Elizabeth
II: In Private. In Public. The Inside Story. 9 April 2026
by Robert
Hardman (Author)
‘Sensational’
Daily Mail
Published
for her centenary, Elizabeth II is a brilliant new portrait of the late Queen,
full of fresh revelations. From the Sunday Times number one bestselling author
of Charles III, it is the essential story of her life and record-breaking
reign.
Biographer
and royal commentator Robert Hardman has had unique access to the world of the
late Queen – including family, staff, advisers and even the last state visitor
of her record-breaking reign, President Donald Trump himself.
As
daughter, wife, mother and sovereign, Elizabeth lived fascinating parallel
lives, both in private and in public. But she remained something of a mystery –
beloved, even revered, modest yet daunting, naturally shy but globally
recognizable, inscrutable and also authentic. She was grand but so familiar
that we felt we knew her. Yet we would always be left asking the same question:
‘What’s she really like?’
The only
biographer to have interviewed all the senior members of the Royal Family, some
of them several times, no one has written more authoritatively on Queen
Elizabeth II than Robert Hardman. Here he has crafted a gripping story of
drama, devotion, triumph, tragedy, humour and conflict; of an outwardly
stoical, inwardly complex woman whose love of family, love of country and duty
to the Crown might have pulled her in different directions but never derailed
her; a global stateswoman who wielded her great authority with charm and
understatement.
Elizabeth
II will explain why the Queen was not merely the most famous woman in the
world. She was one of history’s all-time greats.
‘If you
read one biography on Elizabeth II, this is the one . . . magnificent’ – Simon
Sebag Montefiore, author of The World: A Family History
Arundells,
located in Salisbury's Cathedral Close, is a 13th-century medieval canonry
transformed from a dilapidated state into the cherished home of former Prime
Minister Sir Edward Heath. Purchased by Heath in 1985, this Grade II*-listed
building serves as a curated sanctuary, displaying his extensive art
collection, political memorabilia, and musical interests.
A History
of Transformation
Medieval
Origins: Originally constructed around 1213 as a canonry, the house retains its
medieval foundation.
18th
Century Facade: The building received a comprehensive rebuilding in 1718,
resulting in its current Queen Anne classical appearance.
Neglect
and Restoration: After periods of decline in the mid-20th century, the house
was extensively restored after being purchased by Robert and Kate Hawkins,
before Ted Heath bought the leasehold in 1985.
The Prime
Ministerial Sanctuary
Sir
Edward Heath (Prime Minister from 1970–1974) lived at Arundells from 1985 until
his death in 2005.
Eclectic
Collection: The house acts as a time capsule, showcasing paintings by Winston
Churchill and John Singer Sargent, Chinese ceramics, Japanese prints, and
cartoons.
Personal
Interests: It features his Steinway piano and significant sailing memorabilia
from his times as an accomplished yachtsman.
Walled
Garden: The property includes two acres of gardens that stretch to the
confluence of the rivers Avon and Nadder.
Visiting
Arundells
Charitable
Trust: Heath bequeathed the house to the Sir Edward Heath Charitable Foundation
to allow public access.
Opening
Times: It is generally open to the public, offering guided tours of the house
and access to the gardens.
Location:
Situated at 59 The Close, Salisbury, offering stunning views of the Cathedral.
Alvis Car and
Engineering Company Ltd was a British manufacturing company in
Coventry from 1919 to 1967. In addition to automobiles designed for
the civilian market, the company also produced racing cars, aircraft
engines, armoured cars and other armoured fighting vehicles.
Car manufacturing
ended after the company became a subsidiary of Rover in 1965, but
armoured vehicle manufacture continued. Alvis became part of British
Leyland and then in 1982 was sold to United Scientific Holdings,
which renamed itself Alvis plc.
The original
company, T.G. John and Company Ltd., was founded in 1919 by Thomas
George John (1880–1946). Its first products were stationary
engines, carburetors and motorscooters. Following complaints from the
Avro aircraft company whose logo bore similarities to the original
winged green triangle, the more familiar inverted red triangle
incorporating the word "Alvis" evolved. On 14 December 1921
the company officially changed its name to The Alvis Car and
Engineering Company Ltd. Geoffrey de Freville (1883–1965) designed
the first Alvis engine and is also responsible for the company name.
The origin of the
name Alvis has been the subject of a great deal of speculation over
the years. Some have suggested that de Freville proposed the name
Alvis as a compound of the words "aluminium" and "vis"
(meaning "strength" in Latin), or perhaps it may have been
derived from the Norse mythological weaponsmith, Alvíss. De Freville
however vigorously rejected all of these theories. In 1921 he
specifically stated that the name had no meaning whatsoever, and was
chosen simply because it could be easily pronounced in any language.
