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Groom in Waiting

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The office of Groom in Waiting (sometimes hyphenated as Groom-in-Waiting) was a post in the Royal Household of the United Kingdom, which in earlier times was usually held by more than one person at a time – in the late Middle Ages there might be dozens of persons with the rank, though the Esquires and Knights of the Body were more an important and select group. Grooms-in-Waiting to other members of the Royal Family and Extra Grooms in Waiting were also sometimes appointed. For the general history of court valets or grooms see Valet de chambre.

From the time of the Restoration (1660), the king was attended by Grooms of the Bedchamber, whose functions as attendants on the monarch's person were performed in the reign of Queen Anne by Women of the Bedchamber. By the time of Queen Victoria, however, the majority of political offices no longer involving regular attendance on the sovereign, there were appointed, in addition to the Queen's Women of the Bedchamber, eight Grooms in Waiting who would discharge those political and social functions of the Grooms of the Bedchamber which could not be undertaken by the Queen's attendants of the female sex. After Queen Victoria's reign, the nomenclature of "Grooms in Waiting" was retained in preference to "Grooms of the Bedchamber".

One of the holders of the office was designated the Parliamentary Groom in Waiting from about 1859, when it became customary to appoint a Member of Parliament who was a supporter of the government of the day. In addition to his political functions, the Parliamentary Groom in Waiting was in attendance on the Queen with the other grooms. The office became vacant in 1891, when Brownlow Cecil, Baron Burghley was promoted to the similar political office of Vice-Chamberlain of the Household. The political office fell into disuse in 1892, since which time it has not been revived, although this did not affect the non-political, court position of Groom in Waiting.

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List of Parliamentary Grooms in Waiting

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List of all Grooms in Waiting

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Victoria (1837–1901 )

In Ordinary

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  • 17 July 183718 December 1842 General Sir Frederick Augustus Wetherall
  • 7 November 184215 December 1850 General Sir William Lumley
  • 31 December 18443 June 1895 Charles Augustus Murray
  • 24 September 18593 May 1860 Lieutenant-General Berkeley Drummond
  • 28 March 186016 August 1865 General Sir Frederick Stovin
  • 1 April 186126 December 1861 Colonel Lord James Murray
  • 26 December 18611 June 1867 Colonel Francis Seymour
  • 30 July 186622 January 1901 Lieutenant Walter George Stirling
  • 24 February 187610 July 1890 Lieutenant General Francis Seymour
  • 21 December 187711 March 1881 Lieutenant Colonel William Cavendish
  • 23 October 187822 March 1880 Captain Fleetwood Edwards
  • 29 December 188214 December 1888 Colonel George Liddell
  • 13 April 188430 June 1884 Alexander Grantham Yorke
  • 15 March 188822 January 1901 Major-General Thomas Dennehy
  • 23 June 189131 December 1891 Admiral Sir John Edmund Commerell
  • 31 December 189115 January 1896 Admiral Lord Frederick Kerr
  • 16 December 189522 January 1901 General Sir Michael Biddulph

Edward VII (1901–1910)

In Ordinary

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  • 23 July 19016 May 1910 The Hon. Alexander Grantham Yorke
  • 23 July 19016 May 1910 Major-General Sir Thomas Dennehy
  • 23 July 19011 April 1909 Sir Maurice Holzmann
  • 23 July 190123 July 1905 General Sir Michael Biddulph
  • 23 October 19056 May 1910 Admiral Sir John Fullerton
  • 25 June 19096 May 1910 Sir Donald Mackenzie Wallace

George V (1910–1936)

In Ordinary

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Edward VIII (1936)

In Ordinary

No ordinary grooms-in-waiting were appointed to attend Edward VIII during his reign as King-Emperor.

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George VI (1936–1952)

In Ordinary

  • 2 March 193711 December 1945 Rear-Admiral Sir Basil Vernon Brooke
  • 2 March 19373 August 1937 Commander Sir Harold George Campbell[12][13]
  • 2 March 19376 February 1952 Arthur Horace Penn, Esq.
  • 2 March 193730 January 1942 Colonel Sir George Sidney Herbert, Bart.
  • 3 August 19376 February 1952 Captain Richard John Streatfeild (in the room of Commander Sir Harold George Campbell) [14]
  • 3 August 19376 February 1952 Brigadier-General George Paynter

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Elizabeth II (1952–2022 )

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