| Prince Albert Recovers  by Jeff Provine 
     Author 
    says: what if Prince Albert had recovered? muses Jeff Provine's on his 
    excellent blog This 
    Day in Alternate History. Please note that the opinions expressed in 
    this post do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s). 
     
      On December 14th 1861,
     
      Please click the
        
        
          
           icon to follow us on Facebook.after a terrible year involving a 
        
        carriage crash, scandal with the Prince of Wales cavorting with the Irish 
        
        actress Nellie Clifden, shouldering many of the Queen's duties during her 
        
        mourning of the death of her mother, the Duchess of Kent, and intervening 
        
        in harsh diplomatic response to the United States of America blocking 
        
        Confederate envoys in a raid upon a British ship, Prince Albert of 
        
        Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, Prince Consort of the United Kingdom, finally had 
        
        some luck. His chronic illness with what his physician William Jenner had 
        
        diagnosed as typhoid fever finally began to clear up. It would remain a 
        
        cold, solemn Christmas, but, by spring, Albert would be well among the 
        
        living. 
 Despite his brush with death, Albert continued with his lifelong 
        
        dedication and energy to his many causes. Up to that time, he had 
        
        transcended the typically quiet position as consort, where he 
        
        revolutionized and expanded his and the Queen's many estates with advanced 
        
        technology and practices. Albert additionally took up causes such as the 
        
        abolition of slavery and reforms of nearly every policy. He served as 
        
        Chancellor at the University of Oxford, modernizing the curriculum, as 
        
        well as president for the society for Advancement of Science. During the 
        
        turbulent times of the 1840s, Albert supported the government in enacting 
        
        progressive policies without need for violence. His work to open the 
        
        international scope of London ultimately succeeded in the Great Exhibition 
        
        of 1851, made greater by its lowering of entrance prices to a single 
        
        shilling, making the exhibition accessible to the lower classes and 
        
        opening the eyes of thousands to the greater world. While Albert attempted 
        
        to obtain a peaceful diplomatic agreement between Russia and the Ottoman 
        
        Empire, the Crimean War would break out, causing his popularity to 
        
        plummet.
 
 "I don't think the South would have touched the 
          
          institution of slavery until its back was literally right against the 
          
          wall---they had much too much of an emotional investment for that. And 
          
          "British interference" in US affairs would not have pleased the US 
          
          government." - reader's commentRenewed with life in 1862, Albert 
        
        shifted his attentions to a diplomatic solution in the ongoing American 
        
        Civil War. A weaker United States would be politically advantageous to the 
        
        world-leader Britain, though it did not want it as an enemy.
        
        "I agree, except that it wasn't just an emptional 
          
          investment. The Southern economy was utterly dependent on slavery and 
          
          collapsed after 1865 largely because of the end of that institution. It 
          
          didn't begin recovering until, after the end of Reconstruction, 
          
          Southerners found substitutes in sharecropping and the use of (largely 
          
          black) convict labor. " -reader's commentsAlbert told the political 
        
        envoys that Her Majesty's Government admired the CSA's sense of 
        
        independence and were willing to contribute, but they simply could not 
        
        back the institution of slavery on moral grounds. In 1863, the South began 
        
        a policy of voluntarily freeing slaves with government compensation, and 
        
        the abolitionist support in the North began to wane. The war would come to 
        
        an end with separate but equal nations in 1865 after the loss of Abraham 
        
        Lincoln in the election of 1864.
 
 "I too am skeptical of the implications for the 
          
          CSA. As for the notion that he might have had significant influence on his 
          
          grandson Willy / Kaiser-to-be, perhaps, esp. since Vicky was so much his 
          
          favorite, but it's hard to imagine it being enough to shape German 
          
          unification in a more democratic, pacifistic direction (with all the the 
          
          militaristic influences he'd have to overcome). " - reader's commentsIn 
        
        1870, Albert would again try his hand at steadying international conflicts 
        
        by trying to cool the head of Emperor Louis Napoleon of France, but the 
        
        Franco-Prussian War would go on, nonetheless. As it ended with the Treaty 
        
        of Frankfurt, Albert admired his native Germany in its unification and 
        
        used his rights as Prince of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha to address Kaiser 
        
        Wilhelm on the goods of liberal, paternal governance. He often visited his 
        
        daughter Victoria and son-in-law Frederick, encouraging them to discipline 
        
        their son Friedrich Wilhelm and once caning the boy himself for not 
        
        minding his elders. Biographers record incidents between Albert and the 
        
        lad who would become Kaiser Wilhelm II as greatly instrumental into 
        
        shaping him into the mindful, studious man he was.
 
 Building diplomacy with Germany and developing industrial policy would 
        
        dominate the latter years of Albert's life. Suffering from what modern 
        
        historians believe to be cancer, but about which his medical documents 
        
        were politely vague, Albert died in 1879, two days short of matching his 
        
        father's lifespan. His legacy stands throughout Europe to this day, 
        
        creating monarchy that is an example of morality to its people, aimed at 
        
        mutually advantageous diplomatic agreements, and tied tightly to 
        
        education, industry, and technological development. While many Marxist and 
        
        radicals call Albert "paternalist" and "deceptively authoritarian", most 
        
        credit him with enabling a twentieth century where the majority of wars 
        
        have been colonial or internal affairs dealing with anti-imperial, 
        
        anarchical threats.
 
        
        
       
      
      
 
     
     Author 
    says Prince Albert died after his lungs became congested. The Queen 
    would grieve for him the rest of her life, and Britain, who had received him 
    at times with mediocrity, showered his memory with sympathy. Memorials 
    crowded London and the world, such as Prince Albert Hall, the Prince Albert 
    Memorial, the Albert Medal of the Royal Society of Arts, and Africa's Lake 
    Albert. To view guest historian's comments on this post please visit the
    
    Today in Alternate History web site. 
 
     Jeff Provine, Guest Historian of
    
    Today in Alternate History, a Daily Updating Blog of Important Events In 
    History That Never Occurred Today. Follow us on
    
    Facebook, Myspace and
    Twitter.  Imagine what would be, if history had occurred a bit 
    differently. Who says it didn't, somewhere? These fictional news items 
    explore that possibility. Possibilities such as America becoming a Marxist 
    superpower, aliens influencing human history in the 18th century and Teddy 
    Roosevelt winning his 3rd term as president abound in this interesting 
    fictional blog. 
 
 
    
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