He reaffirmed this position in the early 1960s, stating that any
other explanations for the source of the name were purely
coincidental.
Production was
relocated to Holyhead Road in Coventry, where from 1922 to 1923 they
also made the Buckingham car. In 1922 George Thomas Smith-Clarke
(1884–1960) left his job as assistant works manager at Daimler and
joined Alvis as Chief Engineer and Works Manager. Smith-Clarke was
accompanied by William M. Dunn, who also left his job as a
draughtsman at Daimler to become Chief Draughtsman at Alvis. This
partnership lasted for nearly 28 years and was responsible for
producing some of the most successful products in the company's
history. Smith-Clarke left in 1950, and Dunn assumed Smith-Clarke's
position as chief engineer, remaining in that position until 1959.
De Freville's first
engine design was a four-cylinder engine with aluminium pistons and
pressure lubrication, which was unusual for that time. The first car
model using de Freville's engine was the Alvis 10/30. It was an
instant success and established the reputation for quality
workmanship and superior performance for which the company was to
become famous. The original 10/30 side-valve engine was improved,
becoming by 1923 the overhead valve Alvis 12/50, a highly successful
sports car that was produced until 1932. Around 700 of the 12/50
models and 120 of the later Alvis 12/60 models survive today.
1927 saw the
introduction of the six-cylinder Alvis 14.75 and this engine became
the basis for the long line of luxurious six-cylinder Alvis cars
produced up to the outbreak of the Second World War. These cars were
elegant and full of technical innovations. Independent front
suspension and the world's first all-synchromesh gearbox came in 1933
followed by servo assisted brakes. The Alvis 12/75 model was
introduced in 1928, a model bristling with innovation, such as
front-wheel drive, in-board brakes, overhead camshaft and, as an
option, a Roots type supercharger.
As with many
upmarket engineering companies of the time, Alvis did not produce
their own coachwork, relying instead on the many available
coachbuilders in the Midlands area, such as Carbodies, Charlesworth
Bodies, Cross and Ellis, Duncan Industries (Engineers) Ltd, E.
Bertelli Ltd, Grose, Gurney Nutting, Hooper, Lancefield Coachworks,
Martin Walter Ltd, Mayfair, Mulliners, Tickford, Vanden Plas, Weymann
Fabric Bodies, and William Arnold Ltd. Several cars also survive with
quite exotic one-off bodywork from other designers such as Holbrook,
a U.S. coachbuilder.[2]
In 1936 the company
name was shortened to Alvis Ltd, and aircraft engine and armoured
vehicle divisions were added to the company by the beginning of the
Second World War. Smith-Clarke designed several models during the
1930s and 1940s, including the six-cylinder Speed 20, the Speed 25,
and the Alvis 4.3 Litre model.
Second World War
lubrication, which was unusual for that time. The first car model
using de Freville's engine was the Alvis 10/30. It was an instant
success and established the reputation for quality workmanship and
superior performance for which the company was to become famous. The
original 10/30 side-valve engine was improved, becoming by 1923 the
overhead valve Alvis 12/50, a highly successful sports car that was
produced until 1932. Around 700 of the 12/50 models and 120 of the
later Alvis 12/60 models survive today.
Car production was
initially suspended in September 1939 following the outbreak of war
in Europe, but was later resumed and production of the 12/70, Crested
Eagle, Speed 25, and 4.3 Litre continued well into 1940. The car
factory was severely damaged on 14 November 1940 as a result of
several bombing raids on Coventry by the German Luftwaffe, although
ironically the armaments factory suffered little damage. Much
valuable cutting gear and other equipment was lost and car production
was suspended for the duration of the war, only resuming during the
latter part of 1946. Despite this, Alvis carried out war production
on aircraft engines (as sub-contractor of Rolls-Royce Limited) and
other aircraft equipment.
Car production
resumed with a four-cylinder model, the TA 14, based on the pre-war
12/70. A solid, reliable and attractive car, the TA 14 fitted well
the mood of sober austerity in post war Britain, but much of the
magic attaching to the powerful and sporting pre-war models had gone
and life was not easy for a specialist car manufacturer. Not only had
Alvis lost their car factory but many of the prewar coachbuilders had
not survived either and those that had were quickly acquired by other
manufacturers. In fact, the post-war history of Alvis is dominated by
the quest for reliable and reasonably priced coachwork.
