhibited in 1887, but production was delayed until 1893. A memorial to her brother-in-law, Prince Henry of Battenberg, and a memorial to the colonial soldiers who fell during the Second Boer War, reside at Whippingham Church on the Isle of Wight, and another statue of Queen Victoria remains at McGill University in Montreal, [3] as well as the statue of Queen Victoria on the north side of Lichfield Cathedral.[108]

Selected works of art edit

Works on paper edit
  • Queen Victoria, 1881. Pencil on paper, 36.9 x 24.0 cm (sheet of paper). Royal Collection Trust, RCIN 980422.
Sculpture edit
  • Princess Beatrice, 1864. Marble, 55.0 x 29.0 x 23.0 cm. Royal Collection Trust, RCIN 53351.[109]
  • Prince Arthur, 1869. Marble, 61.5 x 33.0 x 26.0 cm. Royal Collection Trust, RCIN 31662.
  • Prince Leopold,1869. Marble, 43.4 x 29.0 x 19.0 cm. Royal Collection Trust, RCIN 34511.[110]
  • Queen Victoria, 1887. Bronze, 61.5 x 46 x 41 cm. Leeds Museums and Galleries, Temple Newsam House.[106]
  • Self Portrait, n.d. Terracotta, 63.5 cm. National Portrait Gallery, London.[111]
  • Memorial to Mary Ann Thurston Grade II listed monument [112] in Kensal Green Cemetery. Thurston was nanny to Queen Victoria's children 1845–67.
  • Memorial to the Colonial Forces of the Second Boer War, erected 1905, St Paul's Cathedral, London[113][114]

Titles, styles, honours and arms edit

Titles and styles edit

  • 18 March 1848 – 21 March 1871: Her Royal Highness The Princess Louise
  • 21 March 1871 – 24 April 1900: Her Royal Highness The Princess Louise, Marchioness of Lorne
  • 24 April 1900 – 3 December 1939: Her Royal Highness The Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll[115]

Honours edit

British honours
Foreign honours

Honorary military appointments edit

Honorary roles edit

  • President of the Women's Education Union from 1871[3]
  • Patron of the Girls' Day School Trust, 1872–1939[3]
  • Patron of the Ladies Lifeboat Guild, Royal National Lifeboat Institution, 1923–39[122]

Arms edit

In 1858, Louise 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 Louise's arms, the outer points bore cantons gules, and the centre a rose gules. In 1917, the inescutcheon was dropped by royal warrant from George V.[123]

 
 
Coat of arms (1858–1917) Royal monogram

Ancestry edit

References edit

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  2. ^ a b "No. 23720". The London Gazette. 24 March 1871. pp. 1587–1598.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Stocker 2004, Louise, Princess, duchess of Argyll.
  4. ^ Marshall 1972, p. 122.
  5. ^ a b c Longford 1987, p. 195.
  6. ^ a b "No. 20857". The London Gazette. 17 May 1848. pp. 1935–1938.
  7. ^ Martínez 2005.
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  9. ^ Lang & Shannon 1987, p. 326.
  10. ^ a b McDougall 1988, Youth (1848–1878).
  11. ^ Cantelupe 1949.
  12. ^ a b c Dennison 2007, p. 73.
  13. ^ Quoted by McDougall 1988, Youth (1848–1878).
  14. ^ Chomet 1999, pp. 20–21.
  15. ^ Dennison 2007, p. 204.
  16. ^ "The northern suburbs: Haggerston and Hackney Pages 505–524 Old and New London: Volume 5. Originally published by Cassell, Petter & Galpin, London, 1878". British History Online.
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  20. ^ Wake 1988, p. 100.
  21. ^ Benson 1938, p. 162.
  22. ^ a b Buckle 1926, pp. 632–633.
  23. ^ Paraphrased from Buckle 1926, pp. 632–633
  24. ^ a b Victoria, Queen (More leaves), p. 74.
  25. ^ . Paul Fraser Collectibles. Archived from the original on 7 June 2015. Retrieved 16 December 2021.
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  31. ^ . Inveraray Castle. Archived from the original on 23 May 2013.
  32. ^ "Chelsea: Cremorne Gardens Pages 84–100 Old and New London: Volume 5. Originally published by Cassell, Petter & Galpin, London, 1878". British History Online.
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  53. ^ "The Bermuda Parliament; is Opened with Great Pomp and Ceremony" (PDF). The New York Times. 13 April 1890.
  54. ^ "Forty Hours to Bermuda; that may be the Time Within Twenty-Four Months" (PDF). The New York Times. 4 October 1891.
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  61. ^ "The Harrison Estate Pages 70–79 Survey of London: Volume 24, the Parish of St Pancras Part 4: King's Cross Neighbourhood. Originally published by London County Council, London, 1952". British History Online.
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  67. ^ Packard, Jerrold M. (1998). Victoria's Daughters. St. Martin's Press. pp. 205–207. ISBN 978-0-312-24496-5.
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  69. ^ Lutyens 1961, p. 52.
  70. ^ "Did Queen Victoria's Daughter Have an Illegitimate Baby as a Teen?". 14 August 2014.
  71. ^ "Queen Victoria's daughter Princess Louise 'had illegitimate son with brother's tutor'".
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  77. ^ Lucinda Hawksley, Queen Victoria's Mysterious Daughter, Chapter 9 (St. Martin's Press, 2013)
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  92. ^ Quoted in Longford 1991, p. 77
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  95. ^ Longford 1991, p. 81.
  96. ^ "No. 34746". The London Gazette (Supplement). 1 December 1939. p. 8097.
  97. ^ Wake 1988, p. 413.
  98. ^ a b c Wake 1988, p. 412.
  99. ^ Longford 1991, p. 83.
  100. ^ The Glasgow Herald, 13 December 1939, p. 9
  101. ^ "Queen Victoria's daughter died owing money for cigarettes". BBC. 24 December 2018. Retrieved 20 October 2022.
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  103. ^ Wake 1988, p. 350.
  104. ^ Wake 1988, p. 269.
  105. ^ Wake 1988, p. 411.
  106. ^ a b Strang, Alice (2015). Modern Scottish Women: Painters and Sculptors, 1885–1965. National Galleries of Scotland. pp. 66–67. ISBN 978-1-906270-89-6.
  107. ^ Wake 1988, p. 302.
  108. ^ "Lichfield: The cathedral Pages 47–57 A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 14, Lichfield. Originally published by Victoria County History, London, 1990". British History Online.
  109. ^ "Royal Collection Trust". Royal Collection Trust. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
  110. ^ "Royal Collection Trust". Royal Collection Trust. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
  111. ^ "National Portrait Gallery – Portrait". npg.org.uk. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
  112. ^ "Historic England". historicengland.org.uk. Retrieved 8 October 2022.
  113. ^ Jason Edwards, Amy Harris & Greg Sullivan (2021). Monuments of St Paul's Cathedral 1796–1916. Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers Ltd. ISBN 978-1-78551-360-2.
  114. ^ "War Memorials Register: Colonial Forces - Boer War". Imperial War Museum. Retrieved 29 June 2022.
  115. ^ a b "No. 34396". The London Gazette (Supplement). 11 May 1937. p. 3074.
  116. ^ Wake 1988, p. 68.
  117. ^ "No. 24539". The London Gazette. 4 January 1878. p. 113.
  118. ^ "No. 25449". The London Gazette. 11 August 1885. p. 3701.
  119. ^ "No. 30730". The London Gazette (Supplement). 4 June 1918. p. 6685.
  120. ^ "No. 33284". The London Gazette. 14 June 1927. p. 3836.
  121. ^ Bragança, Jose Vicente de (2014). "Agraciamentos Portugueses Aos Príncipes 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.
  122. ^ Hennessy, Sue (2010). Hidden Depths: Women of the RNLI. History Press Limited. ISBN 978-0-7524-5443-6.
  123. ^ Velde, Francois R. "Heraldica – British Royalty Cadency". Heraldica.org. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
  124. ^ Louda, Jiří; Maclagan, Michael (1999). Lines of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe. London: Little, Brown. p. 34. ISBN 1-85605-469-1.

