Mary of Teck

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Mary of Teck
Queen Consort of the British Empire (more...)
Photographic Portrait by Lafayette of Bond Street
Photographic Portrait by Lafayette of Bond Street
Consort 6 May 191020 January 1936
Coronation 22 June 1911
Consort to George V
Issue
Edward VIII
George VI
Mary, Princess Royal
Henry, Duke of Gloucester
George, Duke of Kent
Prince John
Full name
Victoria Mary Augusta Louise Olga Pauline Claudine Agnes
Titles
HM Queen Mary
HM The Queen
HRH The Princess of Wales
HRH The Duchess of Cornwall and York
HRH The Duchess of York
HSH Princess Victoria Mary of Teck
Royal house House of Windsor
House of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha
House of Württemberg
Father Prince Francis of Teck
Mother Princess Mary Adelaide, Princess of Teck
Born 26 May 1867
Kensington Palace, London
Baptised 27 July 1867
Kensington Palace, London
Died 24 March 1953
Marlborough House, London
Burial 31 March 1953
St George's Chapel, Windsor

Mary of Teck (Victoria Mary Augusta Louise Olga Pauline Claudine Agnes; 26 May 186724 March 1953) was the Queen Consort of George V. Queen Mary was also the Empress of India. Before her accession, she was successively Duchess of York, Duchess of Cornwall and Princess of Wales. In her own right she held the title of a Princess of Teck in the Kingdom of Württemberg with the style Her Serene Highness. To her family, she was informally known as May, after her birth month.

Six weeks after her engagement to Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence, the heir to the British throne, he unexpectedly died of pneumonia. The following year she became engaged to the new heir, Albert Victor's brother, George. As his Queen Consort from 1910, she supported her husband through World War I, his ill-health, and major political changes arising from the aftermath of the war and the rise of socialism and nationalism. After George's death in 1936, her elder son Edward became King-Emperor, but much to her dismay he abdicated the same year in order to marry the twice-divorced American socialite Mrs. Wallis Simpson. She supported her second son, Albert, who succeeded to the throne as George VI, until his death in 1952. She died the following year.

During her time, Queen Mary was known for setting the tone of the British Royal Family, as a model of regal formality and propriety, especially during state occasions. She was the first Queen Consort to attend the coronation of her successors. Known for superbly bejewelling herself for formal events, Queen Mary left a collection of jewels now considered priceless.

Contents

[edit] Early life

Princess Victoria Mary, "May", of Teck was born on 26 May 1867, at Kensington Palace, London. Her father was Prince Francis, Duke of Teck, the son of Duke Alexander of Württemberg by his morganatic wife, Countess Claudine Rhédey von Kis-Rhéde (created Countess von Hohenstein in the Austrian Empire). Her mother was Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge, the third child and the younger daughter of Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge and Princess Augusta of Hesse-Kassel. She was baptised in the Chapel Royal of Kensington Palace on 27 July 1867 by Charles Thomas Longley, Archbishop of Canterbury, and her godparents were Queen Victoria, the Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII, and May's father-in-law), and the Duchess of Cambridge.[1]

She was the eldest of four children, the only girl, and "learned to exercise her native discretion, firmness and tact" by resolving her three younger brothers' petty boyhood squabbles.[2] They played with their cousins, the children of the Prince of Wales, who were similar ages to themselves.[3] May was educated at home by her mother and governess (as were her brothers until they were sent to boarding schools).[4] Her upbringing was "merry but fairly strict";[5] the Duchess of Teck spent an unusually long time with her children for a lady of her time and class,[5] and enlisted May into various charitable endeavours, which included visiting the tenements of the poor.[6]

Although her mother was a grandchild of George III, May was only a minor member of the British Royal Family. Her father, the Duke of Teck, had no inheritance or wealth, and carried the lower royal style of Serene Highness because his parents' marriage was morganatic.[7] However, the Duchess of Teck was granted a Parliamentary Annuity of £5,000 – in addition, she received about £4,000 a year from her mother, the Duchess of Cambridge.[8] Despite this, the family was deeply in debt and lived abroad from 1883, in order to economise.[9] The Tecks travelled throughout Europe, visiting their various relatives and staying in Florence, Italy, for a time. There, May enjoyed visiting the art galleries, churches, and museums.[10]

