Horse Guards Parade

Horse Guards Parade was formerly the site of the Palace of Whitehall's tiltyard, where tournaments (including jousting) were held in the time of Henry VIII.

[1] The PIRA's mortar attack on 10 Downing Street on 7 February 1991, which was carried out from a vehicle parked in Horse Guards Avenue nearby, narrowly missed causing casualties and led to concerns.

[2] The proposal was taken up by the Department of National Heritage but then resisted by senior Cabinet members, apparently under pressure from the civil servants who were to lose their parking places.

[3] Public revelation of the resistance led to considerable criticism by Simon Jenkins, a newspaper columnist, who pressured Sir Robin Butler, Head of the Home Civil Service, to end general usage as parking as part of a wider programme of reforms.

A number of military monuments and trophies ring the outside of the parade ground, including: An oddity is the black background to the number 2 of the double sided clock which overlooks the Parade Ground and the front entrance, it is popularly thought to commemorate the time the last absolute monarch of England, Charles I, was beheaded at the Banqueting House opposite.

[6] In the early summer, grandstands are erected in Horse Guards Parade in preparation for the Trooping the Colour ceremony which is usually on the second Saturday in June and celebrates the monarch's Official Birthday.

The public can watch the troops enter and leave Horse Guards Parade and tickets for the seating are sold subject to a ballot.

Trooping the Colour at Horse Guards Parade in 1956
The Coldstream Guards on Parade at Horse Guards , by John Chapman , c. 1755
Horse Guards Parade with the London Eye Ferris wheel in the background
The Guards Memorial
Changing The King's Life Guard in 2013.
Trooping the Colour in 2022.
The Bands of the Household Division at the finale of Beating Retreat in 2013.
Horse Guards Parade during the 2012 Summer Olympics