Sources edit

  • Benson, E. F. (1938). Queen Victoria's Daughters. Appleton & Company.
  • Buckle, George Earle (1926). Letters of Queen Victoria 1862–1878. London: John Murray.
  • Cantelupe, Dorothy (1949). "Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online, DNB Archive ed.). Oxford University Press. Retrieved 25 January 2007.
  • Chomet, Seweryn (1999). Helena: A princess reclaimed. New York: Begell House. ISBN 1-56700-145-9.
  • Dennison, Matthew (2007). The Last Princess: The Devoted Life of Queen Victoria's Youngest Daughter. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-0-297-84794-6.
  • Hawksley, Lucinda (2013). The Mystery of Princess Louise: Queen Victoria's Rebellious Daughter. London: Chatto and Windus. ISBN 0701183497
  • Hubbard, R. H. (1977). Rideau Hall. Montreal and London: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-0310-6.
  • Lang, Cecil Y.; Shannon, Edgar F. Jr., eds. (1987). The Letters of Alfred Lord Tennyson Volume II 1851–1870. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-52583-3.
  • Longford, Elizabeth (1987). Victoria R. I. (Second ed.). London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-84142-4.
  • Longford, Elizabeth (1991). Darling Loosy: Letters to Princess Louise 1856 to 1939. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-297-81179-7.
  • Lutyens, Mary (1961). Lady Lytton's Diary. London: Rupert Hart-Davies.
  • MacDermot, H. E. (1938). Sir Thomas Roddick: His Work in Medicine and Public Life. Canada: MacMillan Co. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  • Marshall, Dorothy (1972). The Life and Times of Victoria. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. OCLC 300168891.
  • Martínez, Tori V. (2005). "Swiss Cottage: A Royal Playhouse". Time Travel Britain. Retrieved 23 August 2011.
  • McDougall, D. Blake (1988). "Princess Louise Caroline Alberta, Youth (1848–1878)". Edmonton Legislature Library. Legislative Assembly of Alberta. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  • McDougall, D. Blake (1988). "Princess Louise Caroline Alberta, Later years (1883–1939)". Edmonton Legislature Library. Legislative Assembly of Alberta. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
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  • Reid, Micheala (1996). Ask Sir James: the life of Sir James Reid, personal physician to Queen Victoria. London: Eland. ISBN 978-0-90787-152-1.
  • Sandwell, R. W. (2006). "Dreaming of the Princess: Love, Subversion, and the Rituals of Empire in British Columbia, 1882". In Coates, Colin MacMillan (ed.). Majesty in Canada: Essays on the Role of Royalty. Toronto: Dundurn Press Ltd. ISBN 978-1-55002-586-6. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  • Stocker, Mark. "Louise, Princess, duchess of Argyll (1848–1939)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/34601. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Stocker, Mark. "Boehm, Sir (Joseph) Edgar [formerly Josef Erasmus Böhm], baronet (1834–1890)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/2762. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Queen Victoria of Great Britain (1884). More Leaves from the Journal of a Life in the Highlands from 1862 to 1882. London: Smith & Elder, & Co. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  • Waite, P. B. (1998). "Campbell, John George Edward Henry Douglas Sutherland, Marquess of Lorne and 9th Duke of Argyll". In Cook, Ramsay; Hamelin, Jean (eds.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. XIV (1911–1920) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  • Wake, Jehanne (1988). Princess Louise: Queen Victoria's unconventional daughter. London: Collins. ISBN 0-00-217076-0.
  • 1 artwork by or after Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll at the Art UK site

External links edit

Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll
Cadet branch of the House of Wettin
Born: 18 March 1848 Died: 3 December 1939
Honorary titles
Preceded by Viceregal consort of Canada
1878–1883
Succeeded by

