King Billy Hull

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  1. King Billy Toilets Hull
  2. King Billy Hull Obituary
  3. King Billy Hull Biography
  4. King Billy Hull Height
  5. King Billy Hull Jr

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King billy gin hullKing Billy, as the statue is affectionately know, sits in the centre of the road of Low Gate in Hull. The place was actually where the bear baiting ring was in previous times. The statue is of King William III, William of Orange. Hull was the first large city in Britain to swear their allegiance to the new King when he deposed James II in 1685. This came about as Parliament thought that James was to change the state religion to Catholic and they wanted to remain Protestant. Williams mother, Mary, was daughter of Charles I and then William had married Mary, his first cousin and eldest surviving daughter of James II, when he was the Duke of York. She was therefore the next in line to the throne after James II. William refused however to be consort to Queen Mary or only as King during her lifetime and threatened to leave the country. Parliament thought it better to have a Protestant King and so it was the connivance of the Houses of Lords and Commons that declared them joint Rulers but William would exercise the regal power for both of them. They were crowned in April 1689. He died in 1702.
  1. KINGS, Kingston upon Hull. The former King Billy pub in Hull’s Old Town becomes KINGS - a new music venue, bar & creative space. DM for enquiries INSTAGRAM: @kingsofhull.
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  3. Martin Luther King Jr. (born Michael King Jr.; January 15, 1929 – April 4, 1968) was an African American Baptist minister and activist who became the most visible spokesperson and leader in the Civil Rights Movement from 1955 until his assassination in 1968.

The statue was paid for by public suscription and cost £785. Today this would be around £150,000. It was designed by a Dutchman Peter Scheemaker in 1734 and sits on a stone pedestal. The Statue is of William in Roman Emperor costume astride a horse. The statue was gilded in 1768. The Inscription reads; ' This statue was erected in the year 1734 to the memory of King William Third. Our Great Deliverer.'

Statue of King Billy in Low Gate in late 1800's as there are no toilets but the fountain and lamps are there.

The inscription on the plinth with the water fountain below that no longer is working.
In 1880 a plain drinking fountain was added to the plinth below the inscription and in the late 1800's the four lamps were added at the corners of the plinth. These were made by local firm King and Peach.


King Billy HullIn the Victorian era some public conveniences were built below the statue. They were very ornate and had glass cisterns. I always thought they should have had gold fish in.
Gents loos below King Billy's statue.
It was the only piece of public art in Hull to removed to safety for the Second World War and it was taken to Sancton near Market Weighton. It was reinstated in 1948

The statue being transported back to Low Gate.
There are several myths concerning the statue. The first is that Scheemaker committed suicide when he realised that he had forgotten the stirups but in fact as he is depicted as a Roman they didn't have stirrups at the time. It is also said that when the clock of Holy Trinity strikes midnight King Billy gets off his horse and goes for a drink in the nearby pub. It is also said that when it strikes thirteen the horse also get down for a pint!

The gilded statue of King William III is one of Hull's most distinctive landmarks.

Installed in 1734, the sculpture features what appears to be a Roman emperor sat astride a horse.

The Roman theme was the idea of sculptor Peter Scheemakers, but an inscription on the front of the statue reveals the true identity of the rider above.

It says: 'This statue was erected in the year 1734 to the memory of King William the Third our Great Deliverer'.

Today, the familiarity of the King Billy statue in Market Place makes it easy to forget why it's there in the first place and exactly what sort of delivery business the late monarch was involved in.

Needless to say, it had nothing to do with pizzas or Amazon-style brown boxes.

The scene in Market Place around the King William statue in 1901 (Image: Hull Daily Mail)

Instead, the reality is far more dramatic and involves a near-invasion of Hull, a bloodless coup and a long-forgotten annual day of local celebration which took place for over 100 years.

The story behind the statue starts in late 1688 amid mounting tensions over the immediate future of King James II.

King billy hull actor

At the time the Catholic king's popular support was weakening, chiefly because of his determination to convert the country to his religion.

Without a son for many years, an heir apparent was his Dutch-born son-in-law Prince William of Orange who was a Protestant.

Prince William of Orange (Image: Hulton Archive)

When James finally fathered a son, anti-Catholic feeling swept through the country and resulted in a group of noblemen secretly urging William to intervene to prevent the king packing parliament and the armed forces with Catholic supporters.

King Billy Toilets Hull

Prince William set sail with an invasion force of around 100 ships on October 19 but was driven back by a storm.

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The fleet sailed again two weeks later but across the North Sea in England no-one seemed to know what part of the coast it was bound for.

Because of its strategic position, the port of Hull was a likely landing point and preparations had been put in place for a siege, including plans to deliberately flood the surrounding countryside by destroying drainage dykes.

The activity centred on the Citadel, a military fortress at the mouth of the River Hull close to where The Deep stands today.

A 1640 drawing of part of the Citadel next to the River Hull (Image: Hull City Council)
Billy and gloria hull

A garrison there was under the command of Lord Langdale, the then governor of Hull and a leading Catholic supporter of the king.

Langdale fully expected William's invasion fleet to appear in the Humber and but he already had his hands full providing sanctuary to Catholics fleeing to Hull from the East Riding where Protestant support was rising.

As it was, the weather intervened again and more strong winds eventually took William's fleet to the Devonshire coast where 15,000 troops landed at Brixham.

Hull remained under Catholic control until December 3, when a plot by Langdale and his supporters to lock up all the Protestant officers at the garrison was uncovered.

King William nearly invaded Hull (Image: Picture of the day)

Secretly backed by the town's magistrates and other leading figures, rebel Protestant officers organised a counter-coup and arrested Langdale and his cohorts, putting them behind bars in the Citadel's cells instead.

The events in Hull finally crushed any lingering hopes James had of winning support for his cause ion the north of England and on December 11 he fled the throne.

The Citadel coup became known as Town Taking Day, which would be celebrated for Hull for years to come.

A recent archaeological dig at the Citadel site uncovered the remains 19th century cobbled yard (Image: Hull Daily Mail)

However, the annual festival is unlikely to have been the equivalent today's Humber Street Sesh as Hull's established reputation as a hotbed of Puritan faith frowned on theatre-going, gambling, drinking and idleness.

Eventually, however, a less sober approach was adopted.

The installation of the King William cemented Hull's Protestant credentials and a contemporary report of the town's centenary celebration of Town Taking Day in 1788 suggests a continuing love affair with King William's Glorious Revolution.

Watch: Can you recognise Hull pubs and bars from these nostalgic pictures?

King Billy Hull Obituary

'The concourse of persons who flocked into the place from all parts of the surrounding country was immense, and the visitors as well as the inhabitants, were splendidly decorated with orange ribands.'

King Billy Hull Biography

A procession, a special service at Holy Trinity Church and an evening of 'elegant and sumptuous entertainments' at the Guildhall were followed by fireworks and triumphal archway being erected over the statue.

The toilets under King William statute, Market Place, Hull.

Fast forward to 2020 and the recent conversion of the former King William House office block into apartments and the imminent re-opening of nearby historic King Billy pub as a live music venue have once again shifted the focus back onto the statue which has inspired their names.

King Billy Hull Height

Sadly, some of the statue's eye-catching gilt paintwork is looking a little shabby while the equally famous Grade II listed toilets which it stands above remain closed.

King Billy Hull Jr

Perhaps it's time for the King to get his lustre back and for someone at the city council to re-open the loos to the public once again.