Reports speculating that Prince William had an affair with British noblewoman Sarah Rose Hanbury have been quietly deleted by UK media outlets, a Vulture investigation suggests.
A royal correspondent for Vulture, Ellie Hall, pieced together a timeline of the erasure or modifications of news stories that stretches from 2019, when the affair rumors first emerged, to March 2024.
The timeline lays out how several British publications published articles about any relationship between William, 42, and Hanbury, 40, that have since been taken down or substantially updated.
The stories amended after publication came from outlets including tabloids like The Sun, The Daily Mail, The Daily Express, and The Mirror as well as Tatler, a high-society magazine.
The news stories Vulture said were amended after publication range from opinion pieces to aggregated articles, covering everything from rumors that Hanbury was at one point a potential romantic "contender" for William to an apparent falling out between Hanbury and Kate Middleton, 42, over the Princess of Wales seeing her as "rival."
Some of the deleted or updated articles are still accessible in their original form via resources like the Internet's WayBack Machine, Vulture reported.
Hanbury, through her lawyers, said in a March email to Business Insider that the affair rumors were "completely false."
Vulture also said it is unclear if the outlets that erased or edited stories did so at the request of representatives for William or Hanbury, who is the Marchioness of Cholmondeley.
The only publication to issue a statement to Vulture was The Guardian. That newspaper removed a reference to a joke talk-show host Stephen Colbert made on air about the affair rumors in March. The Guardian told Vulture it had adjusted its story "after internal editorial consideration and not following external outreach."
The publications, Kensington Palace, and representatives for Hanbury did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
As BI previously reported, Hanbury has been linked to William, Kate, and the royal family for years.
Her maternal grandmother was one of Queen Elizabeth II's bridesmaids. In 2019, she officially became a noblewoman, after marrying David Cholmondeley (pronounced "Chumley"), the 7th Marquess of Cholmondeley.
Affair rumors have been bolstered by the fact that William and Kate were briefly neighbors with the Cholmondeleys.
Before making Windsor Castle their primary home, the couple was living at Amner Hall in Norfolk, about a 10-minute car ride from the Cholmondeley residence at Houghton Hall.
After rumors first sprung up online in 2019, the Daily Beast reported that lawyers representing William issued a warning to "at least one British publication" that covering the gossip was not only "false and highly damaging" but would infringe upon his privacy in line with Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
According to the Equality and Human Rights Commission, the law protects an individual's "private and family life," and can only be interfered with in certain instances, such as if the information concerns "public safety" or "the rights and freedoms of other people."
While the William-Rose rumors have ebbed and flowed over the years, they hit a boiling point when Colbert dedicated part of his opening monologue on the March 12 episode of "The Late Show" to speculation that the alleged affair was connected to Kate taking months off from public appearances.
She said later the absence was due to her cancer diagnosis and treatment.