Funeral Procession of Late Lord Viscount Nelson from the Admiralty to St Paul's Cathedral
Artist
Augustus Charles Pugin
(British 1762-1832)
Engraver
James Merigot
(French 1760-1824)
Publisher
James Cundee
(British fl. 1804-1813)
Printer
Albion Press
Date1806
Object number00019633
NameEngraving
MediumInk on paper
DimensionsImage: 320 x 443 mm
ClassificationsArt
Credit LineANMM Collection
DescriptionOn 9 January 1806, Nelson's coffin was placed on an ornate funeral car hauled by six black horses in black livery. It was designed to look like HMS VICTORY with elaborately carved representations of a ship's bow and stern; it was hung with Nelson's naval war trophies. A huge procession made up mainly of soldiers escorted the coffin. The only naval people taking part were Greenwich pensioners, Nelson's fellow officers, and members of the VICTORY's crew. Vast numbers of people lined the streets to view the procession. Stands were built and tickets sold for some of the best seats along the route. The procession was so long that by the time the head of the column arrived at St Paul's Cathedral the funeral car had still not left Whitehall. It was getting dark as Nelson's body arrived at the cathedral.
This coloured aquatint depicts the arrival of Nelson's cortege at the Great West Door of St Paul's Cathedral. Mourners throng the streets around St Paul's and the rooftops of surrounding buildings. Nelson's funeral carriage features central left; and Queen Anne's statue central right. The statue of Queen Anne was designed by Francis Bird in 1712; the Queen is surrounded by representations in female form of England, France, Ireland and North America. It was replaced in 1886 by new statues of the same subjects.
HistoryAdmiral Lord Nelson is considered the greatest naval hero in British history and his death at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805 plunged the country into mourning. His corpse arrived back in England in a cask of brandy and raw alcohol and was taken to Greenwich on 5 January 1806. There it was placed in a lead coffin which was then placed inside another wooden one made from the mast of L'ORIENT - salvaged (at Nelson's orders) after the Battle of the Nile (1798).
Nelson's body lay in state in the Painted Hall at Greenwich Hospital for three days, where tens of thousands of people from all walks of life filed past the remains of their beloved naval hero. There were so many mourners that the authorities were fearful a riot could break out at any time, brought on by nothing more than grief over Nelson. Black hangings covered the vivid wall paintings and brightly coloured shields and coats of arms gleamed in the glow from hundreds of candles. The coffin was surrounded with trophies, including captured French and Spanish flags.
On the 8th his remains were placed in the royal barge originally made for King Charles II and taken up river, accompanied by Lord Hood, Sir Peter Parker and the Prince of Wales. The Prince at first announced his intention to attend the funeral as chief mourner, but later attended in a private capacity with his brothers when his father King George III reminded him that it was against protocol for the Heir to the Throne to attend the funerals of anyone except members of the Royal Family.
The City Livery Companies attended the procession in their own ceremonial barges, to make the procession from Greenwich to Whitehall the most exciting spectacle ever to have been seen on the river Thames. Disembarking at Whitehall they proceeded to the Admiralty, where the body of Lord Nelson, attended by his chaplain Alexander Scott, who had been with Nelson when he died, remained overnight.
The next day, 9 January, a funeral procession of 32 admirals, over a hundred captains, and an escort of 10,000 troops took the coffin from the Admiralty to St Paul's Cathedral. Along the processional route there was a reverenced silence from the huge crowds that had assembled in the streets and in the stands which had been specially erected to accommodate the throng. Mourners occupied every conceivable vantage point in order to witness this overwhelmingly sad spectacle.
After a four-hour service Nelson was laid to rest within an Italian marble sarcophagus presented by King George III from the Royal Collection.SignificanceThe Nelson Funeral was unprecedented - he was the first non-royal to be granted a state funeral. His significance to Australia lies in the legendary standards Nelson set for valour, discipline and naval strategy. They remain important traditions in those navies, like Australia's, which were formed in the British mould.Augustus Charles Pugin
1806
British and Foreign Sailors' Society
1905
Augustus Charles Pugin
1806