by Brenda Ralph Lewis
It is nothing unusual these days for British royals to
marry outside their own blue-blooded ranks. In the
19th century, though, the story was very different,
which is why the marriage of Princess Louise,
fourth daughter and sixth child of Queen Victoria
to John Douglas Sutherland Campbell, Marquis of
Lorne and heir to the dukedom of Argyll created
such a stir when it took place in 1871.
The Royal Family were outraged, but Victoria
pulled rank on all of them, and made it known
that if the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Ireland and all her possessions beyond
the seas thought the Marquis was right for
Louise, who else had anything to say about it'
It was not surprising that Louise made a 'different'
marriage. She was a 'different' princess, not
overfond of royal ritual or the rather stuffy royal
social round, and was clearly made for life beyond
the limitations which her birth had imposed on her.
She was born at Buckingham Palace on 18
March 1848, a lively, talented and intelligent
child who, from the first, was clearly destined to
grow into a beauty. She was later accounted the
loveliest of Victoria's daughters,
and the others were no mean lookers, either.
Though a formal career was not possible for
a princess in Louise's time, her abilities in painting
and sculpture were not allowed to go to waste.
She was permitted to attend art school and in 1863,
when she was fifteen, the famous sculptress,
Mrs. Mary Thorneycroft, became her tutor.
Two years earlier, Louise had been at Windsor
Castle when her father Prince Albert died there. When her sister, Princess
Helena, married Prince Christian of Battenburg in 1866, she succeeded her
as companion to their widowed mother. It was a demanding job, since her
beloved husband's early death brought out the most selfish aspects of Queen
Victoria's character, but Louise was so good at it that her mother described as
'amiable, attentive and cheerful.' for such a demanding parent, so intent on
damping down all and every sign of enjoyment that might distract those about
her from the proper solemnity of mourning, this was quite an accolade.
By the late 1860s, the business of Louise's marriage came under review. At this juncture, it was practically a royal family custom for eldest sister Vicky, Crown Princess of Prussia, to get out her 'Almanach de Gotha' and start matchmaking. Vicky favoured a Prussian prince, but she had forgotten an important factor which was uppermost in Louise's mind. Louise was well aware of the problems her elder sister had encountered in Europe where royal courts, headed by absolute rulers, were extremely repressive and liberal-minded English princesses were widely distrusted. Louise resolved not to be sidelined and ostracised like Vicky. She realised, besides, that her own already growing interest in philanthropy and the advancement of women would mark her out as a troublemaker just as Vicky was, and that it could hardly be pursued in such a brutally reactionary atmosphere.
Her best future, Louise decided, lay in Britain. That, of course, meant a British husband which, in turn, meant a non-royal and a commoner. Unlike Germany, with its plethora of small states, orFrance with its mass of dispossessed and ambitious royals and pseudo-royals, there were no princes going spare in Britain, so that the royal marriage market there did not really exist. The British Royal Family was not, in any case, the aloof, arrogant sort which, in Germany, made even talking to a commoner, apart from the servants, something that was just not done. This, in fact, is why European royalty often looked askance at the British Royal Family who, in their supremely snobbish view, sullied themselves by their willingness to connect with ordinary people.
Louise could never have lived happily in an atmosphere like that, and fortunately, the logic of her thinking was not lost on others. Her engagement to the Marquis of Lorne in the autumn of 1870 was supported not only by her mother but also by her mother's Prime Minister, Benjamin Disraeli. Disraeli knew Lorne, a commoner despite his descent from the Kings of Scotland, for a gentle, good-tempered man of 'bright cultivated intelligence' who was just right for the artistic Louise. The match also pleased the British public which had feared yet another of the 'German marriages' which, in their view, had already occurred too often in the Royal Family.
After her marriage in 1871, Louise embarked on an unusual life for a princess, as the wife of a Member of Parliament, and one who was able, as most other royals were not, to surround herself with artists and philanthropists, the people whose company both she and her husband preferred.
The Marquis naturally became prominent in British public life because of his marriage, and served as Governor-General of Canada between 1878 and 1883. Louise, as Governor's lady, made her own mark in the Dominion and later, her time was marked by naming Lake Louise, near Laffan in the Rocky Mountains, after her.
On their return to Britain, the couple organised their own quiet life, giving few parties and none of the ostentatious variety expected of the aristocracy, even though they lived in some splendour at Kensington Palace in London. Louise was aware, even so, that her royal status gave her an edge when it came to supporting good causes, and she put it good effect for the Ladies' Work Society which helped poor women earn a living from needlework. Improved education for women was another campaign which attracted Louise, and in 1872, he became first president of the National Union for the Higher Education of women founded in that year. She was no figurehead, though, but an active campaigner who promoted her causes tirelessly, with speeches and letters to the press.
Louise was also a working artist and sculptor, well respected for her considerable skills. The best of her work was seen around London - the marble statue of Queen Victoria which overlooked the Round Pond in the grounds of Kensington Palace, or her design for the memorial in St. Paul's Cathedral to Canadian casualties of the Boer War of 1899-1902.
Louise became Duchess of Argyll in 1900 when her husband succeeded as 9th Duke, but sadly the couple never had children and when the Duke died in 1914, he was succeeded by a nephew. Despite this lack in their lives, Louise and Argyll were very happy together and when he developed what appears to have been Alzheimer's Disease, she nursed him devotedly.
This was undoubtedly one of the great unsung royal love matches and Louise never quite recovered from her husband's death. There was an echo of Queen Victoria in the way she reacted, though she did not go quite as far as her mother who made mourning for her lost Prince Albert a whole way of life in the forty years of her widowhood. Nevertheless, Louise, now 66, became somewhat reclusive after Argyll died, although in 1919 she accepted the colonelcy-in- chief of the Sutherland Highlanders and she was always willing to appear in public for a charitable cause.
Louise became the first honorary freeman of the Royal Borough of Kensington and in 1935, when her nephew King George V celebrated his Silver Jubilee, Louise was at Kensington Town Hall to greet him and his queen, Mary.
This, though, was virtually her last public appearance. Louise died four years later at Kensington Palace on 3 December 1939. She was 91 and Queen Victoria's longest-living and most accomplished daughter.
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