The Sunday Telegraph

No bumpy ride to Coronation in ‘horrible’ Gold Coach

More comfortabl­e mode of transport may be used after late Queen bemoaned travelling in ornate carriage

- By Camilla Turner and Victoria Ward

THE King and Queen will not use the Gold State Coach to travel from Buckingham Palace to Westminste­r Abbey for the Coronation, The Sunday Telegraph understand­s.

In a break from tradition, the couple will instead only use the coach on the return journey, as they process through the streets of London after their crowning.

It raises the prospect that the King might opt for a more comfortabl­e mode of transport for getting to the ceremony on May 6.

The public will still get a good glimpse of the 260-year-old coach, as it will wait outside the Abbey to take the couple back to the Palace.

Although the return route is yet to be confirmed, it could follow that of the late Queen Elizabeth’s procession meaning it would pass up Whitehall and down the Mall to Buckingham Palace.

There are a number of alternativ­e travel options available to the King and Queen for the journey to the Abbey, including the Irish State Coach, which has often been used for the State Opening of Parliament.

The couple could also opt to travel by car, but experts believe a coach will be used as a nod to the late Duke of Edinburgh who had a passion for carriages.

Dr George Gross, visiting research fellow in theology at King’s College London and a co-founder of the British Coronation­s Project, said: “It would not be surprising if they travelled in another coach from the Royal Mews Collection, possibly the Diamond Jubilee State Coach – built in Australia and therefore incorporat­ing another Commonweal­th element to the event.”

The interior panelling of the Diamond Jubilee State Coach includes materials from “emblematic and historic” locations and buildings across the UK, Dr Gross explained.

“This would therefore combine both

Commonweal­th and Union references and British history, too,” he said.

Another option is the Australian State Coach, but this would not cover British historical references or the “Union element”, he added.

Dr Gross said: “Subject to our famous weather, the 1902 State Landau would allow the option of travelling with the top lowered – so this would give more of a view for the public and the cameras if the elements permit.”

The 24ft-long Gold State Coach was commission­ed by George III in 1760 and has been used at the coronation of every monarch since George IV in 1821.

In 1953, Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh were driven from Buckingham Palace to the Abbey in the coach, pulled by eight grey gelding horses: Cunningham, Tovey, Noah, Tedder, Eisenhower, Snow White, Tipperary and McCreery.

‘I think it would not be surprising if they travelled in another coach from the Royal Mews Collection’

However, the ornately carved coach does not offer its passengers the comfort and luxury that its dazzling exterior might indicate.

The late Queen bemoaned the “horrible” carriage ride on the day of her coronation, suggesting that the difficulti­es may have been down to a lack of suspension.

Asked about the journey for a BBC documentar­y in 2018, she said: “It’s only sprung on leather. Not very comfortabl­e.”

“Were you in it for a long time?” Alastair Bruce, the presenter, asked.

“Halfway around London,” the Queen replied, drily. “We must have gone four or five miles. We could only go at a walking pace. The horses could not go any faster.”

William IV likened travelling in it to being aboard a ship in rough seas, while Queen Victoria refused to travel in it because of its “distressin­g oscillatio­ns”.

These were reduced when George VI ordered an overhaul, but not nearly enough to guarantee a pleasant ride.

 ?? ?? The 260-year-old Gold State Coach is said to give a bumpy ride because of its poor suspension
The 260-year-old Gold State Coach is said to give a bumpy ride because of its poor suspension

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