Trafalgar Square (2) : Monarchs & Miscellanea

 Now that the monarchy is a colourful but toothless institution, most of us are content to keep it. In days of old, when it played a more pivotal role in Government, the issue of monarch's attitude and aptitude was central to the national story. There are three Kings remembered on Trafalgar Square and merit doesn’t seem to have played a part in their selection.    

Charles 1st 

To the south of Square, marooned by traffic on the little roundabout is Charles 1st an 'S' size man on an 'XXL' horse. Brains are no correlate of wisdom. Charles was not a dope, but was encumbered by a rigid belief in his divine right to be boss and made no pretence to be a man of the people. Many people didn't like autocracy and were similarly averse to his suspected wish to re-introduce Catholic practices into what was then a protestant country. To add the problem, Parliament was developing its own muscle in governance and many members shared those views. 

The grim outcome was the Civil War between Charles' supporters and those who followed Parliament. An estimated 4% of the British English population perished, twice the number who died in World War One. The outcome was a victory for Parliament and the protestant opposition led by Oliver Cromwell. Thereafter, as a renegade or prisoner, Charles proved to be a bad and unrepentant loser so the new government eventually and controversially decided that he had to go. At noon on January 30th 1649 he sank a glass of claret and faced his masked and bewigged executioner. 

In short, he was an inflexible ruler who put his own interests before the country’s and paid the price. But nonetheless his statue can stay. It all happened a long time ago and he is a fixture, like the ancient bigot propping up the end of the pub bar, maybe in the sole London pub named after him, in Kings Cross. The bar has its own take on the politics of the day and I wonder what Charlie would have made of them. 

Sign in the 'Charles 1st' 

His successor was his son, also Charles and  known in his youth as Bonnie Prince Charlie. He went into exile (the 'Skye Boat Song' tells part of the story) until Cromwell’s regime disintegrated, when he was invited back to take the throne as Charles 2ndHe in turn was succeeded by his younger brother James 2nd, who sits on the North West side of the square in a pseudo-Roman get-up topped with a laurel wreath, the adornment of a victorious commander. 

James 2nd

Views on James vary. He seems to have been was a clever, cold, serious oddball, but many believed him to be religiously tolerant up to a point. Others thought that he was just a hypocritical bigot following in his father's autocratic and quasi-Catholic footsteps. I don’t know, I never met him, but in any event he wasn't popular. 

Once again the result was political turbulence and rebellions, which this time ended with the ‘Glorious Revolution’ of 1688 which actually wasn’t glorious and wasn’t a revolution. Rather, it was a Dutch invasion led by the protestant William of Orange and achieved with a lot of inside assistance and a degree of acquiescence from population that must have been fed up with it all. James had done more than his share of soldiering, but having read the tea leaves he fled into exile. So much for the laurel 'victors' wreath he is wearing here!. William took the throne as William 3rd. with a fig leaf of respectability from marriage to James' daughter Mary. 

Here is James in his steel pyjamas. 


Frankly, the whole episode makes the 'Succession' TV series sound uneventful! O
ur low benchmark of monarchical competence suggests that James could have been worse and there is a point in time before which I am happy to let bygones be bygones. So his statue can stay providing his ghost doesn't mind us mocking his clobber. 

The undeserving Stuart kings don't score well in the pubs stakes. There is one in Kings Cross named for Charles 1st but none for James. 

On the much larger Northern plinth, on horseback and dressed in even more laughably pretentious Roman garb, is George 1V who reigned in the early 1800’s.

This was the era of the final defeat of Napoleon, but he played no role in that. Over the preceding century, government had mostly passed from the Monarch to Parliament who sensibly kept this liability away from world affairs. 

George 4th 

Maybe the Palace PR man had a hand in the design of this monument. In reality George was a financially and sexually incontinent, glutinous culture vulture. People hated him for it and in particular for his treatment of his Queen, Caroline of Brunswick, chosen because she was rich, rude, ugly and smelly and thus no threat to his existing secret and illegal marriage or his many other liaisons. She didn’t think much of him either. What a pair they made! There is too much rich stuff to summarise so the tale is told here: George & Caroline


Cruikshank on George & Caroline

In the end, George engineered a controversial divorce and, when he succeeded his Father and donned his diamond encrusted crown, they wouldn’t even let her into the Coronation. By that time he was obese and reportedly hooked on opiates.

Amazingly, he score two pubs, even though he was an unpopular, embarrassing, expensive and dissolute waste of space. If we must have statues of Kings, can we have the good ones, please. He should go. A long way away. 

The empty fourth plinth in the Square was going to hold a statue of William 4th, George’s younger brother who succeeded him and was thankfully nothing like him, but sadly this more deserving man never got it because the funds ran out. So, a few words on the man whose statue should have been here but in fact is in Greenwich. This is what he looked like. 

William was a sailor who saw action, starting as a junior officer and ending up as an Admiral of the Fleet. Appropriately for a naval man in his sailor days, he seems to have found girlfriends more convenient than a wife. By the time he became King and married another fish from the sea of sub-royalty from the German micro-states, he had already begat at least eleven live children. 

