I’ve just read
Lucinda Hawksley’s fascinating biography: ‘The Mystery of Princess Louise:
Queen Victoria’s Rebellious Daughter’. I often pass The
Princess Louise pub going down High Holborn in London and I was intrigued. Who was she, and
why was a pub named after her?
Princess Louise (1848-1939) was Victoria and Albert’s sixth child and fourth
daughter, and arguably, the most popular of the royal progeny. Beautiful,
intelligent and artistic, she was friends with artists, such as Whistler and Gabriel
Rossetti, and the composer Arthur Sullivan.
She was herself a successful sculptor and
her statue of Queen Victoria sits in front of Kensington Palace where the queen had spent her childhood,
and where the princess herself had a sculpture studio. The words H. R. H. Princess Louise sculpt can just
be made out at the base of the statue.
In her
eventful life, she championed various progressive campaigns for women’s rights.
She knew and supported Josephine Butler and Elizabeth Garrett, for example, and
was actively involved with a large number of charitable institutions helping
the poor, including founding the Princess Louise Hospital for Children in North
Kensington, then a poverty-stricken part of London.
When, in 1878, her husband, the Marquess of
Lorne, became Governor General of Canada, Louise supported progressive
initiatives there, too.
The public saw her as delightfully unstuffy.
She refused to marry into a German royal family like most of her siblings. Instead,
she insisted that she would marry ‘a Britisher’, a declaration that was viewed
as patriotic as well as romantic when the Franco-Prussian war broke out in 1870
and everything German became deeply unpopular.
When Louise married the handsome Marquess of
Lorne in 1871, the press went wild and portrayed it as a true love match. As
one enthusiastic journalist wrote: ‘A
perfect sympathy of taste in literature and music, and all the elegant
accomplishments of refined life between the young couple, forms the basis of
the ardent attachment which happily exists between them.’
Sadly, this was so much hooey. Evidence here
is circumstantial but it seems likely that Lorne’s sexuality was directed
towards his own sex. There were no children and, in later life, the couple
lived largely apart.
Officially, though, the couple were happily
in love. I myself have a 19th century screen with portraits of
Princess Louise and her handsome husband (now sadly damaged), which the
screen’s original owner chose to stick
on.
So why did Louise marry the marquess?
Intriguingly, much of her private life is shrouded in mystery. Rumours have
abounded since the 1860s about her having had a hidden illegitimate child, and
her possible long-term sexual relationship with the sculptor Joseph Boehm. The
Royal Archives’ Princess Louise’s files are closed, as are those in her
husband’s castle of Inveraray. As Lucinda Hawksley’s biography puts
it, ‘The decision to hide away (Louise’s) files indicates very strongly that there is
something in them that the
archivists, even in the twenty-first century, feel the need to conceal.’
This seems to me a huge pity. Louise did not
have an easy life – none of Victoria’s daughters did - but she was obviously
a woman of considerable strength of character as well as being artistically
talented and one who fought hard for her chosen causes. We are living in the 21st
century and, in my view, allowing Princess Louise’s life to be properly studied
would enhance her reputation as a remarkable woman.
Elizabeth
Hawksley
3 comments:
Totally agree, Elizabeth, it would be fascinating to know the real story. Thanks for posting this really interesting post
Thank you for your comment, Melinda/Sarah. Whatever Princess Louise may or may not have got up to in her private life, it's hardly likely to shock or horrify anyone now, in 2014!
I thoroughly enjoyed this intriguing post, Elizabeth.
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