princess, louise, duchess, argyll, louisa, caroline, alberta, march, 1848, december, 1939, sixth, child, fourth, daughter, queen, victoria, prince, albert, princess, louiseduchess, argyll, more, princess, louise, 1881born, 1848, march, 1848buckingham, palace, . Princess Louise Duchess of Argyll Louisa Caroline Alberta 18 March 1848 3 December 1939 was the sixth child and fourth daughter of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert Princess LouiseDuchess of Argyll more Princess Louise in 1881Born 1848 03 18 18 March 1848Buckingham Palace London United KingdomDied3 December 1939 1939 12 03 aged 91 Kensington Palace London United KingdomBurial12 December 1939Royal Vault St George s Chapel Windsor Castle 13 March 1940 Royal Burial Ground FrogmoreSpouseJohn Campbell 9th Duke of Argyll m 1871 died 1914 wbr NamesLouisa Caroline AlbertaHouseSaxe Coburg and Gotha until 1917 Windsor from 1917 FatherPrince Albert of Saxe Coburg and GothaMotherQueen VictoriaSignatureViceregal consort of CanadaIn role 25 November 1878 23 October 1883MonarchVictoriaGovernor GeneralJohn Campbell Marquess of LornePreceded byHariot Rowan HamiltonSucceeded byLady Maud HamiltonIn her public life she was a strong proponent of the arts and higher education and of the feminist cause She was an influential supporter of the Edinburgh College of Domestic Science the forerunner to Queen Margaret University becoming the institution s first Patron in 1891 until 1939 Her early life was spent moving among the various royal residences in the company of her family When her father died in December 1861 the court went into a long period of mourning to which with time Louise became unsympathetic She was an able sculptor and artist and several of her sculptures remain today She was also a supporter of the feminist movement corresponding with Josephine Butler and visiting Elizabeth Garrett Before her marriage Louise served as an unofficial secretary to the Queen from 1866 to 1871 The question of Louise s marriage was discussed in the late 1860s Suitors from the royal houses of Prussia and Denmark were suggested but Victoria did not want her to marry a foreign prince and therefore suggested a high ranking member of the British aristocracy Despite opposition from members of the royal family Louise fell in love with John Campbell Marquess of Lorne the heir of the Duke of Argyll Victoria consented to the marriage 1 which took place on 21 March 1871 2 After a happy beginning the two drifted apart possibly because of their childlessness and the Queen s constraints on their activities 3 In 1878 Lorne was appointed Governor General of Canada a post he held 1878 1884 Louise was viceregal consort starting a lasting interest in Canada Her names were used to name many features in Canada including Lake Louise and the province of Alberta Following her mother s death in 1901 she entered the social circle established by her elder brother the new king Edward VII Louise s marriage with Lorne survived thanks to long periods of separation they reconciled in 1911 and Louise was devastated by Lorne s death in 1914 After the First World War she began to retire from public life undertaking few public duties outside Kensington Palace where she died at the age of 91 Contents 1 Early life 2 Secretary 3 Marriage 3 1 Suitors 3 2 Engagement and wedding 4 Viceregal consort of Canada 4 1 Inauspicious arrival 4 2 Canadian entertainments 4 3 Sleigh accident and Bermuda visit 4 4 Continued interest in Canada 5 Queen Victoria s last years 5 1 Family conflict 5 2 Rumours regarding Louise 5 3 Louise as unconventional royal 6 Later life 6 1 Edwardian period 6 2 Last years 7 Death 8 Legacy 8 1 Art practice 8 1 1 Selected works of art 8 1 1 1 Works on paper 8 1 1 2 Sculpture 9 Titles styles honours and arms 9 1 Titles and styles 9 2 Honours 9 2 1 Honorary military appointments 9 2 2 Honorary roles 9 3 Arms 10 Ancestry 11 References 12 Sources 13 External linksEarly life editLouise was born on 18 March 1848 at Buckingham Palace London 4 She was the fourth daughter and sixth child of the reigning British monarch Queen Victoria and her husband Prince Albert of Saxe Coburg and Gotha Her birth coincided with revolutions which swept across Europe prompting the queen to remark that Louise would turn out to be something peculiar 5 The queen s labour with Louise was the first to be aided with chloroform 5 nbsp Queen Victoria painted a portrait of Princess Louise after an original by Franz Xaver WinterhalterAlbert and Victoria chose the names Louisa Caroline Alberta She was baptized on 13 May 1848 in Buckingham Palace s private chapel by John Bird Sumner the Archbishop of Canterbury Though she was christened Louisa at the service she was invariably known as Louise throughout her life 6 Her godparents were Duke Gustav of Mecklenburg Schwerin her paternal great great uncle for whom Prince Albert stood proxy the Duchess of Saxe Meiningen for whom her great aunt Queen Adelaide stood proxy and the Hereditary Grand Duchess of Mecklenburg Strelitz her first cousin once removed for whom the Duchess of Cambridge stood proxy 6 During the ceremony the Duchess of Gloucester one of the few children of King George III who was still alive forgot where she was and suddenly got up in the middle of the service and knelt at the queen s feet much to the queen s horror 5 Like her siblings Louise was brought up with the strict programme of education devised by her father Prince Albert and his friend and confidant Baron Stockmar The young children were taught practical tasks such as cooking farming household tasks and carpentry 7 From her early years Louise was a talented and intelligent child and her artistic talents were quickly recognised 8 On his visit to Osborne House in 1863 Hallam Tennyson the son of the poet Alfred Lord Tennyson remarked that Louise could draw beautifully 9 Because of her royal rank an artistic career was not considered However the queen first allowed her to attend art school under the tutelage of the sculptor Mary Thornycroft and later 1863 allowed her to study at the National Art Training School now The Royal College of Art 3 Louise also became an able dancer and Victoria wrote after a dance that Louise danced the sword dance with more verve and accuracy than any of her sisters 10 Her wit and intelligence made her a favourite with her father 11 with her inquisitive nature earning her the nickname Little Miss Why from other members of the royal family 10 Secretary edit nbsp Princess Louise in the 1860sLouise s father Prince Albert died at Windsor on 14 December 1861 The queen was devastated and ordered her household to move from Windsor to Osborne House on the Isle of Wight The atmosphere of the royal court became gloomy and morbid in the wake of the prince s death and entertainments became dry and dull 12 Louise quickly became dissatisfied with her mother s prolonged mourning 12 For her seventeenth birthday in 1865 Louise requested the ballroom to be opened for a debutante dance the like of which had not been performed since Prince Albert s death Her request was refused and her boredom with the mundane routine of travelling between the different royal residences at set times irritated her mother who considered Louise to be indiscreet and argumentative 3 The queen comforted herself by rigidly continuing with Prince Albert s plans for their children Princess Alice was married to Prince Louis the future Grand Duke of Hesse at Osborne House on 1 July 1862 In 1863 Edward the Prince of Wales married Princess Alexandra of Denmark The queen made it a tradition that the eldest unmarried daughter become her unofficial secretary a position which Louise filled in 1866 following the marriage of her elder sister Helena despite the queen s concern that she was indiscreet 12 Louise however proved to be good at the job Victoria wrote shortly afterwards She is and who would some years ago have thought it a clever dear girl with a fine strong character unselfish and affectionate 13 However when Louise fell in love with her brother Leopold s tutor the Reverend Robinson Duckworth 14 years her senior between 1866 and 1870 the queen reacted by dismissing Duckworth in 1870 He later became Canon of Westminster Abbey 14 Louise was bored at court and by fulfilling her duties which were little more than minor secretarial tasks such as writing letters on the queen s behalf dealing with political correspondence and providing the queen with company she had more responsibilities 15 She also undertook her share of public and philanthropic duties for example inaugurating the new North Eastern Hospital