Franciscan friars arrived in Gibraltar during the reign of
Charles I of Spain. They were granted a plot of land in the area known at the time as
La Turba where the poorer people of Gibraltar lived. A church and a
friary were built in 1531. The entrance was at the back (what is now Governor's Lane). It stretched up to the area that is occupied today by the
John Mackintosh Hall. After the
capture of Gibraltar by an Anglo-Dutch fleet in the name of the
Archduke Charles, the Franciscan friars did not follow the
exodus of the Spanish population and remained in Gibraltar, at least for some years (their presence was recorded in 1712). The Franciscan friary was later taken over as the residence of the British governors in 1728 and has remained so ever since. The building was heavily rebuilt during the 18th and 19th centuries in the
Georgian style with
Victorian elements. In 1903 Gibraltar received its first visit from a British Monarch when
Edward VII arrived to name the new No. 3 Dock of
Gibraltar Harbour after himself. He received complaints that as head of the
Church of England he should visit a
Catholic institution like
The Convent. The King requested that the building should be called
Government House. The new dry docks attracted
Queen Alexandra in
HMY Victoria and Albert in 1906 and the Prince and Princess of Wales the following year to name dock number two and then one after themselves. ==Overview==