Royal Navy State Funeral Gun Carriage
The Royal Navy State Funeral Gun Carriage is a converted Ordnance, BL, 12 pdr 6 cwt, MK II, gun carriage which has been used in the UK to bear the coffin at the funeral processions of: Queen Victoria; King Edward VII; King George V; King George VI; Sir Winston Churchill; Admiral of the Fleet The 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma; and Queen Elizabeth II. It is traditionally pulled by members of the Royal Navy; when not in use, it is kept at the shore establishment HMS Excellent.[1][2][3] A smaller version, known as the Portsmouth Gun Carriage, has been used at the ceremonial funerals of several senior naval officers in the 20th century.[4]
Manufacture
[edit]The gun carriage is from a British Army Ordnance, BL, 12 pdr 6 cwt, MK II, gun[2] and weighs 2.5 tonnes (2.8 tons).[5]
The carriage was made by Vickers, Sons and Maxim in 1896 and entered storage at the Royal Arsenal, Woolwich, being recorded as No. 146. The carriage never saw active service, probably being retained as part of a reserve.[6] Queen Victoria had seen a gun carriage used during the funeral of her son, the Duke of Albany, and requested the same for her funeral.[2]
In 1899, No. 146 was handed to the Royal Carriage Department for conversion for use in state funerals. A catafalque and rubber tyres were added but other fittings and fixtures were left unchanged.[2][6]
Victoria's funeral
[edit]The carriage was used during the state funeral of Queen Victoria in 1901.[6] In the days after Victoria's death the carriage was issued to the X Battery of the Royal Horse Artillery (RHA). It was to carry the Queen's coffin from Windsor railway station to Windsor Castle, where it would be interred in the adjacent Royal Mausoleum at Frogmore on 2 February.[6]
According to the Naval Historical Society of Australia there are two accounts of the events that followed. According to a naval observer, Lieutenant Percy Noble, the RHA's horses had not been exercised while awaiting the Royal Train's arrival and were unhappy when the coffin was placed on the carriage. They are said to have reared up and threatened to topple the coffin. Noble stated that Prince Louis of Battenberg asked the Royal Navy party commander, Lieutenant Algernon Boyle, for his sailors to pull the carriage.[6]
The army officer in charge of X Battery at the funeral, Lieutenant M.L. Goldie, stated instead that an eye hole on the carriage splinter bar broke when his horses moved off. Confusion followed as various officers and officials attempted to exert control over the situation that prevented him from carrying out immediate repairs.[7]
The end result was that sailors of the Royal Navy pulled the carriage to Windsor Castle, with a team of sailors using improvised drag ropes, made up from the horse harnesses and the communication cord taken from the royal train.[6] This started a tradition that has been upheld at all subsequent state funerals.[7]
Later history
[edit]After Victoria's funeral, the Royal Navy retained the carriage; they may have refused to return it to the army.[7] The navy was formally given the carriage by George V in 1910. The carriage has since been used at the funerals of Edward VII, George V, George VI, Sir Winston Churchill, Lord Mountbatten, and Elizabeth II. It is stored at the shore establishment HMS Excellent, near Portsmouth. The staff instructors' mess displays the ropes used at the funeral of Edward VII.[7] In storage the carriage is moved slightly every seven days, to allow its wheels to turn by a quarter to prevent them from being deformed. The carriage, including its gun barrel, are regularly polished. The carriage is held at 24-hours readiness for service in a facility kept at a constant temperature of 16–20 °C (61–68 °F) and between 40 and 70% humidity to hinder fungal growth.[5]
Most recently, the gun carriage made its first appearance in 43 years for the funeral procession from Westminster Hall to Westminster Abbey for the state funeral of Queen Elizabeth II on 19 September 2022.[8] It was transported by 138 naval ratings, with 98 pulling, in front of the carriage, and 40 behind, braking,[9] with 4 officers walking alongside the 40 brakers, 4 officers walking alongside the pullers, and 2 further officers leading the 138. After the service at the abbey the carriage was used again, attended by 137 naval ratings (one having fallen ill),[citation needed] to carry the coffin to Constitution Hill where it was transferred to the state hearse for its journey from Wellington Arch to St George's Chapel at Windsor Castle for interment.[10] This occasion marked the first time in history that women of the Royal Navy were part of the gun carriage crew.[11]
