Royal George Hotel, Perth Explained

Royal George Hotel
Former Names:The George Inn
Status:Complete
Building Type:Hotel
Architectural Style:Victorian renaissance
Address:54 George Street
Perth
Location Country:Scotland
Coordinates:56.398°N -3.4272°W
Namesake:George III
Destruction Date:-->
Owner:Anderson Hotels
Floor Count:3 (plus attic)
Number Of Rooms:45
Public Transit: Perth
Embedded:
Embed:yes
Designation1:Category B Listed Building
Designation1 Offname:GEORGE STREET 47-51 (E SIDE) ROYAL GEORGE HOTEL (ODD NUMBERS)
Designation1 Date:26 August 1977

The Royal George Hotel (also known as The Royal George) is a hotel and restaurant in Perth, Scotland. It is a Category B listed building dating to 1773.[1] [2] [3] [4] Its main entrance is on George Street,[5] though its Tay Street frontage, overlooking the River Tay, is more well known. It is named for George III.[1]

Notable visitors to the hotel include Empress Eugenie and Queen Victoria, her husband, Albert, Prince Consort, and their children, who stayed there on 29 September 1848,[6] [1] during their journey south after holidaying at Balmoral Castle.[7] [8] (William Murray, 4th Earl of Mansfield, was out of town and, thus, they were unable to stay at Scone Palace, just under two miles to the north.)[8] It was Victoria's first time staying in a hotel.[6] [8] After breakfast at the hotel the following morning, the family left for Carlisle on the recently built Scottish Central Railway.[7] Then named The George Inn,[9] [10] the business was renamed The Royal George Hotel in her honour.[7] (The street adjacent to the property on its southern side is named George Inn Lane.) Both the Royal Warrant and two lamps from the room the monarch slept in are still in the hotel today.

Queen Victoria returned to Perth in 1864 to unveil a statue of her husband, who died three years earlier, at the North Inch.[11]

Local architect Donald Alexander Stewart, in partnership with Robert Matthew Mitchell, did some reconstruction work on the hotel in 1927.[12]

Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex, dined at the hotel in 2003.[8]

The hotel has 45 rooms.[13]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Perth: The Postcard Collection, Jack Gillon (2020)
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=cRAFAAAAYAAJ&dq=the+george+inn+perth&pg=PA19-IA1 Guide to the City and County of Perth
  3. The Scots Magazine, Volume 70, DC Thomson (1808), p. 318
  4. https://portal.historicenvironment.scot/designation/LB39439 GEORGE STREET 47-51 (E SIDE) ROYAL GEORGE HOTEL (ODD NUMBERS)
  5. Association and Enlightenment Scottish Clubs and Societies, 1700–1830, Bucknell University Press,
  6. The Tourist's Hand-book to Perth and Neighbourhood (1849), p. 39
  7. The History of Perth: From the Earliest Period to the Present Time, Thomas Hay Marshall and Henry Adamson (1849), p. 483
  8. https://theroyalgeorgehotel.co.uk/royal-george-royalty.html Royal George Royalty
  9. https://books.google.com/books?id=dDUaAQAAIAAJ&dq=the+george+inn+perth&pg=PA343 The Tradesman
  10. Traditions of Perth, George Penny (1836), p. 142
  11. https://portal.historicenvironment.scot/designation/LB39336 Albert, Prince Consort, Statue To, North Inch
  12. http://www.scottisharchitects.org.uk/architect_full.php?id=202131 Donald Alexander Stewart
  13. https://theroyalgeorgehotel.co.uk/accommodation.html Accommodation