In 1885, the Tecks returned to London, and were given use of White Lodge, in Richmond Park, as a residence. May was close to her mother, and acted as an unofficial secretary, helping to organise parties and social events. She was also close to her aunt, the Grand Duchess of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (née Princess Augusta of Cambridge), and wrote to her every week. During World War I, the Crown Princess of Sweden even helped pass letters from May to her aunt, who lived in enemy territory in Germany, until Augusta's death in 1916.[11]

[edit] Engagements

Princess Victoria Mary of Teck shortly before her marriage to the Duke of York in 1893.
Princess Victoria Mary of Teck shortly before her marriage to the Duke of York in 1893.

In December 1891, May was engaged to her second cousin, once-removed, Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence and Avondale, the eldest son of the Prince of Wales.[12] May was chosen as a bride for the Duke, due mainly to Queen Victoria's fondness of her, as well as her strong, sensible character and sense of duty. However, the Duke of Clarence and Avondale died six weeks later, in the worldwide influenza pandemic which swept over Britain in the winter of 1891-2.[13]

Despite this setback, the Queen still favoured May as a suitable candidate to marry a future King, and Albert Victor's brother, Prince George, Duke of York, now heir to the throne, evidently became close to May during their shared period of mourning.[14] In May 1893, George duly proposed, and May accepted. Their marriage was a success, May and George were soon deeply in love. George never took a mistress (unlike his father), and he wrote to May every day whenever they were apart.[15]

[edit] Duchess of York

May married Prince George, Duke of York on 6 July 1893, at the Chapel Royal, St. James's Palace, in London. The new Duke and Duchess of York lived in York Cottage, a small house on the Sandringham Estate in Norfolk. They also had apartments in St. James's Palace, London. York Cottage was a modest house for royalty, but was a favourite of George's, who liked a relatively simple life.[16] There they were joined by their six children: Edward, Albert, Mary, Henry, George, and John.

The Duchess was devoted to her children, but put them in the care of a nanny, as was usual for upper-class families at the time. The first nanny was dismissed for insolence, and the second nanny was found to be abusing the children. She would pinch Edward before he was presented to the Duke and Duchess, deliberately making him cry, in order to ensure that he would be returned to her speedily. She too was dismissed, to be replaced by her effective, and much-loved, assistant, Mrs. Bill.[17]

History remembers Queen Mary as perhaps a distant mother. She, at first, failed to notice the nanny's abuse of the young Princes Edward and Albert,[18] and her youngest son Prince John was kept away on the Sandringham Estate, in the care of Mrs. Bill, so the public would not see his epilepsy. However, despite her austere public image, and her strait-laced private life, Mary was a caring mother in many respects, revealing a fun-loving and frivolous side to her children, and teaching them history and music. Edward, in his memoirs, wrote with fondness of Mary as a mother: "Her soft voice, her cultivated mind, the cosy room overflowing with personal treasures were all inseparable ingredients of the happiness associated with this last hour of a child's day…Such was my mother's pride in her children that everything that happened to each one was of the utmost importance to her. With the birth of each new child, Mama started an album in which she painstakingly recorded each progressive stage of our childhood".[19] However, views expressed in private letters to his wife after his mother's death were less charitable: "My sadness was mixed with incredulity that any mother could have been so hard and cruel towards her eldest son for so many years and yet so demanding at the end without relenting a scrap. I'm afraid the fluids in her veins have always been as icy cold as they are now in death."[20]

Princess Victoria Mary, The Duchess of Cornwall and York, Ottawa, 1901
Princess Victoria Mary, The Duchess of Cornwall and York, Ottawa, 1901

As Duke and Duchess of York, George and May carried out a variety of public duties. In 1897, she became the Patron of the London Needlework Guild in succession to her mother. The Guild, initially established as The London Guild in 1882, was renamed several times, eventually taking the name of its Patron in 1914.[21] On 22 January 1901, Queen Victoria died, and the Duchess of York's father-in-law, Albert Edward, ascended the throne as Edward VII. For most of the rest of that year, George and May were styled TRH The Duke and Duchess of Cornwall and York. For eight months they toured the British Empire, visiting Gibraltar, Malta, Egypt, Ceylon, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand, Mauritius, South Africa and Canada. No royal had ever undertaken such an ambitious tour before. The Duchess broke down in tears at the thought of leaving her children (they were to be left in the care of their grandparents) for such a lengthy period of time.[22] In May 1901, representing King Edward VII, they opened the first session of the Australian Parliament in Melbourne, shortly after the Commonwealth of Australia came into being on 1 January 1901.