1950s
Smith-Clarke retired
in 1950 and Dunn took over as chief engineer. In 1950 a new chassis
and six-cylinder 3–litre engine was announced and this highly
successful engine became the basis of all Alvis models until
production ceased in 1967. Saloon bodies for the TA 21, as the new
model was called, again came from Mulliners of Birmingham as they had
for the TA 14, with Tickford producing the dropheads. But with the
first of these committing themselves in October 1954 to supply only
Standard Triumph who purchased it in 1958 and the second being
acquired by David Brown owner of Aston Martin Lagonda in late 1955,
it was becoming clear that new arrangements would have to be made.
Some of the most original and beautiful designs on the 3 Litre
chassis were being produced by master coachbuilder Carrosserie Herman
Graber of Switzerland and indeed these often one-off–designed cars
are highly sought after today. Graber had begun to use TA 14 chassis
soon after the war building three Tropic coupés which were much
admired. When the Three Litre chassis was introduced his bodies
displayed at the Geneva Motor Shows in 1951 and 1952 attracted
sufficient interest for Graber to set up a standing order of 30
chassis per year. Swiss-built Graber coupés were displayed on the
Alvis stand at both Paris and London Motor Shows in October 1955.
With a licence in
place, from late 1955 all Alvis bodies became based on Graber designs
however few chassis and few bodies were built over the next two
years. Around 15 or 16 TC108/Gs were built by Willowbrook Limited of
Loughborough and Willowbrook was subsequently taken over by Duple
Coachbuilders. Over the same two years Graber built 22 TC 108Gs and
complained that if he had received chassis he would have committed
himself to buying 20 a year. Only after late 1958 with the launch of
the TD 21 did something resembling full-scale production resume as
Rolls-Royce subsidiary Park Ward began to build the new bodies now
modified in many small ways. These cars, the TD 21 and its later
variants, the TE 21 and finally the TF 21 are well built, attractive
and fast cars. However it was clear by the mid-1960s that with a
price tag of nearly double that of the mass-produced Jaguar, the end
could not be far off.
From 1952 to 1955
Alec Issigonis, the creator of the later Mini, worked for Alvis and
designed a new model with a V8 engine which proved too expensive to
produce.
1960s
Rover took a
controlling interest in Alvis in 1965 and a Rover-designed
mid-engined V8 coupé prototype named the P6BS was rumoured to be the
new Alvis model but with the takeover by British Leyland this too was
shelved. By the time the TF 21 was launched in 1966, (available, like
its predecessors in both saloon and drophead form and with either
manual or automatic gearbox), the model was beginning to show its age
despite a top speed of 127 mph – the fastest Alvis ever produced.
With only 109 sold and with political troubles aplenty in the UK car
manufacturing business at that time, production finally ceased in
1967.
In 1968, a
management buyout of the car operations was finalised and all the
Alvis car design plans, customer records, stock of parts and
remaining employees were transferred to Red Triangle.
1970s to present
As part of Rover,
Alvis Limited was incorporated into British Leyland but was bought by
United Scientific Holdings plc in 1981. Subsequently the company's
name was changed to Alvis plc. Alvis plc acquired British truck
manufacturer Universal Power Drives in 1994, naming their new
subsidiary Alvis Unipower Limited. The trucks were subsequently
branded as Alvis-Unipower. In 1998, Alvis plc acquired the armoured
vehicle business of GKN plc, and the main UK manufacturing operation
was moved from Coventry to Telford. The site of the Alvis works in
Holyhead Road is now an out-of-town shopping complex, but its name,
Alvis Retail Park, reflects the heritage of the site. In 2002 Alvis
plc purchased Vickers Defence Systems to form the subsidiary Alvis
Vickers Ltd, which was in turn purchased by BAE Systems in 2004. BAE
Systems ended the use of the Alvis distinctive red triangle
trademark.
In 2009, Red
Triangle negotiated the legal transfer of the Alvis car trademarks.
The following year, the company announced that the 4.3 Litre Short
Chassis tourer would once again be available. All Alvis' records
remain intact at the company’s Kenilworth headquarters along with a
large stock of period parts. One of the men to have worked on the
very last Alvis car produced in 1967 is still retained by Red
Triangle in a training capacity. Built to the original plans, the new
car has been named the "Continuation Series", to reflect
the 73-year interruption in its production between 1937 and 2010. It
differs only in detail from the pre-war examples: for emissions, the
engine is governed by an electronic fuel injection system with
electronic ignition, brakes are hydraulic rather than cable, the
steering column collapsible and the rear light arrangement
reconfigured to conform to modern standards.
1935 Alvis 4.3 Litre
1936 Alvis Speed 20
1936 Alvis Speed 25
1948 Fourteen
drophead coupé-cabriolet
1952 Three Litre
sports saloon
Three Litre TC
21/100 Grey Lady sports saloon
1957 Three Litre TC
108G fixed head coupé
1967 Three Litre
series IV drophead coupé or cabriolet