A design for the funeral carriage of the Duke of Wellington is to be sold at auction
A pencil-drawn design for the funeral carriage of the Duke of Wellington, best known for his defeat of Napoleon Bonaparte at Waterloo in 1815, is to be sold at auction.
Known as the Iron Duke, Wellington was hailed as a military hero and twice served as prime minister. He died in 1852 aged 83.
An original 1852 design for Wellington's funeral carriage, created by the artist Richard Redgrave for Prince Albert, is to be offered for sale at Cheffins auctioneers in Cambridge.
The 26cm by 35cm drawing, in pencil with white highlights, is expected to fetch between £5,000 and £8,000.
The 156-year-old design has been privately owned since 2005 when it was bought for £7,440.
Seller Graham Rust, who is also an artist, said he acquired it as a collector of Redgrave's work and he had a family connection.
Rust, 84, who lives near Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, said his distant cousin Evelyn Redgrave was the great-great-granddaughter of Richard Redgrave.
He said the design had hung in his library but he was "in the process of downsizing" and "now feels like the right moment to let it pass to a new custodian".
The Iron Duke died in 1852 at the age of 83
The complete funeral carriage measured 27ft long (8.2 metres), 10ft (three metres) wide and 17ft (five metres) high. It was pulled by 12 horses, and the cortege was said to have been watched by more than one million people.
Prince Albert oversaw its creation, insisting it should serve as a powerful symbol of British military achievement and statesmanship.
The drawing is inscribed: "First idea of the Wellington Funeral car / this is the drawing shewn (sic) to H.R.H. Prince Albert & approved by him."
Redgrave produced the design at short notice after earlier proposals were rejected.
According to his memoir, when the sketch was presented at Windsor, Prince Albert immediately approved it, declaring: "This is the thing!"
The finished carriage was one of the largest ever constructed, cast from more than 18 tonnes of bronze taken from cannons captured at the Battle of Waterloo.
Reaction to the carriage was mixed, with Queen Victoria recording her admiration for its grandeur - but Charles Dickens criticised it for its ugliness.
Brett Tryner, a director at Cheffins, said: "The Duke of Wellington's state funeral was one of the defining events of the 19th Century, and this drawing is central to that story."
The design will be offered for auction by Cheffins as part of The Fine Sale on 25 March.
Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.
After the landslide: Can India
A reset of the frayed relationship is possible, say analysts. But it will require restraint - and reciprocity.(2 )Readerstime:2026-02-15
Motorbike raids on villages ki
Assailants shot dead or cut the throats of their victims, lit homes on fire and abducted multiple people in Niger state, Nigeria.(2 )Readerstime:2026-02-15
An abduction, a Bitcoin demand
Samantha Guthrie‘s fame has helped turn her mother‘s abduction into a national obsession.(2 )Readerstime:2026-02-15
'Trump will be gone in three y
Opposition politicians flocked to a summit in Munich to offer an alternative to America First - and stake a claim as future party leaders.(2 )Readerstime:2026-02-15Afghan asylum seeker guilty of
The 12-year-old suffered "extremely horrific sexual offences" in the Nuneaton attack, police say.2026-02-10Victims of shootings in Canada
Eight people were killed, ranging in age from 11 to 39, with 25 people injured in the shootings at a school and a home.2026-02-13ICE agents may have lied about
ICE chief Todd Lyons says the two officers were immediately placed on administrative leave.2026-02-14How off-the-shelf drones are c
Insurgents have carried out a wave of drone strikes on military positions in the region.2026-02-09