Book description
A century after Queen Victoria's death, debate still rages
surrounding her relationship with her gillie, John Brown. Were they
ever married? What was the extraordinary hold he had over her? This
biography aims to shed new light on these questions and to discover
the truth behind Brown's hold on his royal employer. Following the
death of Prince Albert in 1861, the Queen found solace in the
companionship of John Brown, who had commenced his royal employment as
a stable hand. He became "The Queen's Highland Servant" in
1865 and rose to be the most influential member of the Scottish Royal
Household. While the Queen could be brusque and petulant with her
servants, family and minsters, she submitted to Brown's fussy
organisation of her domestic life, his bullying and familiarity
without a murmur. Despite warnings of his unpopularity with her
subjects by one Prime Minister, the Queen was adamant that Brown would
not be sacked. The Queen's confidence was rewarded when Brown saved
her from an assassination attempt, after which he was vaunted as a
public hero. The author reveals the names of republicans and
disaffected courtiers who related gossip about Queen Victoria and John
Brown and their purported marriage and child, and identifies those who
plotted to have Brown dismissed. Based on research in public,. private
and royal archives, as well as diaries and memoirs of those who knew
Brown and interviews with his surviving relatives, this text analyses
the relationship between Queen Victorian and Brown.