The First Royal Media War  
Edward VIII, The Abdication and the Press
Author(s): Adrian Phillips
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781399065436
Pages: 0

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The abdication crisis of 1936 demolished the wall of silent deference that had protected the British royal family from press comment and intrusion since the days of Queen Victoria. King Edward VIII was a child of the burgeoning age of media and the first celebrity monarch, but the immense personal popularity created by his charm and good looks was not enough to save him when he came into conflict with a government that embodied the conservative ethos of the time. Nor did the support of powerful media barons. In the United States William Randolph Hearst, who inspired Citizen Kane, dreamed of giving Britain an American Queen and maneuvered with Wallis Simpson to place her on the throne. In Britain the Anglo- Canadian newspaper magnate Lord Beaverbrook hoped to use the confrontation between the King and the government to force the prime minister, his bitter enemy Stanley Baldwin, out of power. Edward was blocked from broadcasting his case directly to the public, which was the source of deep resentment to him. The government treated the couple’s media initiatives as declarations of war and was prepared to respond savagely. The British press remained tactfully silent almost until the end of the crisis, but behind the scenes, a cold war was being fought.

For the rest of his life, Edward fought to air his grievances against the ill-treatment to which he thought that he had been subjected. He believed that he had been forced to abdicate by a coalition of reactionaries grouped behind the Archbishop of Canterbury. Edward resented bitterly the ostracism to which he and Wallis were subjected by his brother and sister-in-law, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, especially the refusal to grant his wife royal status. With sometimes farcical results, Edward tried to find authors who put over his side of the story. Beaverbrook supported Edward but tried to bend Edward’s quest to fit his own agenda. The establishment did its utmost to restrain Edward and maintain a discreet silence over the crisis, but gradually members of the royal court abandoned reticence and fought back.

The abdication challenged the British monarchy as an institution. A large part of the legacy is today’s no-holds-barred media environment where the royal family's issues are fought in a ruthless glare of worldwide attention.
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The abdication crisis of 1936 demolished the wall of silent deference that had protected the British royal family from press comment and intrusion since the days of Queen Victoria. King Edward VIII was a child of the burgeoning age of media and the first celebrity monarch, but the immense personal popularity created by his charm and good looks was not enough to save him when he came into conflict with a government that embodied the conservative ethos of the time. Nor did the support of powerful media barons. In the United States William Randolph Hearst, who inspired Citizen Kane, dreamed of giving Britain an American Queen and maneuvered with Wallis Simpson to place her on the throne. In Britain the Anglo- Canadian newspaper magnate Lord Beaverbrook hoped to use the confrontation between the King and the government to force the prime minister, his bitter enemy Stanley Baldwin, out of power. Edward was blocked from broadcasting his case directly to the public, which was the source of deep resentment to him. The government treated the couple’s media initiatives as declarations of war and was prepared to respond savagely. The British press remained tactfully silent almost until the end of the crisis, but behind the scenes, a cold war was being fought.

For the rest of his life, Edward fought to air his grievances against the ill-treatment to which he thought that he had been subjected. He believed that he had been forced to abdicate by a coalition of reactionaries grouped behind the Archbishop of Canterbury. Edward resented bitterly the ostracism to which he and Wallis were subjected by his brother and sister-in-law, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, especially the refusal to grant his wife royal status. With sometimes farcical results, Edward tried to find authors who put over his side of the story. Beaverbrook supported Edward but tried to bend Edward’s quest to fit his own agenda. The establishment did its utmost to restrain Edward and maintain a discreet silence over the crisis, but gradually members of the royal court abandoned reticence and fought back.

The abdication challenged the British monarchy as an institution. A large part of the legacy is today’s no-holds-barred media environment where the royal family's issues are fought in a ruthless glare of worldwide attention.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Introduction: The First Celebrity Monarch
  • 1. The House of Windsor Enters the Age of Media
  • 2. No Minister Will Dare to Go Against This Force
  • 3. Unnatural Silence
  • 4. Friday’s Job
  • 5. Furnishing an American Queen
  • 6. Editors as Statesmen
  • 7. The Jolt
  • 8. King Edward’s Contribution to Democratic Government
  • 9. The Filthy Newspaper and the Mind of the English People
  • 10. Round Trip to New York
  • 11. The Dam Bursts
  • 12. A Friend on Fleet Street
  • 13. A Powerful Propaganda Agency
  • 14. A Fireside Chat
  • 15. A Thoroughly Efficient Horse-Whipping
  • 16. The Brand of Unfitness
  • 17. The Behaviour of Those in Power
  • 18. Careful and Delicate Handling
  • 19. Interlude
  • 20. Despatches from St Helena
  • 21. A Rope of Sand
  • 22. This Wretched Publication
  • 23. The Beaverbrook Car Service
  • 24. The Beaverbrook Broadcasting Service
  • 25. A Novice Lost on the Cresta Run
  • 26. Garnished With Malice
  • 27. The Black Rat and the Jazz-Boy King
  • 28. Palace Persecution
  • 29. Transference of Responsibility
  • 30. A Forlorn Thermos of Tea
  • 31. The End of Discretion
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Acknowledgements
  • About the Author
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