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List of things named after Anne, Queen of Great Britain

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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This is a list of places and things named after Anne, Queen of Great Britain, who reigned from 1702 to 1714.

Not all things with "Queen Anne" in their name refer to Queen Anne (1665–1714). Anne's great-grandmother Anne of Denmark, the queen consort of King James I of England, lent her name to the theatrical company Queen Anne's Men, and Cape Ann, Massachusetts. Both queens are credited with lending their name to the plant Queen Anne's lace.[1][2]

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Art, architecture, and design

  • Queen Anne style architecture – A construction style in Great Britain during Anne's reign, and in the United States from the 1870s until the early 1900s (decade).
  • Queen Anne style furniture – A furniture style popular at the beginning of the 18th century. Lighter and more graceful than its predecessors, its distinguishing characteristics included its curvilinear design, cabriole-style legs, and scallop-shell carvings.
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Law and government

Militaria

Places

Buildings and streets

  • Princess Anne Street in Fredericksburg, Virginia, named before her accession.
  • Queen Anne Boulevard, Seattle
  • Queen Anne's Gate, Westminster, London, UK – a short street created by merging a square with an inn-yard. A bust of the Queen stands halfway along.
  • Queen Anne's Gate, an apartment complex in Weymouth, Massachusetts
  • Queen Anne's School, Caversham, Berkshire
  • Queen Anne Elementary School, Los Angeles, California
  • Queen Anne Hotel, San Francisco, California
  • Queen Anne Place, Los Angeles, California
  • Queen Anne Road, Teaneck, New Jersey
  • South Anne Street, Dublin, Ireland
  • Queen Anne Square, a park in downtown Newport, Rhode Island
  • Queen Square, Bloomsbury, London – There is a statue in the square of Queen Charlotte, wife of King George III, but the square itself was built in 1708 and named for Anne.
  • Queen Square, Bristol, UK – This was the first residential square built outside London, in 1702. Anne paid a visit to the site during construction.
  • St. Ann's Fort (St. Ann's Castle), The Garrison, Barbados – a large citadel built to protect the capital Bridgetown and the island of Barbados, constructed between 1703 and 1716. The Fort was part of the 19th century British Military Garrison and still stands today within the headquarters of the Barbados Defence Force. The Garrison is being considered by UNESCO for World Heritage Site status.
  • Ann Street, Brisbane, Australia.[citation needed] (Streets of Brisbane's CBD are all named after British Kings and Queens)
  • Queen Street, Portsmouth, UK. Bordering HM Dockyard. The dockyard wall, running along the north side of the western section of this road, is pierced by Victory gate at its western end. On the wall to the right of this gate (looking into the dockyard) is a plaque inscribed: "This wall was begun the 4th June and finished ye 13th December 1711".
  • Queen Anne Road, Harwich, Massachusetts, A Residential Road in Running From East Dennis To Chatham, With the Majority in Harwich.
  • Queen Anne Terrace, Plymouth, UK.
  • Queen Anne Drive, Dorset, UK.[6]

Geographical features

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Sports

Other

  • Fortnum & Mason Queen Anne Blend tea. "Created in 1907, our bicentennial year...commemorates the reigning sovereign in the year Fortnum & Mason first began."[8]
  • Hill, Thomson & Co Ltd. of Edinburgh released the "Queen Anne" Rare Scotch Whisky in 1884. Hill, Thomson – which was granted a Royal Warrant by Queen Victoria in 1838,[9] and held under the reign of Queen Elizabeth II[10] – merged with The Glenlivet distillery in 1970.[11]
  • Cunard Line's luxury ship Queen Anne entered the fleet in 2024 as the fourth ship, after Queen Elizabeth, Queen Victoria, and the flagship Queen Mary 2.[12] Together, the fleet's names were chosen as a means of "honouring the names of each Queen Regnant over the last millennium."[13]
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References

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