Their subsequent begatting led to David Cameron but we shouldn't blame him for that. He had a more modern view of the Monarch's role, saying 'I have my view of things, and I tell them to my ministers. If they do not adopt them, I cannot help it. I have done my duty.' Quite. His legitimate kids all died young, so his successor was his niece Victoria. Perhaps in tribute to his common sense, he scores two pubs, one of which keeps an eye on the rascally ghosts in Kensal Cemetery. 

There are a few other things you might notice around the square and some you won't! 

The most obvious one is the 4th Plinth, which as explained in the second of this series was originally earmarked for William 4th but which after decades of standing empty is now occupied by a rotating cast of modern ‘cutting edge’ sculptures. (Art UK’s words, not mine!) . Some are interesting, some not, others are cartoonish or whimsical. The pic below is the current offering based on a 1914 photo of a Baptist preacher from Malawi. It will soon be replaced so I won’t add in the back story but you can find it here: John Chilembwe

John Chilembwe

If you want to see all the past occupants of this plinth search online for something online. Here is the Wikipedia offering:  Fourth Plinth

Frankly, it splits opinion and I doubt that folk would want to see the idea cloned. So when the powers that be wake up and declare ‘Pootler is right! We need to clear out this imperial reliquary'; there will be another debate on what the replacements should be. Should we ask the public? Maybe not. Think ‘Boaty McBoatface’. And at least in that case, the evidence was to be despatched to the Antarctic. Or leave it to our elected representatives? Certainly not. Think of recent Prime Ministerial honours lists.

To be clear, I have no gripe with the various monuments which honour the military dead and am keenly aware that I wouldn't have been first to volunteer for the trenches. Rather, I am just not so keen on giving the prime position to the blokes that led them to their death but somehow survived themselves. The truth is, I can’t get the image of Stephen Fry’s General Melchett out of my mind and would welcome a balance with people who made a humane contribution to the common weal.

Or maybe move Shakespeare from the ugly heart of London that is Leicester Square? How about Wilberforce who did so much to abolish slavery and is currently remembered by a statue in Hull and at his tomb in Westminster Abbey.   

Wilberforce

Jenner, who introduced vaccines, is now remembered in Kensington Gardens, but was actually in the Square until the military allied with early anti-vaxxers to 'cancel' him. According to a newspaper at the time '...the veterans of the Horse Guards and Admiralty were scandalised at the idea of a mere civilian, a doctor, having a place in such distinguished company, and moreover daring to be seated while his betters were standing”. The medical profession followed Queen Victoria (and Albert) in being unamused, noting that the others remained in the square ‘because they killed their fellow-creatures, whereas he only saved them’. They didn’t let it rest and have petitioned for his return since.  

Jenner

On the monarchical side, why not replace the awful George 4th with Elizabeth 2ndOr Henry 5th, to double down on teasing the French. And do Kings have to be real ones? I wouldn’t mind seeing Arthur there. I do like this spectral image of him from Tintagel. After all, he is the King who will rise again in Britain’s hour of need. Surprisingly he has seen fit to do so yet.  

The Once and Future King? 

One other Royal deserves a mention here. If you stand beside Charles 1st statue on its little island and gaze down the canyon of Government buildings in Whitehall towards Parliament Square, you can see two large backsides on a prime plinth in the middle of the road. One belongs to a horse. The other, less deserving, was owned by Prince George, once the Duke of Cambridge and a peripheral member of the Hannover dynasty. He was Queen Vic's cousin. 

As the Commander in Chief of the Army this old crusty old walrus ran the army for almost forty years, which was a problem because during a period of rapid progress, he regarded any attempt to keep up with the times as an anathema. The result was the disaster that was the Boer War which came at the apogee of Victorian over-confidence and when the weaknesses were laid bare and the largest army Britain had ever assembled until then was embarrassed. 

Prince George

You have to agree that he's dressed to kill and looks the part with great whiskers. He put this to good use in his extracurricular marital activity, as a by-product result he neglected to leave a legitimate heir so the title went into abeyance until it was unearthed for our Current heir to the throne. 

The statue should be consigned to some soulless park in one of the New Towns. I assume that London’s three eponymous pubs were named for him; if you can name a pub the ‘Dog & Duck’ there is no harm in naming it after an anencephalic Walrus but He doesn't seem worth this highest of all honours. 


Some micro-trivia.

The National Gallery’s site above the square is not an artificial architectural conceit. During the ice ages and the warmer periods between them, the Thames followed sea levels by rising and sinking. When it sank, it marooned its old beaches and foreshores as gravel terraces on higher ground. The National Gallery sits on one of those terraces and the Square itself on a later and lower one. Water levels were highest when the climate was warmer and the river would have been popular with wildlife. The remains of rhinos, lions, wolves, hippos and elephants have been found buried here and are now in the Natural History Museum.

On the wall and steps along the north side of the Square to the right of the bust of Beatty are plaques, each representing the imperial measures of distance. They were installed by the Board of Trade in 1876 after previous official measurements were destroyed when Parliament burnt down in 1834. 

The Imperial measures of length

Finally, a police observation cubby hole is built into the light in the southeast corner of the Square. It is not London's smallest Police Station, contrary to the information in many of the guides. Rather, before they had surveillance cameras, the authorities  wanted to keep an eye on protesters. In fact, the whole design of the square serves the purpose of crowd control; the position of the column and fountains made it an unpromising location for large political protests. Unlike the ubiquitous monitoring cameras, at least then we could watch them watching us.....














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