[edit] Princess of Wales

On 9 November 1901, nine days after arriving back in Britain and on the King's sixtieth birthday, George was created Prince of Wales. They and their family moved their London residence from St James's Palace to Marlborough House. As Princess of Wales, May accompanied her husband on trips to Austria-Hungary and Württemberg in 1904. The following year she gave birth to her last child, John. It was a difficult labour, and although she recovered quickly, her newborn son suffered respiratory problems.[23]

From October 1905 the Prince and Princess of Wales undertook another eight month tour, this time of India, and the children were once again left in the care of their grandparents.[24] They passed through Egypt both ways and on the way back stopped in Greece. The tour was almost immediately followed by a trip to Spain for the marriage of King Alfonso XIII to Victoria Eugenie of Battenberg, at which the bride and groom narrowly avoided assassination.[25] Again, only a week after returning to Britain, they went to Norway for the coronation of King Haakon VII and Queen Maud (George's sister).

[edit] Queen consort

King George V and Queen Mary
King George V and Queen Mary

On 6 May 1910, Edward VII died, and the Prince of Wales ascended the throne as George V. Thus, May became Queen Consort of the United Kingdom. Her husband, the King, asked her to drop one of her two official names, Victoria Mary. As she thought she should not be "Victoria", because she did not wish to take the name of her husband's grandmother, Queen Victoria, she chose instead to be called "Mary" from then on.[26] Queen Mary was crowned with the King on 22 June 1911 at Westminster Abbey. Later in the year, they travelled to India, for the Delhi Durbar that was held on 12 December 1911. The King and Queen toured the sub-continent visiting their new subjects as Emperor and Empress of India, returning to Britain in February.[27] Both Queen Mary College, Lahore, Pakistan, and Queen Mary's School, New Delhi, India, were established after her India visit.

The beginning of Mary's reign as consort saw her come into conflict with the Dowager Queen Alexandra. Although the two queens were on fairly friendly terms, Alexandra could be stubborn. She demanded precedence over Mary at the funeral of Edward VII, was slow in leaving Buckingham Palace, and kept some of the royal jewels that should have been passed to the new queen.[28]

During World War I Queen Mary instituted an austerity drive at Buckingham Palace, rationing food, and visited the hospitalized servicemen, who were wounded and often dying, which she found to be a great emotional strain.[29] After three years of war with Germany, anti-German feeling among the public in Britain was high; the Russian Imperial Family, which had been deposed by a revolutionary government, was refused asylum, possibly partly because the Tsar's wife was German-born.[30] News of the Tsar's abdication provided a boost to those in Britain who wished to replace the monarchy with a republic.[31] After republicans used the King and Queen's German heritage as an argument for reform, the King abandoned his German titles, and renamed the Royal House from the German "Saxe-Coburg-Gotha" to the British "Windsor". The Queen's relatives also abandoned their German titles, and adopted the English surname of Cambridge. In 1918 the war ended with the defeat of Germany and the abdication and exile of the Kaiser.

Teck-Cambridge Family

Francis, Duke of Teck
Children
   Mary of Teck
   Adolphus, Marquess of Cambridge
   Prince Francis of Teck
   Alexander, Earl of Athlone
Adolphus, Marquess of Cambridge
Children
   George, Marquess of Cambridge
   Mary Somerset, Duchess of Beaufort
   Lady Helena Gibbs
   Lord Frederick Cambridge
Grandchildren
   Lady Mary Whitley
Alexander, Earl of Athlone
Children
   Lady May Abel Smith
   Rupert Cambridge, Viscount Trematon
   Maurice of Teck

Two months after the end of the war, Queen Mary's youngest son died aged just thirteen. She described her shock and sorrow in her diary and letters, extracts of which were published after her death: "our poor darling little Johnnie had passed away suddenly…The first break in the family circle is hard to bear but people have been so kind & sympathetic & this has helped us [her and the King] much."[32]