for Children in 1867 16 and launching the ship HMS Druid in 1869 Marriage editSuitors edit As a daughter of the queen Louise was a desirable bride more so as she is regarded as the queen s most beautiful daughter by both contemporary and modern biographers 3 17 18 However she was accused by the press without substantiation of romantic affairs 3 This coupled with her liberalism and feminism prompted the queen to find her a husband The choice had to suit Victoria as well as Louise and the queen insisted that her daughter s husband should live near her a promise which had also been extracted from the husband of Helena Louise s sister Various suitors were proposed by the leading royal houses of Europe Princess Alexandra proposed her brother the Crown Prince of Denmark but the queen was strongly opposed to another Danish marriage that could antagonise Prussia at a time of diplomatic tension over the Schleswig Holstein question Victoria Louise s eldest sister proposed the tall and rich Prince Albert of Prussia but Queen Victoria disapproved of another Prussian marriage that would have been unpopular in England 19 Prince Albert was also reluctant to settle in England as required William Prince of Orange was also considered a suitor but because of his extravagant lifestyle in Paris where he lived openly with a lover the queen quickly vetoed the idea 20 nbsp Louise and Lorne s engagement photo W amp D Downey 1870 Louise viewed marriage to any prince as undesirable and announced that she wished to marry John Campbell Marquess of Lorne heir to the Dukedom of Argyll No marriage between a daughter of a monarch and a British subject had been given official recognition since 1515 when Charles Brandon 1st Duke of Suffolk married King Henry VIII s sister Mary 3 Louise s eldest brother the Prince of Wales was strongly opposed to a marriage with a non mediatized noble 21 Furthermore Lorne s father George Campbell was an ardent supporter of William Ewart Gladstone and the Prince of Wales was worried that he would drag the royal family into political disputes 19 Nevertheless the opposition was crushed by the queen who wrote to the Prince of Wales in 1869 That which you object to that Louise should marry a subject I feel certain will be for Louise s happiness and for the peace and quiet of the family Times have changed great foreign alliances are looked on as causes of trouble and anxiety and are of no good What could be more painful than the position in which our family were placed during the wars with Denmark and between Prussia and Austria You may not be aware as I am with what dislike the marriages of Princesses of the Royal Family with small German Princes German beggars as they most insultingly were called As to position I see no difficulty whatever Louise remains what she is and her husband keeps his rank only being treated in the family as a relation when we are together 22 The queen averred that Louise s marriage to a subject would bring new blood into the family 22 while all European princes were related to each other She was convinced that this would strengthen the royal family morally and physically 23 Engagement and wedding edit See also Wedding dress of Princess Louise of the United Kingdom nbsp Princess Louise in her wedding dressLouise became engaged to the Marquess of Lorne on 3 October 1870 while they were visiting Balmoral 1 Lorne was invited to Balmoral Castle in Scotland and accompanied Louise the Lord Chancellor Lord Hatherley and Queen Victoria s lady in waiting Lady Ely on a drive Later that day Louise returned and announced to the queen that Lorne had spoken of his devotion to Louise and she accepted his proposal in the knowledge of the queen s approval 24 The queen later gave Lady Ely a bracelet to mark the occasion 25 The Queen found it difficult to let go of her daughter confiding in her journal that she felt painfully the thought of losing her 24 The new breach in royal tradition caused surprise especially in Germany and Queen Victoria wrote to the Queen of Prussia that princes of small impoverished German houses were very unpopular in Britain and that Lord Lorne a person of distinction at home with an independent fortune was really no lower in rank than minor German Royalty 26 Victoria settled an annuity on Louise shortly before her marriage 27 The ceremony was conducted at St George s Chapel at Windsor Castle on 21 March 1871 2 28 and the crowd outside was so large that for the first time policemen had to form chain barriers to keep control 29 Louise wore a wedding veil of Honiton lace that she designed herself and was escorted into the chapel by her mother and her two eldest brothers the Prince of Wales and the Duke of Edinburgh On this occasion the usually severe black of the queen s mourning dress was relieved by the crimson rubies and blues of the Garter star Following the ceremony the queen kissed Louise and Lorne now a member of the royal family but still a subject kissed the queen s hand The couple then journeyed to Claremont in Surrey for the honeymoon but the presence of attendants on the journey and at meal times made it impossible for them to talk privately 30 The short four day visit did not pass without an interruption from the queen who was curious about her daughter s thoughts on married life Among their wedding gifts was a maplewood desk from Queen Victoria now at Inveraray Castle 31 Following her marriage Louise continued her charitable and artistic interests In 1871 the Ladies Work Society was founded in South Audley Street promoting the making and sale of needlework and embroidery for poverty relief Louise became its president and designed some of their products 32 The couple s official place of residence was Rosneath House in Dumbartonshire 33 Viceregal consort of Canada editFurther information History of monarchy in Canada A royal viceregal consort In 1878 British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli nominated Lorne to be Canada s Governor General and he was duly appointed by Queen Victoria 34 Louise thus became his viceregal consort As viceregal consort she used her position to support the arts and higher education and the cause of female equality although she said the subject of Domestic Economy lies at the root of the highest life of every true woman 35 But her stay in Canada was unhappy as a result of homesickness dislike of Ottawa and a bad sleighing accident 3 Inauspicious arrival edit nbsp Princess Louise in CanadaOn 15 November 1878 the couple left Liverpool and arrived in Canada for the inauguration at Halifax on 25 November 36 Louise became the first royal to take up residence in Rideau Hall officially the queen s royal residence in Ottawa However the hall was far from the splendour of British royal residences and as each viceregal couple decorated the hall with their own furnishings and thus took them when they departed the Lornes found the palace sparse in decor upon their arrival Louise put her artistic talents to work and hung many of her watercolour and oil paintings around the hall also installing her sculpted works Though the news that a daughter of the queen would be viceregal consort of Canada first saw a thrill of joy burst upon the Dominion it being felt that the princess would be a strong link between Canadians and their sovereign 37 the arrival of the new governor general and his wife was not initially welcomed by the Canadian press which complained about the imposition of royalty on the country s hitherto un regal society 38 Relations with the press further deteriorated when Lorne s private secretary Francis de Winton threw four journalists off the royal train Although the Lornes had no knowledge of de Winton s action it was assumed by the press that they did and they earned an early reputation for haughtiness 39 Louise was horrified by the negative press and when she heard about reports of a nation of flunkies at the viceregal court taking lessons in the backward walk Louise declared that she wouldn t care if they came in blanket coats 40 A reference to the ubiquitous capote Eventually the worries of a rigid court at Rideau Hall and the feeble undercurrent of criticism turned out to be unfounded as the royal couple proved to be more relaxed than their predecessors 41 Canadian entertainments edit nbsp The Marquess of Lorne accompanied by Princess Louise opening the Canadian Parliament in 1879Louise s first few months in Canada were tinged with sadness as her favourite sister Alice Grand Duchess of Hesse and by Rhine died on 14 December 1878 Although homesick over that first Christmas Louise soon grew