Authors: Paul Thomas Murphy
318:Â Â Â “Certainly not: if I do not go, it will be thought I am seriously hurt, and people will be distressed and alarmed”: “The Character of Queen Victoria,” 318.
319:Â Â Â “The feeling of
all
classes [is] admirable,” she wrote that night in her journal, “the lowest of the low being
most
indignant”: Rowell 31.
319:   ⦠“one of the most magnificent demonstrations of loyalty it has ever been our fortune to witness”:
Morning Chronicle
28 June 1850, 5.
319:   ⦠“the mark of the ruffian's violence plainly visible on her forehead”:
Times
28 June 1850, 8.
319:Â Â Â “I never heard such shouting”:
Punch
19:18 (1850).
319:Â Â Â When Madame Viardot reached the line “Frustrate their knavish tricks,” the crowd roared:
Morning Chronicle
28 June 1850, 5.
320:Â Â Â “The small stick with which the prisoner struck the blow was not thicker than an ordinary goosequill”:
Times
28 June 1850, 8.
320:Â Â Â Pate's caneâa type known as a partridge caneâwas longer, heavier, and much thicker than the newspaper claimed:
Lloyd's Weekly 7
July 1850, 7;
Times
29 June 1850, 8.
320:Â Â Â Victoria long remembered the injury Pate had given her: a walnut-sized welt and a scar that lasted ten years:
Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper
30 June 1850, 12; Gathorne-Hardy 1:244.
320:   “⦠it is very hard and very horrid that I a woman”: Geraghty 30.
320:   ⦠the Queen until the end of her life considered this one the meanest and most ignobleâ”far worse,” she wrote, “than an attempt to shoot”: Geraghty 31.
321:Â Â Â “I own it makes me nervous out driving, and I start at any person coming near the carriage”: Victoria,
Letters
(first series) 2:253.
321:Â Â Â At Vine Street station, Pate was searched:
Times
28 June 1850, 8.
321:Â Â Â The several witnesses to the assault who came with him to the station were questioned, and Pate was charged with assaulting the Queen:
Times
28 June 1850, 8.
321:   Pate ⦠asserted emphatically “those men cannot prove whether I struck her head or her bonnet”:
Morning Chronicle
28 June 1850, 5.
321:   ⦠a little wire and woven horsehair: “Robert Pate.”
322:Â Â Â Otway had just been promoted to Superintendent of C Division:
Times
28 June 1850, 8.
322:Â Â Â Field, already a legend, was very soon to become an even greater one: Collins 204, 206â7.
322:Â Â Â Field was known for his roving eye, which caught all in a glance: Dickens, Amusements 357â369.
322:Â Â Â He made note of Pate's obsessive neatness. He also confiscated a number of Pate's papers:
Times
28 June 1850, 8.
322:   ⦠he brought them to the Home Office examination the next day, but did not bring them forward:
Reynolds's Weekly News
30 June 1850,1.
322:Â Â Â Pate could offer no motive for striking the Queen besides claiming “felt very low for some time past”:
Times
29 June 1850, 8.
322:Â Â Â “I wish to Heaven I had been at your right hand yesterday, and then this should not have happened”:
Times
29 June 1850, 8.
322:   ⦠he sat up and observed the comings and goings at the station house:
Times
29 June 1850, 8.
323:Â Â Â At 12:15 the next day, Superintendent Otway personally escorted Pate out of the station:
Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper
30 June 1850,12.
323:Â Â Â Pate Senior was not there; he would arrive from Wisbech later that afternoon:
Times
29 June 1850, 8.
323:Â Â Â Richard Mayneânow senior Chief Commissioner since the retirement of Charles Rowan earlier in the yearâwas to read the charge:
Times
29 June 1850, 8; Emsley.
323:   ⦠Pate sat and stared vacantly:
Reynolds's Weekly
30 June 1850, 1.
323:   Jervis brought forward just enough witnesses ⦠to connect Pate with the attack and to justify a remand:
Times
29 June 1850, 8.
323:Â Â Â John Huddleston requested more time than that, requesting a postponement until Friday 5 July:
Times
29 June 1850, 8.
324:Â Â Â Pate drew up a list of books he wished transferred from his library at home to Clerkenwell:
Times
29 June 1850, 8.
324:Â Â Â Otway then led Pate out the front door of the Home Office and directly into an unruly mob:
Times
29 June 1850, 8.
324:Â Â Â Commissioner Hay had positioned a number of police before the Home Office to control the crowd:
Reynolds's Weekly
30 June 1850,1.
324:   ⦠the “absorbing topic of conversation” throughout London:
Times
29 June 1850, 8.
324:Â Â Â William Gladstone spoke that Thursday evening, attacking Palmerston's brutal nationalism with a visionary appeal to a brotherhood of nations:
Times
28 June 1850, 5.
324:Â Â Â Gladstone was interrupted often by Palmerston's enthusiastic supporters, as were all of Palmerston's opponents: Ridley 524.
