ROYALS ROYCE First look at King Charles’ new 19ft carriage 6 years in making – from WWI timepiece to 42 portraits of Kings and Queens
FOR the ultimate in heir suspension, take a look at the latest royal carriage being painstakingly built by an Australian master craftsman who is fighting cancer like King Charles.
Jim Frecklington, 74, who has already made two royal coaches, has toiled almost every day for six years on the 3¼-ton gold leaf-embossed work of art at his warehouse in Sydney.
The latest royal carriage has been created by Australian master craftsman Jim Frecklington, who is fighting cancer like King Charles
Jim hopes Charles, 75, and Queen Camilla, 77, will pay a visit to see it on their current tour Down Under, the royals above at Admiralty House in Sydney
He hopes King Charles, 75, and Queen Camilla, 77, will pay a visit to see it on their current tour Down Under so he can show them the extra-ordinarily intricate creation he hopes to complete this year.
Jim revealed the carriage, which takes many of its design cues from Rolls-Royce limousines, for the first time to The Sun on Sunday.
The craftsman, who first worked for the Royal Family in London in 1972, confessed it will be his last, and possibly the last, as carriage-building is a dying art.
He said: “If I didn’t make it, no one else in the world would.
Jim, whose prostate and bowel cancer has spread to his lungs, admits he has been “slowed down a bit” by his illness and fortnightly chemotherapy sessions.
But it is no surprise the 19ft long, 11ft 2in high coach, which will be pulled through London by six horses, has taken so long.
Jim, who corresponds with Charles about his work, has gone to great lengths at his own expense to turn the vehicle into a “time capsule” incorporating unique components.
The crown on top of the carriage is made from timber donated in 2019 by the Dean of Westminster from Westminster Abbey.
The wood is believed to be at least 1,000 years old. The roof is decorated with 56 bronze flowers representing every Commonwealth country’s national flower.
Jim has placed Australia’s — the golden wattle — above the door through which the King and Queen will one day step.
The undercarriage is spotted gum, an Australian hardwood, and the cabin is made from aluminium panels shaped by hand on an English wheeling machine.
It is painted in black and royal claret and embossed with the King’s insignia and cyphers and a floral design created by Jim.
The metal is the same used in Rolls-Royce cars. Red wheel hubs embossed with a gold crown logo do not rotate with the wheels, another idea copied from the luxury motors.
Behind the cabin, there are door handles acquired from the Sydney Opera House to help keep the footman or brakeman steady. The steps and undercarriage contain steel from the Sydney Harbour Bridge donated following recent renovation work.
Bronze bearings in the steering are from the 3801 Australian steam train built in 1943. It was retired in 1962 and has been preserved.
Four brass lanterns remain on Jim’s workshop table but are ready to be installed and fitted with Waterford Crystal.
‘No stone unturned’
The larger panels display animal symbols of England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland, and the smaller ones each national flower.
The coach has thick all-rubber tyres on its vast wheels and hydraulic stabilisers to stop the body rocking.
Jim used a similar suspension technique on his other royal carriages — the Australian State Coach finished in 1989 and Diamond Jubilee State Coach, in 2013.
It is a far cry from the Gold State Coach which Queen Elizabeth II claimed made her feel “travel sick” at her Coronation in 1953.
Jim said: “The reason why I built this one like this is that Her Late Majesty said she didn’t like the ride on the Golden State Coach.