May 21, 2013

KING GEORGE IV, LADY CONYNGHAM, AND THE ROYAL SILVER GILT

Filed under: King George IV / The Prince Regent — tmooresr @ 8:53 am

King George IV collected the finest silver gilt service in the Royal Collection.  He entertained on a lavish scale, and he enjoyed the most magnificent dining tables for his entertainment.  When he died, to show his gratitude, he left the entire silver gilt collection in the Royal Collection to his last mistress, Lady Conyngham.  In an amazing gesture, she refused the gift, and the silver gilt was returned to Windsor Castle.  This great gesture created good will with William IV and Queen Victoria who chose Lady Conyngham’s granddaughter for one of her ladies-in-waiting.  The second Marquess Conynham was one of the two men (the second was the Archbishop of Canterbury) who announced the death of William IV and came to the new Queen at Kensington Palace to announce her ascension.Screen Shot 2013-05-21 at 5.05.26 AM

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Thomas Moore   email:  TMooreSr@me.com    Telephone:  801.791.9918

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May 12, 2013

SUNDAY MOTHER’S DAY: LONDON IN ALL ITS GLORY

Filed under: King George IV / The Prince Regent — tmooresr @ 3:04 pm

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Thomas Moore   email:  TMooreSr@me.com    Telephone:  801.791.9918

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April 3, 2013

CARLTON HOUSE: GEORGE IV’s GOLD DRAWING ROOM — The furniture in Carlton House formed the basis of Buckingham Palace’s furnishings

Filed under: King George IV / The Prince Regent — tmooresr @ 11:16 am

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Thomas Moore   email:  TMooreSr@me.com    Telephone:  801.791.9918

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March 11, 2013

GOOD MORNING, LONDON: GEORGE lV’s GREAT DINING ROOM AT BRIGHTON PAVILION

Filed under: King George IV / The Prince Regent — tmooresr @ 6:20 am

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Thomas Moore   email:  TMooreSr@me.com    Telephone:  801.791.9918

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November 6, 2012

GOOD MORNING, LONDON: KING GEORGE IV VISITS SCOTLAND AND STAYS IN HOLYROOD PALACE~~MAGIC IMAGES

Filed under: King George IV / The Prince Regent,Scotland — tmooresr @ 9:07 am

Thomas Moore   email:  TMooreSr@me.com    Telephone:  801.791.9918

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November 1, 2012

THE ROYAL PAVILION / THE BRIGHTON PAVILION ~~ THE EXOTIC AND FLAMBOYANT TASTE OF THE PRINCE REGENT / KING GEORGE IV~~ THE PERFECT DAY OUT OF LONDON!

Filed under: Day trips from London,King George IV / The Prince Regent — tmooresr @ 3:51 am

The perfect day trip out of London is a visit to the ROYAL PAVILION at Brighton.  A visit to the Pavilion is one of the most amazing experiences;  you have never seen any place like it.  When one realizes that one King, even when Prince Regent, was responsible for the majority of the finest items in the Royal Collection, for Buckingham Palace as we know it today (except for the facade), and for the Royal Pavilion, we understand the hatred for the personage of the King for his excesses by the government and by the society of his day.  But for us, the Prince Regent’s unending collections of the most exquisite art, architecture, and furnishings have brought immense pleasure.  Excesses?  I suppose so.  Exoticism?  Certainly!  Extravagant?  Indeed!  Perfect for a visitor to Britain?  YES, SIR.  The Royal Pavilion at Brighton was a work in progress from a modest house designed for the Prince Regent by Henry Holland from 1787 and enlarged beyond belief by Nash between 1815 and 1822–the same time Nash was rebuilding Buckingham House.  The Indo-Saraconic style of the exterior is a wonderful contrast to the chinoiserie of the interior.  I love all the lanterns, the exquisite black lacquer furniture, the fabulous gilt silver services, the Japan pattern dinner services, the fabulous chandeliers,  the dragons, the fabrics, and Chinese porcelain figures and pagodas.  I love the exotic interior and exterior which cause one to stand silent more than once while wandering through the incredible Pavilion.  By time the King died in 1830, he had nearly bankrupted the treasury and made an enemy of the nation and the government.  But for us, what a treasure!  William IV used the Pavilion for his eight-year reign, but in a much more domestic manner.  Queen Victoria inherited the Pavilion upon becoming Queen, but sold it to the city of Brighton for 50,000 pounds because she could not find any privacy , and she could not identify with the lavishness of the interiors.  The funds were used toward the building of Osborne House on the Isle of Wight.  The furnishings were largely removed and put into storage by Queen Victoria, later to be used by Queen Mary who decorated several rooms in Buckingham Palace in the chinoiserie style.  However, the vast collection which went into storage was far greater than could be used by Queen Mary;  in 1952 the current Queen sent more than 100 pieces of furniture which were in storage back to the Royal Pavilion on permanent loan.  Visitors to the Pavilion today will appreciate the Queen’s permanent loan to the Pavilion because the rooms have a stunning impression of what they must have looked like during the days of  King George IV.  A day trip from London?  ABSOLUTELY