Uses
[edit]Date | Funeral |
---|---|
2 February 1901 | State funeral of Queen Victoria |
20 May 1910 | State funeral of King Edward VII |
28 January 1936 | State funeral of King George V |
15 February 1952 | State funeral of King George VI |
30 January 1965 | State funeral of Sir Winston Churchill |
5 September 1979 | Ceremonial funeral of the Earl Mountbatten of Burma |
19 September 2022 | State funeral of Queen Elizabeth II |
Portsmouth Gun Carriage
[edit]A smaller gun carriage, called the Portsmouth Gun Carriage, is stored at HMS Collingwood, a shore establishment at Fareham in Hampshire, and has been used for eight ceremonial funerals of senior naval officers between 1935 and 1967. These include Earl Jellicoe, Earl Beatty, Sir Dudley Pound, and Viscount Cunningham. A plaque on the carriage records that it originally came from HMS Pembroke in Chatham, Kent, and was first used for the funeral of Sir Charles Madden at Westminster Abbey on 7 June 1935.[12] It is a QF 12-pounder 8 cwt gun carriage, usually pulled by a team of 18 ratings.[6]
Gallery
[edit]-
Royal Navy State Funeral Gun Carriage at funeral of Edward VII, 1910
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Funeral procession of Edward VII, London, 1910 (see 2:30 mins)
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Royal Navy State Funeral Gun Carriage at Churchill's funeral, January 1965
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The gun carriage in 2022 at Elizabeth II's funeral
External links
[edit]- Funeral Of Queen Victoria - C (1901). British Pathé. Retrieved 21 October 2022. - newsreel of Queen Victoria's State Funeral showing firstly the horse drawn gun carriage and secondly (from 1:10), the carriage hauled by naval ratings at Windsor railway station.
- Funeral Of Sir Dudley Pound (1943). British Pathé. Retrieved 21 October 2022. - newsreel of the ceremonial funeral of Admiral of the Fleet Sir Dudley Pound, showing the smaller Portsmouth Gun Carriage.
References
[edit]- ^ "HMS Excellent - The State Field Gun Carriage". Memorials and Monuments in Portsmouth. Archived from the original on 19 September 2022. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
- ^ a b c d Kendall, Paul (24 February 2022). Queen Victoria: Her Life and Legacy. Frontline Books. p. 231. ISBN 978-1-3990-1834-0. Archived from the original on 19 September 2022. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
- ^ Range, M. (2016). British Royal and State Funerals: Music and Ceremonial since Elizabeth I. Boydell & Brewer.
- ^ Dykes, Godfrey. "The Portsmouth Gun Carriage". RN Communications Branch Museum/Library. Retrieved 16 February 2023.
- ^ a b Brown, Larisa (15 September 2022). "Victoria's funeral carriage gets its day to shine for the Queen". The Times. Archived from the original on 19 September 2022. Retrieved 15 September 2022.
- ^ a b c d e f g "The State Funeral Gun Carriage - page 1". Naval Historical Society of Australia. 19 March 1981. Archived from the original on 19 September 2022. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
- ^ a b c d "The State Funeral Gun Carriage - Page 2". Naval Historical Society of Australia. 19 March 1981. Archived from the original on 12 September 2022. Retrieved 12 September 2022.
- ^ "Intriguing history of carriage key to Queen's funeral parade". The West Australian. 14 September 2022. Archived from the original on 14 September 2022. Retrieved 14 September 2022.
- ^ "Royal Navy ready for key role at Queen's funeral".
- ^ "The Funeral of Queen Elizabeth II". www.royal.uk. The Royal Household. Retrieved 19 June 2024.
- ^ Lough, Catherine (19 September 2022). "We were picked for our strength, say first female Navy sailors to pull state gun carriage". www.telegraph.co.uk. Telegraph Media Group Ltd. Retrieved 19 June 2024.
- ^ Dykes, Godfrey (28 March 2021). "The Portsmouth Gun Carriage". www.commsmuseum.co.uk. RN Communications Branch Museum.
21 October 2022