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Episode details

Radio 4,13 May 2019,14 mins

Available for over a year

Lucy Worsley, Chief Curator at Historic Royal Palaces, continues her exploration of Queen Victoria's reign through significant encounters. Queen Victoria found her personal staff - the ‘invisible people’ who kept her household running - through recommendations from her German relatives, and this is how Frieda Arnold, from Karlsruhe, entered her service. When Frieda arrived at Windsor Castle in 1854, Victoria would have found her new dresser quiet and efficient, and wouldn’t have suspected that she was sending detailed reports back to Germany revealing exactly what it was like to live at Windsor Castle. Frieda spent years in the closest of daily contact with the Queen whose clothes she cared for, garments including the beautiful dressing gown with mauve bows featured in this episode. The Queen’s wardrobe, sumptuous in quality but un-showy in style, formed a big part of her middle-of-the-road appeal. Women like Frieda, who saw the queen both in and out of her clothes, grew very intimate with her, and became almost her friends. Readers: Michael Bertenshaw, Sarah Ovens, Sabine Schereck Producer: Mark Burman First broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in May 2019.

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