A monument to a royal child: Princess Elizabeth of Clarence ? Royal Central (http://royalcentral.co.uk/blogs/a-monument-to-a-royal-child-princess-elizabeth-of-clarence-96569)
QuoteIn the entrance hall of Frogmore House in Windsor Great Park is a sculpture of a royal child, remarkable in the sensitivity of its execution and the fineness of its detail. It may seem at first glance no more than a sentimental monument, made to memorialise a beloved child and so immortalise its youth. The hands and feet of the nine children of Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were commemorated in a sculpture by the artist Mary Thornycroft, today to be seen at Osborne House. But this sculpture is different and points to the brief story of a royal child whose life could have turned out very differently, with extraordinary consequences for British history, had she lived. She did not survive infancy and has subsequently become something of a footnote in royal terms, probably not provoking historical curiosity, unless through the study of this sculpture, displayed at Windsor. No other memorial exists to her.
Princess Elizabeth was christened the day of her birth.
http://www.historyofroyalwomen.com/adelaide-of-saxe-meiningen/day-history-death-princess-elizabeth-clarence