Queen Mary's staunch support of her husband continued during the latter half of his reign. She advised him on speeches, and used her extensive knowledge of history and royalty to advise him on certain matters affecting his position. He appreciated her discretion, intelligence and judgement.[33] She retained an imperturbable self-assuredness throughout all her public engagements in the years after the war. Years which saw an increase in civil unrest over social conditions, Irish independence and Indian nationalism.[34]

In the late 1920s, King George became increasingly ill. Queen Mary paid particular attention to his care. During his illness in 1928, one of his doctors, Sir Farquhar Buzzard, was asked who had saved the King's life. He replied, "The Queen".[35] In 1935, King George V and Queen Mary celebrated their Silver Jubilee, with celebrations taking place throughout the British Empire. In his jubilee speech, King George paid public tribute to his wife, telling his speech-writer, "Put that paragraph at the very end. I cannot trust myself to speak of the Queen when I think of all I owe her."[36]

[edit] Dowager Queen

Queen Mary with her grand-daughters Margaret (front) and future Queen Elizabeth II
Queen Mary with her grand-daughters Margaret (front) and future Queen Elizabeth II

The King died on 20 January 1936, after his physician, the future Baron Dawson of Penn, gave him an injection of morphine and cocaine which may have hastened his death.[37] Queen Mary's eldest son, Prince Edward, Prince of Wales, ascended the throne as Edward VIII. She was now Queen Mother (see English Queen Mothers), though she did not use that title and was instead known as Her Majesty Queen Mary.

Within the year, the new King caused a constitutional crisis by announcing his desire to marry his twice-divorced American mistress, Mrs. Wallis Simpson. Queen Mary disapproved of divorce, which was against the teaching of the Anglican Church, and thought that Mrs. Simpson was wholly unsuitable as the wife of a King. After receiving advice from the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Stanley Baldwin, as well as the Dominion governments, that he could not remain King and marry Mrs. Simpson, Edward abdicated. Though loyal and supportive of her son, Queen Mary could not comprehend why Edward, in her view, would neglect his duty as King in favour of his personal feelings.[38] Although Mrs. Simpson had been presented formally to both King George V and Queen Mary at court,[39] Queen Mary later refused to meet her either in public or privately.[40] Queen Mary saw it as her duty to provide moral support for her second son, the reserved and stammering Prince Albert, Duke of York, who ascended the throne in Edward's place as King George VI. She even attended the new King and Queen's coronation, the first dowager queen ever to do so.[41] Although she never wavered in her disapproval of what she perceived as his damage to the Crown, as a mother her love for him as her son remained unaffected.[15][42]

Queen Mary took an interest in the upbringing of her granddaughters, Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret Rose, taking them on various excursions about London, to art galleries and museums. (The Princesses' own parents thought it unnecessary for them to be taxed with any demanding educational regime.)[43]

During World War II, George VI wished his mother to be evacuated from London. Although she was reluctant, she decided to live at Badminton House with her niece, Mary Somerset, Duchess of Beaufort, the daughter of her brother Adolphus, Lord Cambridge.[44] Her personal belongings were transported from London in seventy pieces of luggage. Her household, which comprised fifty-five servants, occupied most of the house, except for the Duke and Duchess's private suites, for the next seven years. The only people to complain about the arrangements were the royal servants, who found the house too small.[45] It was here that Queen Mary supported the war effort by visiting troops and factories, and helping to gather scrap materials. She was known to offer lifts to soldiers she spotted on the roads, and caused her niece some annoyance by having the ancient ivy torn from the walls of Badminton House. Queen Mary considered it a hazard, as well as unattractive.[46] In 1942 her youngest surviving son, George, Duke of Kent, was killed in an air crash while on active service. Queen Mary finally returned to Marlborough House in June 1945, after the war in Europe had resulted in the defeat of Nazi Germany.