325:Â Â Â Crowds crammed the avenues outside the entrances to the House:
Times
29 June 1850, 2.
325:   ⦠“the House and country only wish to hear Peel, Lord John, and Dizzy; all others are only bores”: Roebuck 242.
325:Â Â Â Cockburn deftly and with legal precision deflected Gladstone's attack, defending item by item Palmerston's actions in Greece and throughout Europe:
Times
29 June 1850, 2â3.
325:   Robert Peel⦠managed to chide Palmerston's policy and yet conciliate the Whig government:
Times
29 June 1850, 4â5.
325:Â Â Â John Russell, speaking next, had an easy job of it:
Times
29 June 1850,5.
325:Â Â Â In a speech containing little of his trademark wit, he explained why he would vote as Peel did:
Times
29 June 1850, 5â6.
326:   ⦠250 supporters would enthusiastically sing the national anthem and cheer vociferously the lines “Confound their politics,/Frustrate their knavish tricks”: Ridley 525.
326:   ⦠he “would have consummated his fiendish scheme by violence had not the miraculous efforts of his victim and such assistance attracted by her screams, saved her”: Ridley 532.
326:Â Â Â Albert and Victoria, with the help of Stockmar, tried again a month later, setting out in a memo for Palmerston the behavior they expected in a foreign minister: St. Aubyn,
Queen Victoria
250â1.
326:Â Â Â Russell thought the memo so humiliating that Palmerston would have to resign rather than accept it: Ridley 532.
327:Â Â Â “I consider that man to be the happiest in England at this moment”: Roebuck 242.
327:Â Â Â His wife Julia was feeling unwell and so she remained in bed, reading a newspaper account of his speech: Gash 697.
327:   Playfair ⦠had been appointed upon Peel's recommendation Special Commissioner for the Exhibition: Davis 71; Auerbach 70â1.
328:Â Â Â They discussed the mounting opposition to the Hyde Park site, and resolved that they would hold the Exhibition there or nowhere: RC/8/A, minutes for 29 June 1850, np.
328:Â Â Â “Depend upon it,” he said, “the House of Commons is a timid body”: Cole Henry 167.
328:   Joseph Paxton ⦠approached Henry Cole with a revolutionary idea for the Exhibition building: Davis 81.
328:Â Â Â Three days later, bored in the middle of a railway director's meeting in Derby, Paxton created the most famous doodle in history: Christopher Hobhouse 28; Auerbach 48; ffrench 91.
328:Â Â Â On the train from Derby he had run into the engineer Robert Stevensonâof the Building Committeeâand quickly gained his support: Auerbach 49; Christopher Hobhouse 32.
328:Â Â Â He met with the vice-chairman of the Commission, Earl Granville, who promised to submit the plan to the Commissioners: Christopher Hobhouse 34.
328:Â Â Â “I believe nothing can stand against my plans,
everybody
likes them”: Auerbach 49.
328:Â Â Â He also forwarded a set of plans to Peel: ffrench 97.
329:   ⦠they referred Paxton's plans to them: Christopher Hobhouse 35.
329:Â Â Â The Commission adjourned at 1:15: according to the “Court Circular”:
Times
1 July 1850, 4; it adjourned at 3:00, according to Norman Gash: Gash 697.
329:   ⦠he kissed his wife good-bye and set off with his groom for his customary ride around the Parks: Gash 697;
Times
1 July 1850, 5.
329:Â Â Â The horse he mounted was new to himâan eight-year-old which a friend had purchased for him two months before, from Tattersall's: Gash 697;
Illustrated London News
17 (1850): 10.
329:Â Â Â Peel's coachman was suspicious about the horse, and had recommended Peel not ride it: Gash 697.
329:Â Â Â Peel and his groom passed through St. James's Park and stopped at Buckingham Palace: For Peel's ride, see Gash 697â701;
Times
1 July 1850, 5; Daily News 1 July 1850, 5;
Illustrated London News
17 (1850): 10.
330:Â Â Â The two men who had sat him up, as well as the two doctors, now supported Peel:
Times
1 July 1850, 5. According to the
Illustrated London News
, a doctor from St. George's Hospital accompanied Peel home: 17 (1850): 10.
