With another English Prince abdicating his duties and losing his title to placate the unroyal woman he loves, it is a good time to review what happened with Edward VIII. Time will tell if the past is precursor. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelist.
Edward did not have enough time on the Throne to have a full set of stamps done for him. There was just this rather austere bulk issue where it turned out very appropriately Edward is not wearing a Crown. The stamps showing Edward were not demonetized or overprinted to cancel out his image after abdication. Their short time status is reflected in stamp value today. The next issue same value stamp displaying new King George VI are worth one third the value.
Todays stamp is issue A99, a 2 and a half Pence stamp issued by Great Britain in 1936. It was a four stamp issue in various denominations. According to the Scott Catalog, the stamp is worth 75 cents used.
King Edward VIII was on the Throne for 10 months. He desired to marry an American socialite Wallis Simpson who was divorcing her second husband. Prime Minister Baldwin advised that it was not an appropriate marriage as he was the symbolic head of the Church of England and that the British people would not accept Wallis as Queen Consort. Under the Westminster Statue Law of 1931 the Parliaments of the Dominions had to give assent to the choice. Prime Minister Baldwin also implied that if Edward married anyway, the government would resign. Edward then proposed a morganatic marriage to Wallis where she would not become Queen Consort and any offspring would not be in the line of succession. This was all rejected and Edward abdicated in December 1936.
In theory Edward would have reverted to the Prince title but new King George VI quickly bestowed the title of Duke of Windsor with an accompanying His Royal Highness. This happened before the marriage so HRH did not go to Wallis. Giving Edward this title made him a peer and disallowed him discussing politics or running for the seat in the House of Commons, a big fear. There was also much ado about money. Bank accounts controlled by the King were cleaned out during Edward’s last days on the Throne. Leaving meant that Edward was no longer on the civil list for government funds but George gave Edward a large stipend in return for not coming back to Britain. He also demanded payment for Sandringham House and Balmoral Castle. Telephone calls demanding money from Edward became so frequent that King George VI and the Queen Mother Mary stopped taking his calls.
The Church of England refused to marry but a renegade priest Robert Jardine conducted the ceremony in Paris. The priest claimed that the Bishop’s instruction not perform the marriage did not apply outside of Britain. Jardine was forced to resign the priesthood afterward and move to the USA where he cashed in by writing a book.
As we can expect from Harry, the stipend from the Monarch however generous it would seem to any even well off person, was not enough for the jet set lifestyle. Edward began monetizing his notoriety by being paid to be interviewed and accepting junkets offered by iffy people.
Among those iffy people was Nazi era Germans. Wallis had an affair with German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop from the time he was German Ambassador in London in 1936. They remained in contact and everyone was worried that Edward would reclaim the Throne with German backing, in the dark days after the fall of France. Edward played into that fear by traveling from France to Nazi sympathizing Spain And Portugal. In July 1940, Edward was appointed Governor of far off Bahamas to keep Edward out of Germany’s reach. There was much relief when he boarded the ship to leave Lisbon for his new assignment.
Edward after the war concocted a plot to return to England. He considered buying a country house near London as George VI’s health declined. He wanted to be in place in case there was an opportunity to serve as Regent. This did not pan out and he received no new assignments from Queen Elizabeth II. One bone she threw at her uncle was allowing him and Wallis! to be buried at the Royal burial ground at Frogmore castle. The previous plan would have seen the couple buried in Baltimore, Maryland next to Wallis’s father. The cemetery in Baltimore is also the place of rest for John Wilkes Booth.
Well my drink is empty and I will pour another to toast King George VI. It must have been a Herculean task to keep things going through all the craziness. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.
2 replies on “Great Britain 1936, Edward VIII the past as precursor”
Too bad Edward isn’t around during these days of Instagram and Facebook!
His Spiritual successor, the Artist formerly known as HRH Prince Harry is, and recently appeared for money for Goldman Sachs