accustomed to the winter climate Sleighing and skating were two of her favourite pastimes In Canada as the monarch s direct representative Lorne always took precedence over his wife so that at the Opening of the Parliament of Canada on 13 February 1879 Louise was ranked no differently from others in attendance She had to remain standing with the MPs until Lorne asked them to be seated 42 In order for Lorne to meet every Canadian member of Parliament he held bi weekly dinners for 50 people However some of the Canadian ladies responded negatively to the British party One of her ladies in waiting reported that some had an I m as good as you sort of manner when one begins a conversation 43 Court entertainments were open anyone who could afford the clothing to attend functions was simply asked to sign the visitor s book 44 Louise s first state ball was given on 19 February 1879 and she made a good impression on her guests when she ordered the silk cordon separating the viceregal party from the guests be removed However the ball was marred by various mishaps including a drunken bandsman nearly starting a fire by pulling a curtain over a gas lamp 44 The open house practice was criticized by guests who complained about the low social status of other guests One attendee was horrified to find the attendee s grocer dancing in the same set 44 One of her works as a sculptor is the statue of Queen Victoria which now stands in front of the Royal Victoria College Montreal 35 now the Strathcona Music Building of McGill University Lorne s father The Duke of Argyll arrived with two of his daughters in June and in the presence of the family Louise caught a 28 pound 13 kg salmon 45 The women s success at fishing prompted the Duke to remark that fishing in Canada required no skill 45 Sleigh accident and Bermuda visit edit nbsp The arrival of Princess Louise in Hamilton Bermuda 29 January 1883 Louise Lorne and two attendants were hurt in a sleigh accident on 14 February 1880 46 The winter was particularly severe and the carriage in which they were traveling overturned throwing the coachman and footman from the sleigh The horses then panicked and dragged the overturned carriage over more than 400 yards 370 m of ground Louise was knocked unconscious when she hit her head on the iron bar supporting the roof and Lorne was trapped underneath her expecting the sides of the carriage to give way at any moment 47 48 Eventually as they overtook the sleigh ahead the horses calmed and the occupant of that sleigh Princess Louise s aide de camp ordered an empty carriage to convey the injured party back to Rideau Hall 49 The doctors who attended Louise reported she was severely concussed and in shock and that it was a wonder her skull was not fractured 49 Louise s ear had been injured when her earring caught on the side of the sleigh tearing her ear lobe in two 49 The press played down the story on instructions from Lorne s private secretary an act that was described by contemporaries as stupid and ill advised 50 For example one New Zealand newspaper reported Excepting immediately after the blow the princess was perfectly sensible during the whole time 48 Knowledge of Louise s true condition might have elicited sympathy from the Canadian people As it was one Member of Parliament wrote Except the cut in the lower part of the ear I think there was no injury done worth mentioning 50 Therefore when Louise cancelled her immediate engagements people thought she was malingering News of the accident was also played down in Britain and in letters home to the anxious Queen Victoria 50 Princess Louise left Canada for England in 1881 while her husband remained in Canada until 1883 She played a major role in the development of the nascent tourism industry of the colony of Bermuda 770 nautical miles 1 430 km south east of Nova Scotia In 1883 because of her fragile health she spent the winter in Bermuda arriving on 29 January 1883 from Charleston South Carolina aboard HMS Dido popularising a trend for wealthy North Americans to escape to Bermuda s relatively mild climate during the winter months Her visit brought such attention to Bermuda that a palatial hotel which opened in 1885 intended to cater to these new visitors was named after her the Princess Hotel was built on the shore of Hamilton Harbour in the parish of Pembroke the Princess herself having occupied Inglewood the home of JH Timingham in Paget Parish during her visit 51 52 53 54 55 56 Continued interest in Canada edit After returning to Britain in 1883 Louise continued to take an interest in Canada During the North West Rebellion of 1885 she sent a certain Dr Boyd medical supplies and a large fund of money for distribution Her express instructions were that assistance was to be rendered to friend and foe indiscriminately To fulfill her wishes Boyd accompanied the Militia Medical Staff under Dr Thomas Roddick to the sites of the Battle of Fish Creek and the Battle of Batoche to help give medical treatment to the wounded including the Metis opposition 57 In 1905 the province of Alberta was named after Princess Louise Caroline Alberta In the province there is Lake Louise and Mount Alberta is named in her honour 58 59 Queen Victoria s last years editFamily conflict edit nbsp Princesses Louise and Beatrice riding with their motherLouise returned to Britain with her husband on 27 October 1883 60 Queen Victoria had allocated them apartments at Kensington Palace and the couple took up official residence in the suite that was to remain Louise s home for the rest of her life Louise resumed public duties in Britain for example opening St George s Gardens Bloomsbury on 1 July 1884 61 and Lorne his political career campaigning unsuccessfully for the Hampstead seat in 1885 In 1896 he won the South Manchester seat entering parliament as a Liberal Louise unlike Lorne and his father was in favour of Irish Home Rule and disappointed when he defected from Gladstonian Liberalism to the Liberal Unionists 62 Relations between Louise and Lorne were strained and despite the queen s attempts to keep them under one roof they often went their separate ways 63 Even when he accompanied Louise he was not always received with favour at court and the Prince of Wales did not take to him 64 Out of all the royal family Lorne was the only one to be identified closely with a political party having been a Gladstonian liberal in the House of Commons 36 Louise s relationship with the two sisters closest to the queen Beatrice and Helena was strained at best Beatrice had married the tall and handsome Prince Henry of Battenberg in a love match in 1885 and they had four children Louise who had a jealous nature had grown accustomed to treating Beatrice with pity on account of the queen s constant need for her 65 Beatrice s biographer Matthew Dennison claims that in contrast to Beatrice Louise remained strikingly good looking throughout her forties 66 Louise and her husband were no longer close and rumours spread about Lorne s alleged homosexuality 67 Thus Beatrice was enjoying a satisfying sexual relationship with her popular husband which Louise was not 68 Louise may have considered Prince Henry a more appropriate husband for herself 65 Certainly following Prince Henry s death in 1896 Louise wrote that he Henry was almost the greatest friend I had I too miss him more than I can say 65 In addition Louise attempted to champion her late brother in law by announcing that she was his confidante and that Beatrice a mere cipher meant nothing to him 69 Rumours regarding Louise edit From late 1865 to mid 1866 the royal family was guarded by 150 Scots Fusiliers Officially this was to protect the family from Fenian threats but it was whispered by members of high society that Louise had fallen pregnant by Walter Stirling the tutor of her brother Leopold 70 71 According to Louise s biographer Lucinda Hawksley her son Henry was born in 1866 and shortly after the Queen s lawyers were summoned to her residence The Queen s obstetrician Frederick Locock and his wife adopted a son named Henry immediately after the meeting 72 The boy supposedly grew up with other royal children and claimed to have been Louise s child DNA testing has been sanctioned by Henry s descendants but courts ruled the claims unfounded 73 Further rumours spread that Louise was having an affair with Arthur Bigge later Lord Stamfordham the queen s assistant private secretary Beatrice mentioned the rumours to the queen s physician calling it a scandal 66 and Prince Henry claimed to have seen Bigge drinking Louise s health at dinner 66 Louise denied the rumour claiming