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London Air Defence Area

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The London Air Defence Area ( LADA ) was the name given to the organisation created to defend London from the increasing threat from German airships during World War I . Formed in September 1915, it was commanded initially by Admiral Sir Percy Scott , a controversial figure, responsible for major advances in naval gunnery techniques, but also accused of insubordination and profiting from his inventions. In August 1917 Major-General Edward Ashmore was appointed Commander of the London Air Defence Area.

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27-476: LADA was among the first wide-area air defence organizations. To coordinate the attacks on the enemy that were spread out over dozens of miles, it developed a system in which reports from ground observers were sent to a central office in the Horse Guards in downtown London. There, telephone operators would record the location of the reports on a large map of the surrounding area. The markers were Color-coded to match

54-468: A danger to the sentries. In 1745, King George II commissioned a new building in the fashionable Palladian style by the architect William Kent . Having to reuse the same plot of land, Kent managed to retain essentially the same plan as the original building while doubling the interior space. Kent died in April 1748 before the old Horse Guards had been demolished; work on the new building commenced in 1750 under

81-412: A further two floors were added to these, giving the building its present appearance. Kent's decision to retain a Baroque clock tower on his new Palladian building resulted in a peculiar blend of styles, perhaps the cause of it being described by Charles Knight as "the ugliest building in the metropolis". The building also served as the offices for the various administrative departments responsible to

108-459: A tradition which continues to the present, although the modern passes are made of plastic; only the monarch has the right to drive through the arch without a pass. Initially, the building was intended only to accommodate the King's Guard and included stabling for more than a hundred cavalry horses on the ground floor, as well as separate barracks for the foot guards . Following a fire at Whitehall in 1698,

135-558: A trumpeter and standard bearer ; known as a Long Guard. When the monarch is not in London, the guard is reduced to two non-commissioned officers and ten troopers; known as a Short Guard. The ceremony of Changing The King's Life Guard takes place on Horse Guards Parade adjacent to the Horse Guards building. Two mounted sentries guard the entrance to Horse Guards on Whitehall from 10:00 am until 4:00 pm and are changed every hour. There

162-457: Is a dismounted parade at 4:00 pm (described above) and two dismounted sentries remain on duty until 8:00 pm. 51°30′17″N 0°07′38″W  /  51.50472°N 0.12722°W  / 51.50472; -0.12722 John Vardy John Vardy (February 1718 – 17 May 1765) was an English architect attached to the Royal Office of Works from 1736. He was a close follower of

189-800: Is preserved in the same room, which is now the office of the Major-General Commanding the Household Division and General Officer Commanding London District. Horse Guards subsequently became the headquarters of two major Army commands: the London District and the Household Cavalry . At the annual Trooping the Colour ceremony in June, members of the Royal Family who are not participants watch

216-536: The Commonwealth . Built of red brick and costing some £4,000, it comprised a central range with a clock tower , under which an arch connected Whitehall with St James's Park ; two wings enclosed a courtyard with two large sentry boxes for mounted troopers on the Whitehall side, facing the palace gate. Entry to the park, then an enclosed private garden, was controlled by special ivory passes issued to favoured courtiers ,

243-514: The Duke of Wellington (1827–28 and 1842–1852). Wellington's coffin rested in this room on the night before his state funeral in 1852 . The final Commander-in-Chief at Horse Guards was Prince George, Duke of Cambridge , who was so reluctant to move to the new War Office building at Cumberland House in Pall Mall that he had to be ordered to vacate the building by Queen Victoria in 1858. Wellington's desk

270-523: The King's Life Guard . Although still in military use, part of the building houses the Household Cavalry Museum which is open to the public. It also functions as a gateway between Whitehall and St James's Park . The first Horse Guards building was commissioned by King Charles II in 1663, on the site of a cavalry stables which had been built on the tiltyard of the Palace of Whitehall during

297-696: The Secretary at War , which would eventually become formalised as the War Office . Also located at Horse Guards was the office of the Commander-in-Chief of the Forces . Hence, for many decades the term 'Horse Guards' was used as a metonym for British Army headquarters. Two famous occupants of the office, a room originally intended for courts-martial , were Prince Frederick, Duke of York and Albany (1795–1809), popularly believed to be " The Grand Old Duke of York ", and

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324-572: The clockmaker to King George III . Prior to the completion of the clock of Big Ben in 1859, the Horse Guards Clock was the main public clock in Westminster. A dark stain above the Roman number two on the clock face is supposed to mark the time of the execution of King Charles I in 1649, which took place in the roadway outside Horse Guards. The annual ceremony of Trooping the Colour commences when

351-592: The neo-Palladian architect William Kent . John Vardy was born to a simple working family in Durham . His early training is obscure. His career at the Office of Works, which demanded most of his attention throughout his life, began in May 1736, when he was appointed Clerk of the Works at Greenwich Hospital . He was Clerk of the Works at Hampton Court Palace , January 1745 to 1746; Clerk of