Queen Mary was an eager collector of objects and pictures with a Royal connection.[47] She paid above-market estimates when purchasing jewels from the estate of Dowager Empress Marie Feodorovna[48] and paid almost three times the estimate when buying the family's Cambridge Emeralds from Lady Kilmurry, mistress of her late brother Prince Francis.[49] Queen Mary's Dolls' House was created for her collection of miniature pieces, in 1924, by the famous architect, Sir Edwin Lutyens.[50] Indeed, she has sometimes been criticised for her aggressive acquisition of objets d'art for the Royal Collection. On several occasions, she would express to hosts, or others, that she admired something they had in their possession, in the expectation that the owner would be willing to donate it.[51] Her extensive knowledge of, and research into, the Royal Collection helped in identifying artifacts and artwork that had gone astray over the years.[52] The Royal Family had loaned out many such objects, to British friends over previous generations, which had not been returned. Once she had identified missing items through old inventories, she would write to the holders to request them back.[53]

In 1952, King George VI died. He was the third of Queen Mary's children to predecease her. Her eldest granddaughter, Princess Elizabeth, ascended the throne. Queen Mary died the next year of lung cancer (referred to publicly as "gastric problems"[54]) at the age of 85, without seeing Elizabeth II's coronation. She let it be known that, in the event of her death, the coronation was not to be postponed. Her remains lay in state at Westminster Hall, where large numbers of mourners filed past her coffin. She is buried in the nave of St. George's Chapel, Windsor, beside her husband.[55]

[edit] Legacy

Sir Henry "Chips" Channon wrote that she was "above politics…magnificent, humorous, worldly, in fact nearly sublime, though cold and hard. But what a grand Queen."[56]

The ocean liners RMS Queen Mary and Queen Mary 2;[57] the Royal Navy Battlecruiser, HMS Queen Mary, which was blown up by fire from the German Battlecruiser SMS Seydlitz at the Battle of Jutland in 1916; Queen Mary College, University of London;[58] Queen Mary Hospital, Hong Kong; Queen Mary's Peak, the highest mountain in Tristan da Cunha; and Queen Mary Land in Antarctica are named in her honour.

Queen Mary has been portrayed by a multitude of distinguished British actresses on stage and screen, including Dame Wendy Hiller,[59] Dame Peggy Ashcroft, Dame Eileen Atkins, and Miranda Richardson.[60]

[edit] Titles, styles, honours and arms

[edit] Titles

[edit] Honours

[edit] Honorary military appointments

  • 1913: Chief, Husaren-Regiment Fürst Blücher von Wahlstatt
  • 1914-1922: Colonel-in-Chief, the 18th Royal Hussars (Queen Mary's Own)
  • 1920-1922: Colonel-in-Chief, the Queen's Own Oxfordshire Hussars
  • 1922: Colonel-in-Chief, the 13/18th Royal Hussars (Queen Mary's Own)
  • 1922-1939: Colonel-in-Chief, the 100th (Worcestershire and Oxfordshire Yeomanry) Brigade, RFA (TA)
  • 1926-1949: President, Queen Alexandra's Imperial Military Nursing Service
  • 1928: Colonel-in-Chief, The Queen's Own Rifles of Canada
  • 1937: Colonel-in-Chief, the Queen's Royal Regiment (West Surrey)
  • 1939-1942: Colonel-in-Chief, the 63rd (Worcestershire and Oxfordshire Yeomanry) Anti-Tank Regiment, RA (TA)
  • 1942-1950: Colonel-in-Chief, the 387th Field Regiment (Queen's Own Oxford Hussars) (TA)
  • 1942-1953: Colonel-in-Chief, Royal Army Medical Corps
  • 1949-1953: Colonel-in-Chief, Queen Alexandra's Royal Army Nursing Corps
  • 1950-1953: Colonel-in-Chief, the 299th (Royal Buckinghamshire Yeomanry and Queen's Own Oxford Hussars) Field Regiment, RA (TA)[61]

[edit] Arms

The Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom are impaled with her family arms - 1st and 4th quarters, the arms of her grandfather, HRH Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge; 2nd and 3rd quarters, the arms of her father, HH The Duke of Teck.[62]