that it was started by Beatrice and Helena to undermine her position at court 74 However on Henry s death relations between the sisters sporadically improved and it was Louise rather than the queen who was the first to arrive at Cimiez to be with the widowed Beatrice 75 Nevertheless Louise s jealousy did not evaporate completely James Reid the queen s physician wrote to his wife a few years later Louise is as usual much down on her sisters Hope she won t stay long or she will do mischief 76 Rumours of affairs did not concern only Bigge In 1890 the sculptor Sir Joseph Edgar Boehm died in Louise s presence at his studio in London leading to rumours that the two were having an affair 3 According to historian Lucinda Hawksley the two had a long lasting love affair 77 Boehm s assistant Alfred Gilbert who played a central role in comforting Louise after Boehm s death and supervised the destruction of Boehm s private papers 78 was rapidly promoted as a royal sculptor 78 Louise was also romantically linked to fellow artist Edwin Lutyens her equerry Colonel William Probert and an unnamed music master 79 However Jehanne Wake Louise s biographer argues that there is no substantial evidence to suggest that Louise had sexual relationships with anyone other than her husband 79 During Victoria s last years Louise carried out a range of public duties such as opening public buildings laying foundation stones and officiating at special programmes Louise like her eldest sister Victoria was more liberally minded and supported the suffragist movement completely contrary to the queen s views 64 Louise privately visited Elizabeth Garrett the first British woman openly to qualify as a physician 80 Queen Victoria deplored the idea of women joining professions especially medicine and described the training of female physicians as a repulsive subject 81 Louise as unconventional royal edit nbsp Princess Louise Duchess of Argyll c 1900 by William James TopleyLouise was determined to be seen as an ordinary person and not as a member of the court When travelling abroad she often used the alias Mrs Campbell 64 Louise was known for her charity towards servants On one occasion the butler approached her and requested permission to dismiss the second footman who was late getting out of bed When she advised that the footman be given an alarm clock the butler informed her that he already had one She then went so far as to suggest a bed that would throw him out at a specified time but she was told this was not feasible Finally she suggested that he might be ill and when checked he was found to have tuberculosis The footman was therefore sent to New Zealand to recover 64 On another occasion when she visited Bermuda she was invited to a reception and chose to walk rather than be driven She became thirsty along the way and stopped at a house where she asked a Black woman named Mrs McCarthy for a glass of water Owing to the scarcity of water the woman had to go some distance to obtain it but was reluctant because she had to finish her ironing When Louise offered to continue the ironing the woman refused adding that she was in a great hurry to finish so that she could go and see Princess Louise Realising that she had not been recognised Louise enquired whether McCarthy would recognise her again When the woman said that she would have thought so but was admittedly unsure Louise replied Well take a good look at me now so you can be sure to know me tomorrow at St Georges 82 The princess clung to her privacy and enjoyed not being recognised 83 Louise and her sisters had another disagreement after the death of the queen s close friend Jane Spencer Baroness Churchill Determined not to put her mother through more misery Louise wanted the news to be broken to the queen gradually When this was not done Louise voiced sharp criticism of Helena and Beatrice 84 One month later on 22 January 1901 Queen Victoria died at Osborne House on the Isle of Wight 85 In her will the queen bequeathed Kent House on the Osborne Estate to Louise as a country residence 86 and gave Osborne Cottage to Louise s youngest sister Beatrice Louise and Beatrice were now neighbours both at Kensington Palace and Osborne 87 Later life editEdwardian period edit nbsp Portrait by Philip de Laszlo 1915Upon Queen Victoria s death Louise entered the social circle of her brother the new King Edward VII with whom she had much in common including smoking 88 She had an obsession with physical fitness and if she was sneered at for this she would retort by saying Never mind I ll outlive you all 89 Meanwhile Louise s husband 9th Duke of Argyll since 1900 took his seat in the House of Lords The Colonial Secretary Joseph Chamberlain offered him the office of Governor General of Australia that year but the offer was declined 36 Louise continued her sculpture and in 1902 designed a memorial to the colonial soldiers who died in the Boer War 90 In the same year she began a nude study of a married woman suggested by the English painter Sir William Blake Richmond 90 Louise spent much of her time at Kent House and she frequently visited Scotland with her husband Financial pressures did not disappear when Lorne became Duke and Louise avoided inviting the King to Inveraray Argyll s ancestral home because the couple were economising When Queen Victoria had visited the house before Lorne became Duke of Argyll there were seventy servants and seventy four dogs 88 By the time of Edward VII s accession there were four servants and two dogs 88 nbsp Princess Louise in later lifeThe Duke of Argyll s health continued to deteriorate He became increasingly senile and Louise nursed him devotedly from 1911 In these years Louise and her husband were closer than they had been before 3 In spring 1914 Louise stayed at Kensington Palace while her husband remained on the Isle of Wight He developed bronchial problems followed by double pneumonia Louise was summoned on 28 April 1914 and he died on 2 May 91 Following his death Louise had a nervous breakdown and suffered from intense loneliness writing to a friend shortly afterwards My loneliness without the Duke is quite terrible I wonder what he does now 92 Last years edit Louise spent her last years at Kensington Palace occupying rooms next to her sister Princess Beatrice She made occasional public appearances with the royal family such as at the Cenotaph at Whitehall on 11 November 1925 However her health deteriorated In 1935 she greeted her nephew King George V and his wife Queen Mary at Kensington Town Hall during their Silver Jubilee celebrations and was made an Honorary Freeman of the Borough of Kensington Her last public appearance occurred in 1937 at the Home Arts and Industries Exhibition Between these occasions her great nephew King Edward VIII abdicated on 11 December 1936 In December 1936 Louise wrote to the British prime minister Stanley Baldwin sympathising with him about the crisis 93 Following the accession of Edward s brother King George VI she became too ill to move around and was confined to Kensington Palace affectionately called the Auntie Palace by Princess Elizabeth and Princess Margaret 94 She developed neuritis in her arm inflammation of the nerves between the ribs fainting fits and sciatica Louise occupied herself by drafting prayers one of which was sent to Neville Chamberlain reading Guide our Ministers of State and all who are in authority over us 95 Death edit nbsp Princess Louise s grave centre at the Royal Burial Ground at FrogmorePrincess Louise died at Kensington Palace on the morning of 3 December 1939 at the age of 91 96 wearing the wedding veil she had worn almost 70 years earlier 97 Following a simple funeral owing to the war her remains were cremated at Golders Green Crematorium on 8 December 1939 98 Her ashes were quietly placed in the Royal Vault at St George s Chapel on 12 December 1939 with many members of the British royal family and Argyll family present 98 Her ashes were moved to the Royal Burial Ground Frogmore near Windsor on 13 March 1940 99 Louise s will stated that if she died in Scotland she should be buried at the Campbell mausoleum in Kilmun next to her husband if in England at Frogmore near her parents 98 Her coffin was borne by eight NCOs of her own regiment The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders 100 Her estate was probated as 239 260 18 shillings and sixpence with her debts including 15 shillings for cigarettes 101 Legacy editLouise bestowed her name on four Canadian regiments The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders of Canada Princess Louise s in Hamilton