1. The Buckingham Palace Edward VII, the only child born at Buckingham Palace and the eldest son of Queen Victoria, passed away there.
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2. Buckingham Palace has an extensive mulberry garden. King James I attempted, but failed, to produce silkworms in a mulberry garden during the 1600s.
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3. A railway track is rumored to run through one of the tunnels that connect several locations beneath Buckingham Palace.
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4. There is a legend that the 'Lost' River Tyburn flows beneath Buckingham Palace.
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5. Buckingham Palace has a helicopter pad in its garden. A few days before Elizabeth II was crowned in 1953, the first-ever helicopter landing took place in the garden.
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6. Queen Victoria initially appeared on the Royals' balcony in 1851, marking the official opening of Hyde Park, which subsequently became a royal custom.
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7. Buckingham Palace personnel can also use the Royal Mail-operated Court Post Office located within the palace.
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8. Buckingham House, the wine cellar beneath the west wing of Buckingham Palace, is the oldest portion of the palace.
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9. In 1940, an air raid destroyed Buckingham Palace's Royal Chapel. The palace had been attacked for the third day in a row.
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10. Largest room at Buckingham Palace, measuring 36.6 m x 18 m, was opened to commemorate Crimean War end in 1856.