13 Secrets Of Buckingham Palace

Laura Reynolds
By Laura Reynolds Last edited 10 months ago
13 Secrets Of Buckingham Palace

A look at some little-known facts about the royal residence.

Buckingham Palace facts: The exterior frontage and gates of Buckingham Palace in London
The world-famous exterior of Buckingham Palace. Photo: Hulki Okan Tabak via Unsplash

1. The basics

It's a pretty big place, consisting of 775 rooms (including 19 State rooms, 52 Royal and guest bedrooms, 188 staff bedrooms, 92 offices and 78 bathrooms). The Ballroom is the largest room (36.6m long, 18m wide) and opened in 1856 to celebrate the end of the Crimean War.

The garden is the largest private garden in London, covering 39 acres.

The staff — all 800 of them — can make use of the Court Post Office within the Palace, run by Royal Mail. Here's what it looked like in 1941. The Palace even has its own Coutts ATM, as confirmed by Queen Elizabeth II's bank manager, and rumour has it that there's a swimming pool, doctor's office and cinema in there too.

2. The tunnel rumours

Rumours of tunnels linking Buckingham Palace to various other parts of London are prevalent. As we've already said, it's unlikely that a tunnel exists linking the palace to the tube. An underground link-up with Whitehall and the Houses of Parliament is plausible, given the warren of Whitehall tunnels that is known to exist, but unproven.

Other unproven rumours include a tunnel between the palace and Clarence House (former residence of the Queen Mother), and a branch of the Post Office Railway running right under the Palace.

Buckingham Palace facts: Inside the Mail Rail tunnels elsewhere in London - is there a similar tunnel under Buckingham Palace?
Does the Mail Rail run directly beneath the palace? Maybe. Photo by Matt Brown

3. London's oldest helicopter pad

The garden is the oldest helicopter pad in London... sort of. A helicopter was first landed in the garden just before Queen Elizabeth II’s Coronation in 1953, not on an official helipad, but in a helicopter landing area, which continued to be used for many years.

Nearly 50 years later, in 2000, the Royal family had had enough of the lawn being destroyed by helicopter landings, so an official helipad was built in the gardens. A concrete helipad was considered far too unsightly, so the Royal helipad is created from a layer of matting underneath grass.

By comparison, the heliport at Battersea opened in 1959, and London's Air Ambulance has been operating from the top of the Royal London in Whitechapel since 1989, putting the Royals well ahead of the trend in helicopters.

Buckingham Palace facts: The exterior of Buckingham Palace, behind flower beds filled with yellow flowers.
Photo: Ferdinand Stöhr via Unsplash

4. Royal births and deaths

Only one monarch was both born in the palace and died there: Edward VII. More recently, Queen Elizabeth II gave birth to King Charles III and Prince Andrew at the palace.

5. Oldest part

The oldest part of the palace is the wine vaults located below the west wing, dating back to 1760. Back then, it was known as Buckingham House, and belonged to the family of the Duke of Buckingham, which is where it got its name. In 1761, George III acquired the building for the royal family, although it didn't become an official royal residence until years later.

6. Down by the river

The 'lost' River Tyburn runs right below the Palace, although it's now more of a sewer than a river. Diamond Geezer reckons it passes "underneath the front courtyard and beneath the south wing", but we don't fancy going down there to confirm it.

7. Dogs ruled

Buckingham Palace facts: a mural depicting the Queen on a hoverboard holding three corgi leads
The Queen and her corgis (street art in East Dulwich in 2016). Photo: Londonist

We all know that Queen Elizabeth II loved a corgi, but according to royal journalist Brian Hoey's 2011 book, Not In Front Of The Corgis, they ruled the roost:

The Queen's Corgis are allowed unrestricted access to any part of any Royal residence; nowhere is off-limits...They also are not fully house-trained so a supply of soda water and blotting paper is kept at hand just in case of any ‘little accidents.'

8. The balcony

The famous balcony has hosted various members of the royal clan on all manner of occasions, including as the site of a 34-year-old Prince William getting a telling off from Granny.

The tradition of the Royals appearing on the balcony began with Queen Victoria, who made an appearance there for the opening of the Great Exhibition in Hyde Park in 1851.

The appearance at the end of the Trooping the Colour celebrations was a tradition introduced by George IV.

Buckingham Palace facts: a guard on duty outside Buckingham Palace wearing a red tunic and bearskin hat
Photo: Jean Carlo Emer via Unsplash

9. Nearly a museum

Buckingham House, which once stood on the spot where the palace now stands, was once considered as a potential site for the British Museum, but it was considered too expensive.

10. Mulberry bushes

Buckingham Palace is the holder of the National Collection of mulberries. The whole Palace is built on a site where King James I had a mulberry garden planted in an attempt to rear silkworms in the 1600s. He was unsuccessful, as he had purchased the wrong species.

11. Why Marble Arch was moved

Buckingham Palace facts: Marble Arch
Marble Arch in its current position - it previously sat outside Buckingham Palace. Photo: Matt Brown

Marble Arch now sits at the north east corner of Hyde Park, but it was originally built in front of Buckingham Palace.

Queen Victoria was the first sovereign to use the palace as her official residence, and it soon became clear that it wasn't large enough for hosting official visitors. So, Marble Arch was moved in order for the fourth wing of the Palace to be built where it once stood.

12. Behind the scenes

When a state banquet is held at the palace, it can take up to five days to put together the banqueting table and lay it up ready for the occasion. Queen Elizabeth II was known to personally inspect the setup herself:

13. During the war

Buckingham Palace wasn't immune to the effects of the Blitz. It was hit nine times, some of them when King George VI and Queen Elizabeth (later the Queen Mother) were in residence.

The Palace Chapel was destroyed by a direct hit in 1940, at which the Queen Mother was reported to have said  "I’m glad we’ve been bombed. It makes me feel I can look the East End in the face."

Last Updated 02 May 2023