Thomas Moore   email:  TMooreSr@me.com    Telephone:  801.791.9918

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October 3, 2012

HELEN MIRREN: “THE MADNESS OF KING GEORGE III”

Ten years ago, I watched THE MADNESS OF KING GEORGE III.  I knew the history of this King, and I admired many of his contributions in many fields such as science, art, agriculture, education, porcelain, etc..  He loved his herds of sheep as I do!   The last years of the King’s life were a great tragedy;  Helen Mirren plays the part of Queen Charlotte who by the end of her life had become weakened by numerous births, the King’s several mental illnesses, and by the difficulty of the Prince of Wales’s  manipulations to establish a regency.  Parts of the movie are hard to watch as the King was subject to severe treatments which seem barbaric in our age, but I enjoyed the movie very much.  And, I really admired the work of Helen Mirren in this production.  She is soon to produce a second movie about the current Queen;  I believe it is a fictional movie about  Queen Elizbeth II’s relationship with her various prime ministers.  I hope she has punched a few of them in her history–particularly Blair and Brown! Anyway, on we go….  That should be very interesting.  These are a few images from THE MADNESS OF KING GEORGE III:

Thomas Moore   email:  TMooreSr@me.com    Telephone:  801.791.9918

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June 20, 2012

THE CONYNGHAM FAMILY AND THEIR RELATIONSHIP TO GEORGE IV AND QUEEN VICTORIA ***A fascinating story***

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This is the image we all know of Queen Victoria hearing that she had become Queen upon the death of her uncle, King William IV.  But there is a story here which is not very well known, but immensely interesting.  The two individuals who came to Kensington Palace to tell Princess Victoria of her ascension were the Archbishop of Canterbury William Howley AND the Lord Chamberlain General Francis Nathaniel Conyngham 2nd Marquess of Conyngham.  The Marquess was the first person in the Realm to call her YOUR MAJESTY and QUEEN.  Who was this man, and how is it that he had such seniority to be able to take these important and impressive steps?!  The 2nd Marquess of Conyngham was the son of Elizabeth Marchioness of Conyngham, the last mistress of King George IV.  The Conynghams were of no significant importance in London society until Lady Conyngham quickly ascended the social scale to the highest connections, great wealth, exquisite Regency taste which she shared with the King, and the King’s bed.  She had been the King’s mistress long before he had become King, and she stayed with the King until he died.  The Royal Family greatly appreciated this highly cultured lady because she was the only person who could control the King’s difficult personality.  There is no question that she was socially ambitious for her family (husband and children), but in the end she truly cared for the dying King.  During his excessive gestures to her, he offered her jewels and the entire silver gilt in the Royal Family’s collection in payment for her devotion.  But, when the King died, she left the lavish gifts the King had given her, vacated her rooms at Windsor Castle, and moved to Paris in order not to complicate the beginning of the reign of William IV.  She lived to be 92, and died  in England in 1861 — highly regarded and appreciated by the Royal Family for her care of the King and for her personal behavior concerning important items in the Royal Collection.  Her son the 2nd Marquess rose to important levels within the court circles, and it is this man who was given the title of LORD CHAMBERLAIN and also given the honor of pronouncing Princess Victoria “QUEEN.”  The 2nd Marquess’s daughter Jane Churchill became one of Queen Victoria’s closest friends and Lady of the Bedchamber.  So, that is the story of a family who learned to behave and reached the highest court levels.  An Amazing story.  So, when I see this picture of the ascension of Queen Victoria, I remind myself of the story of Elizabeth Marchioness of Conyngham, the King’s faithful mistress.  (Interesting to note that Lady Conyngham’s granddaughter married George Finch Hatton, father of Denys George Finch Hatton of OUT OF AFRICA fame.)  On and on the famous lives of her many descendants go even to Royal Circles today.


Thomas Moore   email:  TMooreSr@me.com    Telephone:  801.791.9918

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