Ontario the Princess Louise Dragoon Guards in Ottawa Ontario later the 4th Princess Louise Dragoon Guards inactive since 1965 the 8th Canadian Hussars Princess Louise s in Moncton New Brunswick and the Princess Louise Fusiliers in Halifax Nova Scotia Queen Elizabeth II later recalled that Louise and her sister Beatrice would talk until they stunned their audience with their output of words 102 The province of Alberta in Canada is named after her Although the name Louise was originally planned the princess wished to honour her dead father so the last of her given names was chosen Lake Louise in Alberta is also named after her as is Mount Alberta Although her time in Canada was not always happy she liked the Canadian people and retained close links with her Canadian regiments 3 Back at home she gained a reputation for paying unscheduled visits to hospitals especially during her later years 3 Her relationship with her family was generally close Although at times she bickered with the queen and her sisters Helena and Beatrice the relations did not remain strained for long She retained a lifelong correspondence with her brother Arthur and was one of King Edward VII s favourite sisters 103 Of all her siblings she was closest to Prince Leopold Duke of Albany and Princess Alice and she was devastated by their deaths in 1884 and 1878 respectively 104 Among the younger generations of the family Louise s favourite relatives were the Duke and Duchess of Kent her grandnephew and his wife 94 At the coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in 1937 Louise lent the Duchess the train that she designed and wore for the coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra in 1902 105 A war hospital in Erskine Scotland is named after Louise It took her name as she was the first patron of the unit It was originally called Princess Louise Scottish Hospital for Limbless Sailors and Soldiers The name changed over the years to Erskine Hospital and then just Erskine The charity has grown to become the biggest ex service establishment in the country Art practice edit nbsp Louise s statue of Queen Victoria at Kensington PalaceLouise had artistic training from childhood first with Susan Durant from 1864 then Mary Thornycroft from 1867 and further lessons with Sir Joseph Edgar Boehm 106 She also then attended National Art Training School Like many women artists in the nineteenth century Louise had to make do with training intended for industrial designers and art teachers rather than fine artists There was no training from the nude model as there was for male art students Louise was the most artistically talented of Queen Victoria s daughters and was a prolific artist and sculptor When Louise sculpted a statue of the queen portraying her in Coronation robes the press claimed that her tutor Sir Edgar Boehm was the true creator of the work The claim was denied by Louise s friends who asserted her effort and independence 107 The work was intended to be exhibited in 1887 but production was delayed until 1893 A memorial to her brother in law Prince Henry of Battenberg and a memorial to the colonial soldiers who fell during the Second Boer War reside at Whippingham Church on the Isle of Wight and another statue of Queen Victoria remains at McGill University in Montreal 3 as well as the statue of Queen Victoria on the north side of Lichfield Cathedral 108 Selected works of art edit Works on paper edit Queen Victoria 1881 Pencil on paper 36 9 x 24 0 cm sheet of paper Royal Collection Trust RCIN 980422 Sculpture edit Princess Beatrice 1864 Marble 55 0 x 29 0 x 23 0 cm Royal Collection Trust RCIN 53351 109 Prince Arthur 1869 Marble 61 5 x 33 0 x 26 0 cm Royal Collection Trust RCIN 31662 Prince Leopold 1869 Marble 43 4 x 29 0 x 19 0 cm Royal Collection Trust RCIN 34511 110 Queen Victoria 1887 Bronze 61 5 x 46 x 41 cm Leeds Museums and Galleries Temple Newsam House 106 Self Portrait n d Terracotta 63 5 cm National Portrait Gallery London 111 Memorial to Mary Ann Thurston Grade II listed monument 112 in Kensal Green Cemetery Thurston was nanny to Queen Victoria s children 1845 67 Memorial to the Colonial Forces of the Second Boer War erected 1905 St Paul s Cathedral London 113 114 Titles styles honours and arms editTitles and styles edit 18 March 1848 21 March 1871 Her Royal Highness The Princess Louise 21 March 1871 24 April 1900 Her Royal Highness The Princess Louise Marchioness of Lorne 24 April 1900 3 December 1939 Her Royal Highness The Princess Louise Duchess of Argyll 115 Honours edit British honours21 January 1865 Lady of the Royal Order of Victoria and Albert first class 116 1 January 1878 Companion of the Order of the Crown of India 117 7 August 1885 Member of the Royal Red Cross 118 10 February 1904 Royal Family Order of King Edward VII 3 June 1911 Royal Family Order of King George V 3 June 1918 Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire 119 12 June 1926 Dame Grand Cross of the Venerable Order of St John 120 11 May 1937 Dame Grand Cross of the Royal Victorian Order 115 Foreign honours nbsp 8 January 1866 Dame of the Order of Queen Saint Isabel 121 Honorary military appointments edit nbsp 3 July 1911 Honorary Colonel 5th Princess Louise Dragoon Guards which became 4th Princess Louise Dragoon Guards in 1936 nbsp 1913 Colonel in Chief Kensington Regiment Princess Louise s nbsp 22 June 1914 Colonel in Chief The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders Princess Louise s nbsp 15 April 1930 Colonel in Chief The Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders of Canada Princess Louise s nbsp 14 August 1936 Colonel in Chief The Princess Louise FusiliersHonorary roles edit President of the Women s Education Union from 1871 3 Patron of the Girls Day School Trust 1872 1939 3 Patron of the Ladies Lifeboat Guild Royal National Lifeboat Institution 1923 39 122 Arms edit In 1858 Louise 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 Louise s arms the outer points bore cantons gules and the centre a rose gules In 1917 the inescutcheon was dropped by royal warrant from George V 123 nbsp nbsp Coat of arms 1858 1917 Royal monogramAncestry editAncestors of Princess Louise Duchess of Argyll 124 8 Francis Frederick Duke of Saxe Coburg and Saalfeld4 Ernest I Duke of Saxe Coburg and Gotha9 Countess Augusta Carolina of Reuss Ebersdorf2 Prince Albert of Saxe Coburg and Gotha10 Augustus Duke of Saxe Gotha Altenburg5 Princess Louise of Saxe Gotha Altenburg11 Duchess Louise Charlotte of Mecklenburg Schwerin1 Princess Louise of the United Kingdom12 George III of Great Britain and Hanover6 Prince Edward Duke of Kent and Strathearn13 Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg Strelitz3 Victoria Queen of the United Kingdom14 Francis Frederick Duke of Saxe Coburg and Saalfeld 8 7 Princess Victoria of Saxe Coburg and Saalfeld15 Countess Augusta Carolina of Reuss Ebersdorf 9 References edit a b No 23671 The London Gazette 25 October 1870 p 4593 a b No 23720 The London Gazette 24 March 1871 pp 1587 1598 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Stocker 2004 Louise Princess duchess of Argyll Marshall 1972 p 122 a b c Longford 1987 p 195 a b No 20857 The London Gazette 17 May 1848 pp 1935 1938 Martinez 2005 Ralph Lewis 1996 Lang amp Shannon 1987 p 326 a b McDougall 1988 Youth 1848 1878 Cantelupe 1949 a b c Dennison 2007 p 73 Quoted by McDougall 1988 Youth 1848 1878 Chomet 1999 pp 20 21 Dennison 2007 p 204 The northern suburbs Haggerston and Hackney Pages 505 524 Old and New London Volume 5 Originally published by Cassell Petter amp Galpin London 1878 British History Online Wake 1988 p page needed Longford 1987 p page needed a b Buckle 1926 p 632 Wake 1988 p 100 Benson 1938 p 162 a b Buckle 1926 pp 632 633 Paraphrased from Buckle 1926 pp 632 633 a b Victoria Queen More leaves p 74 Queen Victoria gifted bracelet Paul Fraser Collectibles Archived from the original on 7 June 2015 Retrieved 16 December 2021 Quoted in Benson 1938 p 166 No 23712 The London Gazette 3 March 1871 p 1236 Wake 1988 p 138 Wake 1988 p 139 Wake 1988 p 145 First Floor Inveraray Castle Archived from the original on 23 May 2013 Chelsea Cremorne Gardens Pages 84 100 Old and New London Volume 5 Originally published by Cassell Petter amp Galpin London 1878 British History Online Scotland s Lost Houses by Ian Gow No 24633 The London Gazette 15 October 1878 p 5559 a b Morgan 1903 p 1 a b c Waite 1998 Sandwell 2006 p 48 Longford 1991 p 45 Longford 1991 p 44 Quoted in Longford 1991 p 45 Hubbard 1977 p 125 Wake 1988 p 226 Wake 1988 p 227 a b c Wake 1988 p 228 a b Wake 1988 p 230 Wake 1988 p 236 Quoted in Wake 