330:   ⦠a patent hydraulic bed was set up in the same room:
Illustrated London News
17 (1850): 10.
330:Â Â Â “Sir Robert Peel has met with a severe accident by falling from his horse”: Gash 698â99.
330:Â Â Â Albert and the Prince of Prussia rushed to Whitehall Gardens as soon as they heard of his fall:
Times
1 July 1850, 5.
330:Â Â Â “We have, alas! now another cause of much greater anxiety in the person of our excellent Sir Robert Peel”: Victoria
Letters
(first series) 2:253.
330:Â Â Â Peel told them on the day of the accident that his injury was worse than they realized, and that he would not survive it: Gash 699.
331:Â Â Â “That silent, solemn crowd betokened the unknown depth to which love and reverence for the great practical statesman had sunk in the minds of humble English men and women”:
Illustrated London
News
17 (1850): 3.
331:Â Â Â He ate a little and even walked around the room with assistance: Gash 701.
331:   ⦠he held each of his children's hands in turn, and whispered his good-byes to them, the words “God bless you!” scarcely audible: Illustrated London News 17 (1850): 10.
331:Â Â Â His wife Julia, overwhelmed, was led from the room: Gash 701.
331:   Peel's death ⦓absorbed every other subject of interest”: Greville 2:458.
332:Â Â Â “All persons agree that there has never been an instance of such general gloom and regret”: Bunsen 2:142.
332:Â Â Â “He has felt, and feels, Sir Robert's loss
dreadfully”
: Victoria
Letters
(first series) 2:256.
332:Â Â Â “Now our Exhibition is to be driven from London”: Albert to Ernst, 4 July 1850, qtd. in Auerbach 46.
332:Â Â Â Sibthorp laid into the greatest trash, fraud, and imposition “palmed upon” the people of Britain:
Times
5 July 1850, 3.
333:   ⦠Peel, “that eminent man, who never neglected any duty ⦠which he considered conducive to the public good”:
Times
5 July 1850, 4.
333:Â Â Â “The feeling of the house was completely altered”: Lord John Russell to Albert, qtd. in Davis 78.
333:Â Â Â His iron-and-glass design had received a cold reception from the Exhibition's Building Committee, especially from Isambard Kingdom Brunel: Auerbach 49.
333:   ⦠Paxton's “peculiar” design would cost 10% more than a variation of their own: Davis 83.
334:Â Â Â “Perhaps I might take the liberty of saying that I consider the success of the Exhibition would be considerably increased by the adoption of Mr. Paxton's plan”: Cole 1:124â25.
334:Â Â Â On the sixteenth, the Building Committee met with the Royal Commission:
Times
16 July 1850, 8.
334:Â Â Â “In all the matters which I had in hand,” Albert was able to write Stockmar four days later from Osborne, “I had triumphant success”: Martin 2:247.
334:   ⦠when he returned to complete his Home Office examination on Friday morning, the fifth of July, there was no large crowd outside to hoot or hiss him:
Examiner
6 July 1850, 428. (Other newspapers, however, such as
Lloyd's Weekly
âon 7 July 1850, 7ânote a larger crowd.)
334:   ⦠his health suffered from lack of walking:
Times
6 July 1850, 8;
Examiner
6 July 1850, 428.
334:   ⦠he had instead spent most of the last week absorbed in his books: Manchester Examiner 6 July 1850, 4.
334:   ⦠his own counsel, with whom he hadn't spoken since his arrest:
Times
6 July 1850, 8.
334:Â Â Â Only the Queen's physician, James Clark, had anything new to add:
Times
6 July 1850, 8;
Examiner
6 July 1850, 428.
335:Â Â Â Huddleston, Pate's attorney, said little:
Times
6 July 1850, 8.
335:Â Â Â Monro visited Pate twice at Clerkenwell and three times in Newgate: “Robert Pate.”
336:Â Â Â Attorney General Jervis, then, was compelled to hurry the trial along, requesting the presiding judge, Baron Alderson, to schedule Pate's trial for the next morning, 11 July:
Times
11 July 1850, 7.
336:   ⦠the courtroom on that morning was full but not crowded:
Times
12 July 1850, 7.
336:Â Â Â With perfect composure he bowed slightly to the justices:
Times 12
July 1850, 7.
336:   ⦠Pate loudly pleaded not guilty:
Times 12
July 1850, 7.
336:   ⦠the effect of such an acquittal “would be that he would be imprisoned for the rest of his life”:
Times 12
July 1850, 7.