Sheerness Heritage Centre Rose St

page1 Home pages1-39

Sheppey Where and what??

Hasted map Kent

Page2Chronology

Page3 Royal Dockyard

Page4MedwayRaid

Page5The Residents

Page6SheernessCoop

Page7Jewishcommun

Page8BuildRailway

page9Dr Beeching BR

HMS Bulwark

page10spiesandtraitors

page11loselspystory

12SnesDunkirk paddlersan

page13sinkingofTruculent

page14notesonfreemasons

page15UveJohnson

page16Oddsandends

page17PrincessAlice

page18McCuddens

page19warmemorial

page20Directories

page21RichardParker

page22The Nore

page23HulksBluetown

page24HMSubSahib

page25johnjanmansbottles

Page26John WesleySheerne

page27CharlesDickens

page28DukeofClarence

page29Zeppelnraid1tWW

page30Wildfire

page31William and Mary

page32Nelson Sheerness

page33J ButlerS'ness&BGS

page34RichardMontgomery

page35S'nessVlissingen

page36Lord WilliamPenney

page37Scorpion

page38Henry Russell

page39Sir StanleyHooker

Page41 Coastguard

picsfresidents' cottage.Clic

Picsfortatsheerness

tramsandrailClicktoenlargeWe

PICSSHEERNESSTOWNCENTRE

pics Sheerness on SeaWe welc

ecconomicalandcoopClicktoenl

picsbluetownanddockyardWe we

picsQBCvariousreps

Picschurchesdisusedandused.W

Schools and pupils

Picsthebridges. Click to enl

StagescreenincSheppey Little

Picsmiscellaneouspeople

Sheppey families past and pr

Weather-ice, wind and floods

Acknowledgments

linkSwalemuseums

linkSbourneKemsleyLtRail

Link Penney Sheppey

linkS'gbourneheritage

linkBredgarWrmshill rail

linkTrevspicsSheppey

linkRichardMontgomery

linkHighwaysSheppeyCross

Spa Valley Railway

linkundergroundKent

linkPSKingswearcastle

linkKent&ESussexLt Rly

LinkSheppeywebsite

Link MedwayQueen

linkKentpolicemuseum

LinkSheppeyLittleTheatre
 

THE PAST RECREATED   


DUKE OF CLARENCE LATER WILLIAM 1V

                                   (The sailor King who stayed in Sheerness)

 

 

 

                                                          

         William IV, William Henry. (1765-1837), king of Great Britain and Ireland (1830-37) and King of Hanover (1830-37), during whose reign the first Reform Bill was passed.
William was born August 21, 1765, in
London. The third son of King George III and younger brother of George IV, he entered the British navy in 1779, remaining in its service until 1787. He was made duke of Clarence in 1789. About 1791 he formed a liaison with the Irish actress Dorothea Jordon, by whom he subsequently had ten children. In 1818, after he unexpectedly came into the line of succession to the throne, he married a German princess, Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen, by whom he had two daughters, both of whom died in infancy. He became king in 1830, succeeding his brother.
Warm-hearted and well intentioned but rather eccentric, William had virtually no political judgment. The major event of his reign was the passage of the Reform Bill of 1832, which he was persuaded to support by his prime minister, Charles Grey, 2nd Earl Grey; it was enacted after William finally agreed to create, if necessary, a sufficient number of new peers to overcome the majority opposed to the bill in the House of Lords. The abolition of colonial slavery (1833), the reform of the poor laws (1834), and the Municipal Reform Act (1835) followed the 1832 reform of Parliament. William was the last British ruler to try to force parliamentary acceptance of an unpopular ministry, namely the one headed by Sir Robert Peel in 1834-35. His niece Victoria succeeded William to the British throne. His brother Ernest Augustus inherited the throne of
Hanover.

The newly refurbished dockyard at Sheerness was officially opened by HRH the Duke of Clarence who later became called the sailor king. Some of the leading citizens of Sheerness petitioned the Home Secretary, Sir Robert Peel, to change the name of Sheerness to Clarence Town. The petition was turned down but Admiralty House in the Dockyard was built for him

 

 



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