378-493: The Great Hall at Hampton Court, and drew up Kent's ambitious designs for new Houses of Parliament , under Kent's direction. After Kent's death Vardy and Thomas Robinson saw Kent's Horse Guards , Whitehall, through to completion; Vardy published engravings of his redrawings of the plan and elevation. Vardy's routine at the Office of Works constrained his time to devote to private clients. His London buildings have mostly suffered

405-512: The Horse Guards Clock strikes eleven. The Household Cavalry Museum is the official museum of the Household Cavalry and is located in the Horse Guards. Visitors can view the horses in the 18th-century working stables through a glazed partition. Exhibits explain the training and history of the regiment and include ceremonial uniforms, regalia, royal standards, awards, musical instruments, horse furniture and silverware by Fabergé . Visitors to

432-635: The Household Cavalry regiments; the Life Guards who wear red tunics and white helmet-plumes, and the Blues and Royals who wear blue tunics and red plumes. However, some other mounted units from Britain and other Commonwealth realms occasionally mount the guard; the King's Troop, Royal Horse Artillery and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police are examples. When the monarch is in London, the guard consists of one officer and twelve other ranks including

459-653: The Works at Whitehall , Palace of Westminster and St James's Palace , December 1746 to 1754; Kensington Palace , July 1754 to 1761. He also served as Clerk of the Works at Chelsea Hospital and as Surveyor to the Mint. His relations with William Kent, his senior at the Board of Works, began around 1736 and remained close. Vardy prepared for publication the classic of the Palladian revival, Some Designs of Mr. Inigo Jones and Mr. William Kent , 1744. He redrew and engraved Kent's drawing of

486-500: The colours printed on the face of a large clock, its face divided into four sections. By examining the colours, observers could tell how old the reports were, and develop vectors for the targets to aid the direction of the defences. This system was retained in the post-war era, eventually expanding in stages until it covered the entirety of the UK in what was (later) known as the Dowding system . At

513-411: The court transferred to St James's Palace, therefore the function of Horse Guards changed to controlling the ceremonial approach to St James's from Westminster. In the following decades, Horse Guards was increasingly used as administrative offices for the growing regular army and soon became overcrowded. The fabric of the building was also allowed to deteriorate; pieces of falling masonry were said to be

540-477: The direction of Kent's assistant, John Vardy and William Robinson from the Office of Works . The cost of the buildings was £65,000 and took nearly ten years to complete. The Household Cavalry moved into the northern wing of the uncompleted building in 1755; at that time, there was stabling for 62 horses compared to 17 today. Originally, the two wings were connected to the central block by single storey ranges; in 1803-5

567-472: The end of the war, the following airfields came under the direct control of LADA: This World War I article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This London -related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Horse Guards (building) Horse Guards is a historic building in the City of Westminster , London , between Whitehall and Horse Guards Parade . It

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594-477: The fate of city constructions and have gone. His most prominent surviving work is Spencer House, St. James's , where, ironically the chief fame is garnered by the very early neoclassical interiors of the upper floor, by James "Athenian" Stuart . For Joseph Damer , Vardy probably designed Dorchester House, Park Lane, London, begun in 1751–52. He exhibited designs for interiors at the Society of Artists, 1764. The house

621-545: The inspection out of respect for tradition. Every morning, the mounted King's Life Guard rides from Hyde Park Barracks in Knightsbridge , by way of Hyde Park Corner , Constitution Hill and The Mall , to take over guard duties in a ceremony at 11:00 am, or 10:00 am on Sundays. The guard is usually provided by the Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment , which consists of a squadron from each of

648-455: The museum are welcome to watch the afternoon inspection of the guards and horses that happens daily at 4 pm. This routine began in 1894 when Queen Victoria found the guards drinking and gambling in the afternoon instead of tending to their duty. She proclaimed that they would be punished by a four o'clock inspection daily for the next 100 years. This proclamation and punishment officially expired in 1994, but Queen Elizabeth II chose to continue

675-474: The parade from the windows of Wellington's office over the archway. The clock is sited in the turret above the main archway; it has two faces, one facing Whitehall and the other, Horse Guards Parade, each dial being 7 feet 5 inches (2.26 metres) in diameter. It strikes the quarter-hours on two bells. Originally made by Thwaites in 1756, the clock was rebuilt in 1815–16 by Benjamin Lewis Vulliamy ,

702-526: Was built in the mid-18th century, replacing an earlier building, as a barracks and stables for the Household Cavalry . The current and previous buildings were, between the early 18th century and 1858, the main military headquarters for the British Empire . Horse Guards originally formed the entrance to the Palace of Whitehall and later St James's Palace ; for that reason it is still ceremonially defended by

729-646: Was demolished in 1849. Vardy's will mentions his brother Thomas Vardy , carver in Park Street, Grosvenor Square, and his son, John Vardy Jr. who succeeded his father as Surveyor to the Royal Mint. He remodeled and extended Giacomo Leoni 's Queensberry House in Burlington Gardens , for Henry Paget , from 1785 to 1789; as Uxbridge House it survives, housing the Royal Bank of Scotland . His niece Sarah married

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