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Statue of
Queen Victoria
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In
late 1905 or early 1906 Prince Arthur,
Duke of
Connaught visited Aden as part of a tour of
units stationed in India, and Aden then was part
of the Bombay Presidency.
The Duke’s chief ceremonial duty in Aden was to
unveil the statue of Queen Victoria which had
been erected in the Prince of Wales Crescent at
Tawahi (Steamer Point).
The
commission of the 2-ton statue had been awarded
to S.C. Tweed in Britain. |

Unveiling ceremony. Soldiers from the Indian Army
battalion in Aden are providing a guard of honour and lining the route.

Queen Victoria Statue
1945-46
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"No
embassy is complete without a statue and the
requirement for the British Embassy in Aden is
filled by Queen Victoria. Sculptured by a
little-known Briton, S.C. Tweed, she was
unveiled in 1911 (see note below) on the
occasion of a visit by the then Prince of Wales.
She had been forgotten in Steamer Point Gardens
until August 1967, when it was suddenly feared
the old lady might suffer indignities at the
hands of the mob. So one night, working under
floodlights, a party of Royal Engineers
unceremoniously heaved the 2-ton statue onto a
truck and dumped it onto a pedestal facing the
embassy. Throughout the whole operation the
expression on Queen Victoria's face never
changed but then she was good at controlling her
feelings."
David Ledge 1983 |
Ed. The
statue was actually unveiled 1905
or early 1906
by the Duke of
Connaught and then visited by
King
George V in 1911
On the first of June 2002 the statue
of Queen Victoria, which had resided in the garden of
the British Consulate at Khormaksar for the past few
years, was re-instated to its original
place in Victoria Park Gardens, on the Crescent at Tawahi
(Steamer Point).
The Ambassador and staff and the Deputy
Governor of Aden and officials were present at the
ceremony to celebrate the Golden Jubilee of Her Majesty
the Queen.
As part of the Golden Jubilee celebrations, the derelict
clock and clock tower built by the British and
affectionately known as “Little Ben”, are being
refurbished and should be back to working order by
Ramadan.
H.E. Frances
Guy, British Ambassador to Yemen
In the years 1996 –1998, I was
working for the British Council as a teacher in Yemen.
My first year was in Sana’a and then in late summer
1997, I had the opportunity to go down to Aden to
re-open the British Council Centre and serve as
teacher/acting director. The Centre had closed because
of the 1994 civil war. It was located in what was still
called Ho Chi Minh Street in Khormaksar, the same street
as the old British Embassy.
It was felt that it would be good
if the statue could be released from where it was being
kept, apparently the back garden or yard of the Military
Museum in Crater. It had probably been there since
Marxist times. The museum was never open, as far as I
could tell, so I only have this on good hearsay.
Eventually, all the permissions were granted and the
statue was craned over the British Council wall and
positioned in the front garden facing the forecourt
leading to the entrance. The Queen looked very well,
surrounded by palms and tropical plants and was much
admired. I have a photo of the present Duke of
Gloucester standing in front of his great-great
grandmother. The Duke came to Aden to re-open the
Centre as part of a visit to Yemen with a British trade
mission. The Centre provided English language teaching
to individuals and organisations, including the refinery
at Little Aden, offered advice on education in the UK
and hosted cultural events.
I left at the end of my contract
and sadly, the British Council closed its Aden operation
again less than two years after the re-opening because
of the deteriorating security situation in Yemen. It
seems, from your site, that the statue was moved to the
British Consulate and subsequently to its original
location at Steamer Point.
David Mitchell |