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Marlborough House, London, England

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Marlborough House, London, England

Marlborough House is a Grade I listed mansion in the City of Westminster, central London, in The Mall, London, east of St James's Palace. It was built for Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough, the favourite and confidante of Queen Anne. The Duchess wanted her new house to be "strong, plain and convenient and good". The architect Christopher Wren and his son of the same name designed a brick building with rusticated stone quoins (cornerstones) that was completed in 1711. For over a century it served as the London residence of the Dukes of Marlborough.

The house was taken up by the Crown in 1817. In the 1820s plans were drawn up to demolish Marlborough House and replace it with a terrace of similar dimensions to the two in neighbouring Carlton House Terrace, and this idea even featured on some contemporary maps, including Christopher and John Greenwood's large-scale London map of 1830, but the proposal was not implemented. Marlborough House was primarily used by members of the Royal Family, especially dowager queens and eldest sons of the sovereign.

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Royal residence

Queen Adelaide was given the use of Marlborough House from 1831 until her death in 1849.
From 1853 to 1861 Prince Albert, the consort of Queen Victoria, arranged for the building to be used by the "National Art Training School", later the Royal College of Art.
Marlborough House was (1861–1863) substantially enlarged to designs by Sir James Pennethorne, who added a range of rooms on the north side and a deep porch. This was done for the Prince of Wales, later King Edward VII, and his wife the Princess of Wales, Alexandra of Denmark, who made their home the social centre of London, and lived there until his mother died in 1901, when Edward acceded the throne and they moved to nearby Buckingham Palace. Their second son, later King George V, was born at Marlborough House in 1865.

After King Edward VII died in 1910, Marlborough House became the London home of his widow, Queen Alexandra. She died in 1925. In 1936 it became the London residence of his son, George V's, widow, the queen dowager, Mary of Teck. She survived him by 17 years.

A late Art Nouveau-Gothic memorial fountain by Alfred Gilbert (1926–32) in the Marlborough Road wall of the house commemorates Queen Alexandra. In the grounds of the house remains her pet cemetery. A thatch-roofed rotating summer house built for Queen Mary still is in place. A plaque to commemorate Queen Mary was unveiled by The Queen in 1967 in the exterior wall closest to the corner with the Mall.

Commonwealth Secretariat

After Queen Mary's death in 1953, as Clarence House was used for Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, Marlborough House was donated by Queen Elizabeth II for use by the Commonwealth Secretariat, which continues to use it today.

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Public opening times

Marlborough House is usually open to the public for Open House Weekend each September. The house is also open for group tours by prior arrangement.

Features

The nearly cubical saloon retains wall-paintings by Louis Laguerre of the Battle of Blenheim (at which the 1st Duke of Marlborough was overall commander for Britain and her allies; seat of the Dukes of Marlborough is Blenheim Palace, one of England's largest houses). A cupola inserted in the ceiling is surrounded by paintings by Orazio Gentileschi for the Queen's House, Greenwich, 1636. There are paired staircases flanking the saloon, with further battle pieces by Laguerre. Most of the interiors have been altered.

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marlborough House.
Visiting Information at The Commonwealth Secretariat[dead link] Virtual tour Flickr images tagged Marlborough House