1988 p 236 a b Sleigh Accident to the Princess Louise Nelson Evening Mail Supplement ed New Zealand 8 May 1880 citing the World of 2 March 1880 a b c Wake 1988 p 237 a b c Wake 1988 p 238 The Capital of Bermuda Hamilton The Whitest City in the World PDF The New York Times 28 January 1883 A Nest for the Princess Bermudans Making Elaborate Preparations PDF The New York Times 5 February 1883 The Bermuda Parliament is Opened with Great Pomp and Ceremony PDF The New York Times 13 April 1890 Forty Hours to Bermuda that may be the Time Within Twenty Four Months PDF The New York Times 4 October 1891 Fairmont Hotels amp Resorts Hotel History of the Fairmont Hamilton Princess Ingham Jennifer M 1992 Defence Not Defiance A History of the Bermuda Volunteer Rifle Corps Pembroke Bermuda The Island Press ISBN 978 0 9696517 1 0 MacDermot 1938 pp 71 75 Blythe Trenton 10 December 2017 Which interesting facts about Alberta you should know Alberta Centennial Government of Alberta Archived from the original on 21 October 2018 Donovan Larry Monto Tom 2007 Alberta Place Names The Fascinating People amp Stories Behind the Naming of Alberta 2nd ed Dragon Hill Publishing p 121 ISBN 978 1 896124 23 0 Wake 1988 p 264 The Harrison Estate Pages 70 79 Survey of London Volume 24 the Parish of St Pancras Part 4 King s Cross Neighbourhood Originally published by London County Council London 1952 British History Online Wake 1988 p 282 Wake 1988 p 270 a b c d McDougall 1988 Later years 1883 1939 a b c Dennison 2007 p 198 a b c Dennison 2007 p 199 Packard Jerrold M 1998 Victoria s Daughters St Martin s Press pp 205 207 ISBN 978 0 312 24496 5 Wake 1988 p 315 Lutyens 1961 p 52 Did Queen Victoria s Daughter Have an Illegitimate Baby as a Teen 14 August 2014 Queen Victoria s daughter Princess Louise had illegitimate son with brother s tutor Queen Victoria s daughter Princess Louise had illegitimate son with brother s tutor The mystery of Princess Louise s secret son Dennison 2007 p 201 Dennison 2007 p 200 Reid 1996 p 208 Lucinda Hawksley Queen Victoria s Mysterious Daughter Chapter 9 St Martin s Press 2013 a b Stocker 2004 Joseph Edgar Boehm a b Wake 1988 p 321 Wake 1988 p 98 Longford 1987 p 395 Wake 1988 pp 258 259 Wake 1988 p 259 Longford 1991 p 70 Longford 1987 pp 561 562 Dennison 2007 p 226 Wake 1988 p 346 a b c Longford 1991 p 74 Quoted in Longford 1991 p 74 a b Longford 1991 p 73 Longford 1991 p 77 Quoted in Longford 1991 p 77 Longford 1991 p 306 a b Longford 1991 p 80 Longford 1991 p 81 No 34746 The London Gazette Supplement 1 December 1939 p 8097 Wake 1988 p 413 a b c Wake 1988 p 412 Longford 1991 p 83 The Glasgow Herald 13 December 1939 p 9 Queen Victoria s daughter died owing money for cigarettes BBC 24 December 2018 Retrieved 20 October 2022 Wake 1988 p 410 Wake 1988 p 350 Wake 1988 p 269 Wake 1988 p 411 a b Strang Alice 2015 Modern Scottish Women Painters and Sculptors 1885 1965 National Galleries of Scotland pp 66 67 ISBN 978 1 906270 89 6 Wake 1988 p 302 Lichfield The cathedral Pages 47 57 A History of the County of Stafford Volume 14 Lichfield Originally published by Victoria County History London 1990 British History Online Royal Collection Trust Royal Collection Trust Retrieved 25 May 2016 Royal Collection Trust Royal Collection Trust Retrieved 25 May 2016 National Portrait Gallery Portrait npg org uk Retrieved 25 May 2016 Historic England historicengland org uk Retrieved 8 October 2022 Jason Edwards Amy Harris amp Greg Sullivan 2021 Monuments of St Paul s Cathedral 1796 1916 Scala Arts amp Heritage Publishers Ltd ISBN 978 1 78551 360 2 War Memorials Register Colonial Forces Boer War Imperial War Museum Retrieved 29 June 2022 a b No 34396 The London Gazette Supplement 11 May 1937 p 3074 Wake 1988 p 68 No 24539 The London Gazette 4 January 1878 p 113 No 25449 The London Gazette 11 August 1885 p 3701 No 30730 The London Gazette Supplement 4 June 1918 p 6685 No 33284 The London Gazette 14 June 1927 p 3836 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 Hennessy Sue 2010 Hidden Depths Women of the RNLI History Press Limited ISBN 978 0 7524 5443 6 Velde Francois R Heraldica British Royalty Cadency Heraldica org Retrieved 20 August 2011 Louda Jiri Maclagan Michael 1999 Lines of Succession Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe London Little Brown p 34 ISBN 1 85605 469 1 Sources editBenson E F 1938 Queen Victoria s Daughters Appleton amp Company Buckle George Earle 1926 Letters of Queen Victoria 1862 1878 London John Murray Cantelupe Dorothy 1949 Princess Louise Duchess of Argyll Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online DNB Archive ed Oxford University Press Retrieved 25 January 2007 Chomet Seweryn 1999 Helena A princess reclaimed New York Begell House ISBN 1 56700 145 9 Dennison Matthew 2007 The Last Princess The Devoted Life of Queen Victoria s Youngest Daughter London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 0 297 84794 6 Hawksley Lucinda 2013 The Mystery of Princess Louise Queen Victoria s Rebellious Daughter London Chatto and Windus ISBN 0701183497 Hubbard R H 1977 Rideau Hall Montreal and London McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 0310 6 Lang Cecil Y Shannon Edgar F Jr eds 1987 The Letters of Alfred Lord Tennyson Volume II 1851 1870 Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 52583 3 Longford Elizabeth 1987 Victoria R I Second ed London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 0 297 84142 4 Longford Elizabeth 1991 Darling Loosy Letters to Princess Louise 1856 to 1939 London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 0 297 81179 7 Lutyens Mary 1961 Lady Lytton s Diary London Rupert Hart Davies MacDermot H E 1938 Sir Thomas Roddick His Work in Medicine and Public Life Canada MacMillan Co Retrieved 22 August 2011 Marshall Dorothy 1972 The Life and Times of Victoria London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson OCLC 300168891 Martinez Tori V 2005 Swiss Cottage A Royal Playhouse Time Travel Britain Retrieved 23 August 2011 McDougall D Blake 1988 Princess Louise Caroline Alberta Youth 1848 1878 Edmonton Legislature Library Legislative Assembly of Alberta Retrieved 22 August 2011 McDougall D Blake 1988 Princess Louise Caroline Alberta Later years 1883 1939 Edmonton Legislature Library Legislative Assembly of Alberta Retrieved 22 August 2011 Morgan Henry James ed 1903 Types of Canadian Women and of Women who are or have been Connected with Canada Toronto Williams Briggs Ralph Lewis Brenda 1996 Princess Louise Britannia Internet Magazine Archived from the original on 5 June 2011 Retrieved 2 February 2008 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a work ignored help Reid Micheala 1996 Ask Sir James the life of Sir James Reid personal physician to Queen Victoria London Eland ISBN 978 0 90787 152 1 Sandwell R W 2006 Dreaming of the Princess Love Subversion and the Rituals of Empire in British Columbia 1882 In Coates Colin MacMillan ed Majesty in Canada Essays on the Role of Royalty Toronto Dundurn Press Ltd ISBN 978 1 55002 586 6 Retrieved 22 August 2011 Stocker Mark Louise Princess duchess of Argyll 1848 1939 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 34601 Subscription or UK public library membership required Stocker Mark Boehm Sir Joseph Edgar formerly Josef Erasmus Bohm baronet 1834 1890 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 2762 Subscription or UK public library membership required Queen Victoria of Great Britain 1884 More Leaves from the Journal of a Life in the Highlands from 1862 to 1882 London Smith amp Elder amp Co Retrieved 22 August 2011 Waite P B 1998 Campbell John George Edward Henry Douglas Sutherland Marquess of Lorne and 9th Duke of Argyll In Cook Ramsay Hamelin Jean eds Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol XIV 1911 1920 online ed University of Toronto Press Wake Jehanne 1988 Princess Louise Queen Victoria s unconventional daughter London Collins ISBN 0 00 217076 0 1 artwork by or after Princess Louise Duchess of Argyll at the Art UK siteExternal links editPortraits of Princess Louise Duchess of Argyll at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Princess Louise Duchess of ArgyllHouse of Saxe Coburg and GothaCadet branch of the House of WettinBorn 18 March 1848 Died 3 December 1939Honorary titlesPreceded byThe Countess of Dufferin Viceregal consort of Canada1878 1883 Succeeded byThe Marchioness of Lansdowne Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Princess Louise Duchess of Argyll amp oldid 1206406986, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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