[edit] Ancestry

Mary of Teck's ancestors in three generations
Mary of Teck Father:
Francis, Duke of Teck
Paternal Grandfather:
Duke Alexander of Württemberg
Paternal Great-grandfather:
Duke Louis of Württemberg
Paternal Great-grandmother:
Henriette of Nassau-Weilburg
Paternal Grandmother:
Claudine Rhédey von Kis-Rhéde
Paternal Great-grandfather:
Count Rhédy von Kis-Rhéde
Paternal Great-grandmother:
Baroness Ágnes Inczédy von Nagy-Várad
Mother:
Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge
Maternal Grandfather:
Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge
Maternal Great-grandfather:
George III of the United Kingdom
Maternal Great-grandmother:
Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz
Maternal Grandmother:
Princess Augusta, Duchess of Cambridge
Maternal Great-grandfather:
Prince Frederick of Hesse
Maternal Great-grandmother:
Princess Caroline Polyxene of Nassau-Usingen

[edit] Issue

Name Birth Death Notes[63]
Edward VIII 23 June 1894 28 May 1972 later Duke of Windsor; married, 1937, Wallis Simpson; no issue.
George VI 14 December 1895 6 February 1952 married, 1923, Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon; had issue, including Elizabeth II
Mary, Princess Royal 25 April 1897 28 March 1965 married, 1922, Henry Lascelles, 6th Earl of Harewood; had issue.
Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester 31 March 1900 10 June 1974 married, 1935, Lady Alice Montagu-Douglas-Scott; had issue.
Prince George, Duke of Kent 20 December 1902 25 August 1942 married, 1934, Princess Marina of Greece and Denmark; had issue.
Prince John 12 July 1905 18 January 1919 Suffered from epilepsy

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes and sources

  1. ^ The Times (London), Monday, 29 July 1867 p.12 col.E
  2. ^ Pope-Hennessy, James (1959). Queen Mary. London: George Allen and Unwin Ltd., p.45. 
  3. ^ Pope-Hennessy, p.55
  4. ^ Pope-Hennessey, pp.68,76,123
  5. ^ a b Pope-Hennessey, p.66
  6. ^ Pope-Hennessy, p.68
  7. ^ Pope-Hennessy, pp.36-37
  8. ^ Pope-Hennessy, p.114
  9. ^ Pope-Hennessy, p.112
  10. ^ Pope-Hennessy, p.133
  11. ^ Pope-Hennessy, pp.503-505
  12. ^ May's maternal grandfather, Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge, was a brother of Prince Edward Augustus, Duke of Kent, who was the father of Queen Victoria, Albert Victor's paternal grandmother.
  13. ^ Pope-Hennessy, p.201
  14. ^ Edwards, Anne (1984). Matriarch: Queen Mary and the House of Windsor. Hodder and Stoughton, p.61. ISBN 0340244658. 
  15. ^ a b Prochaska, Frank (Sept 2004; online edn, May 2006), "Mary (1867–1953)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, DOI:10.1093/ref:odnb/34914. Retrieved on 2007-04-17
  16. ^ Pope-Hennessy, p.291
  17. ^ Wheeler-Bennett, Sir John (1958). King George VI. London: Macmillan, pp.16-17. 
  18. ^ Pope-Hennessy, p.393
  19. ^ Windsor, HRH The Duke of (1951). A King's Story. London: Cassell and Co, pp.24-25. 
  20. ^ Ziegler, Philip (1990). King Edward VIII. London: Collins, p.538. 
  21. ^ Queen Mary's Clothing Guild official website. Retrieved on 2007-05-30.
  22. ^ Edwards, p.115
  23. ^ Edwards, pp.142-143
  24. ^ Edwards, p.146
  25. ^ The driver of their coach and over a dozen spectators were killed by a bomb thrown by an anarchist, Mateo Morales.
  26. ^ Pope-Hennessy, p.421
  27. ^ Pope-Hennessy, pp.452-463
  28. ^ Edwards, pp.182-193
  29. ^ Edwards, pp.244-245
  30. ^ Edwards, p.258
  31. ^ Edwards, p.262
  32. ^ Pope-Hennessy, p.511
  33. ^ Pope-Hennessy, p.549
  34. ^ Edwards, p.311
  35. ^ Gore, John (1941). King George V: A Personal Memoir. London: John Murray, p.243. 
  36. ^ The Times (London), Wednesday, 25 March 1953 p.5
  37. ^ Watson, Francis (1986), "The Death of George V", History Today 36: pp.21-30
  38. ^ Airlie, Mabell (1962). Thatched with Gold. London: Hutchinson, p.200. 
  39. ^ HRH The Duke of Windsor, p.255
  40. ^ HRH The Duke of Windsor, p.334
  41. ^ Pope-Hennessy, p.584
  42. ^ Edwards, p.401 and Pope-Hennessy, p.575
  43. ^ Edwards, p.349
  44. ^ Pope-Hennessy, p.596
  45. ^ Mosley, Charles (ed.) (2003). "Duke of Beaufort, 'Seat' section", Burke's Peerage & Gentry, 107th edition, vol.I p.308. 
  46. ^ Pope-Hennessy, p.600
  47. ^ Pope-Hennessy, p.412
  48. ^ Clarke, William (1995). The Lost Fortune Of The Tsars. 
  49. ^ Thomson, Mark. Document - A Right Royal Affair [Radio]. BBC Radio 4.
    See also Kilmurry Papers, Public Record Office of Northern Ireland.
  50. ^ Pope-Hennessy, pp.531-534
  51. ^ Rose, Kenneth (1983). King George V. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, p.284. 
  52. ^ Pope-Hennessy, p.414
  53. ^ The Duke of Windsor, p.238
  54. ^ The Times (London), Wednesday, 25 March 1953 p.8
  55. ^ Royal Burials. St. George's Chapel, Windsor Castle. Retrieved on 2007-06-01.
  56. ^ Channon, Sir Henry; Edited by Robert Rhodes James (1967). Chips: The Diaries of Sir Henry Channon. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, p.473. 
  57. ^ Technically, the QMII was named after the original ocean liner, and is only indirectly named after the Queen
  58. ^ Moss, G. P.; Saville, M. V. (1985). From Palace to College - An illustrated account of Queen Mary College. University of London, pp.57-62. ISBN 0-902238-06-X. 
  59. ^ Dame Wendy Hiller. The Guardian (16 May 2003). Retrieved on 2007-05-30.
  60. ^ The Internet Movie Database. Internet Movie Database Inc.. Retrieved on 2007-05-30.
  61. ^ Queen Mary. Regiments.Org. Retrieved on 2007-05-30.
  62. ^ Maclagan, Michael; Louda, Jiří (1999). Line of Succession: Heraldry of the Royal Families of Europe. London: Little, Brown & Co, pp.30-31. ISBN 0-85605-469-1. 
  63. ^ Weir, Alison (1995). Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy Revised edition. Random House, pp.323-330. ISBN 0-7126-7448-9. 

[edit] References

  • Airlie, Mabell (1962). Thatched with Gold. London: Hutchinson. 
  • Edwards, Anne (1984). Matriarch: Queen Mary and the House of Windsor. Hodder and Stoughton. ISBN 0340244658. 
  • Gore, John (1941). King George V: A Personal Memoir. London: John Murray. 
  • Pope-Hennessy, James (1959). Queen Mary. London: George Allen and Unwin Ltd.. 
  • Prochaska, Frank (Sept 2004; online edn, May 2006), "Mary (1867–1953)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, DOI:10.1093/ref:odnb/34914. Retrieved on 2007-04-17
  • Rose, Kenneth (1983). King George V. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson. 
  • Wheeler-Bennett, Sir John (1958). King George VI. London: Macmillan. 
  • Windsor, HRH The Duke of (1951). A King's Story. London: Cassell and Co. 
  • Ziegler, Philip (1990). King Edward VIII. London: Collins. 

[edit] External link

Preceded by
Alexandra of Denmark
Royal Consort of the United Kingdom
(Queen consort & Empress of India)
1910-1936
Succeeded by
Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon
Queen Mother
1936-1953
Preceded by
The Prince of Wales
Grand Master of the Order of the British Empire
1936-1953
Succeeded by
The Duke of Edinburgh
Persondata
NAME Mary of Teck
ALTERNATIVE NAMES Princess Victoria Mary of Teck; Queen Mary
SHORT DESCRIPTION Wife of George V of the United Kingdom
DATE OF BIRTH 26 May 1867
PLACE OF BIRTH Kensington Palace, London
DATE OF DEATH 24 March 1953
PLACE OF DEATH Marlborough House, London
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