Penticton Herald

Queen was much loved

Tributes pour in as longest-reigning royal in British history dies age 96

- By THE CANADIAN PRESS

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke fondly of the Queen after her death Thursday, saying she was one of his favourite people in the world and that she served with strength and wisdom during her 70 years on the throne.

Trudeau said the longest-serving British monarch, who died at age 96, had an “obvious, deep and abiding love and affection for Canadians.”

Trudeau’s eyes were red and he forced himself to maintain composure as he gave a brief statement to reporters in Vancouver. He said that as the Queen’s 12th Canadian prime minister, he’s having trouble believing that his last meeting with her was his final one. He called her “thoughtful, wise, curious, helpful and funny,” adding that he will “miss her so.”

The monarch’s representa­tive in Canada, Gov. Gen. Mary Simon, said in a statement that the Queen was a “steadfast presence” during tumultuous recent history.

Simon said the Queen believed in service to her people above all and was in equal measures compassion­ate, dedicated, humble, engaged and wise. She said during her visit to London for the Platinum Jubilee celebratio­ns this summer, the Queen gave her a “warm welcome” and it was “a profound moment in our lives and a memory we will cherish forever.”

Protocol calls for 10 days of mourning following the Queen’s death. A funeral date is expected to be announced soon, which governors general and Commonweal­th prime ministers are expected to attend in London.

The cabinet meeting is scheduled to continue in Vancouver Thursday afternoon as planned but an expected announceme­nt from Trudeau on affordabil­ity was cancelled.

Ministers arrived for the meeting shortly before 9 a.m., but several left moments later before returning in more muted colours of clothing.

Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland, initially wearing a bright red dress, switched into something black, while Carolyn Bennett, minister of mental health, replaced her bright red pantsuit with a dark blue version.

Trudeau was expected to announce cost-of-living relief measures for Canadians at 12:30 p.m. eastern time. Shortly before 1 p.m., Jody Thomas, the national security adviser, was seen entering a cabinet room where ministers were meeting.

The Royal Family announced the Queen’s death half an hour later. Trudeau informed his cabinet a few minutes before he issued his public statement.

Staff handed out black ribbons that ministers pinned to their lapels.

A statement from the House of Commons Speaker, Anthony Rota, noted that the Queen first visited Canada in 1951 before her accession to the throne.

Since then she has “observed and shared in the developmen­t of modern-day Canada,” said Rota.

He added that the current session of Parliament and the oaths taken by members are not affected by the news.

Federal Conservati­ve leader Candice Bergen also expressed condolence­s in a statement Thursday afternoon.

“Many will say today that her passing marks the end of an era, but truly, Her Majesty presided over two eras in Canada’s national life,” Bergen said.

The Queen’s signing of the Constituti­on Act in 1982 was a “profound moment” that Bergen said “clearly defined the beginning of a new era for Canada as a fully selfgovern­ing nation, while maintainin­g strong ties to the history that made us who we are.”

NDP leader Jagmeet Singh said the Queen lived a life of history and duty. “She was also a mother, grandmothe­r and great-grandmothe­r,” he said. “My thoughts today are for her family, who have lost a pillar of strength in their lives.”

Ralph Goodale, Canada’s high commission­er to the United Kingdom, tweeted to say the Queen is “a profoundly important person in the most successful constituti­onal monarchy in world history.”

The Senate Speaker, George Furey, noted in a statement that the Queen twice delivered a Speech from the Throne in Canada. Her reign “will continue to instil and inspire the values of public service, selflessne­ss and quiet dignity for generation­s to come,” he said.

Elizabeth II, Queen of the United Kingdom, Canada and the Commonweal­th, ascended the throne as much by a twist of fate as by the grace of God.

As the daughter and granddaugh­ter of men who were not first in line to the throne, Elizabeth was once destined for a life of relative regal obscurity.

Instead, she became one of the world’s most famous women at the age of 25, when her father’s death in 1952 made her England’s sixth ruling queen and longestrei­gning monarch.

She lived her early years in an intimate family atmosphere free from any hint of future royal responsibi­lities.

“Seldom can a royal child have enjoyed so simple and normal an early upbringing,” commented the Guardian newspaper in 1952.

Elizabeth II died Thursday at the age of 96.

Buckingham Palace announced hours earlier that the Queen had been placed under medical supervisio­n because doctors were concerned for her health.

Members of the royal family had traveled to Scotland to be with the monarch.

The Queen had increasing­ly handed over duties to her son -- who became King Charles III on Thursday -- and other members of the Royal Family in recent months as she recovered from a bout of COVID-19, began using a cane and struggled to get around.

Born April 21, 1926, at 17 Bruton Street in London’s Mayfair district at the home of her maternal grandparen­ts, the Earl and Countess of Strathmore, the golden-haired, blue-eyed first granddaugh­ter of King George V and Queen Mary grew up in a household where doors were never slammed in anger.

“We want Elizabeth and her sister Margaret to have happy childhoods, which they can always look back upon,” said her mother.

EARLY DAYS

Thus it was as the child of a country gentleman, rather than as a potential future monarch, that Elizabeth lived at Bruton Street, at White Lodge in Richmond Park, and at 145 Piccadilly, the house taken by her parents, near Hyde Park.

Some happy moments were spent in the tall house on Piccadilly, with its top-floor nursery and Elizabeth’s “stable” of three dozen toy horses.

When she was four, a sister Margaret Rose – the Rose was later dropped – was born in ancient Glamis Castle in Scotland. The two

girls frolicked happily together, Elizabeth’s seriousnes­s and sense of appropriat­eness an engaging contrast with Margaret’s ingrained mischief.

They spent many hours in the ‘Little House’ (Y Bwthyn Bach), a gift from the people of Wales. This was a miniature of a real dwelling faithful in detail down to boxes of matches and baking powder in the tiny kitchen drawers.

Despite the presence of servants and governesse­s, it was their mother who played the most important role in bringing up the two princesses.

Insisting on personal oversight of every detail, the woman later lovingly known as the Queen Mother excluded influences that might set Elizabeth and Margaret apart from other children. Elizabeth studied languages, particular­ly French and German, and took special lessons in constituti­onal history from the late Sir Henry Marten, provost

of Eton.

She made her first broadcast at 14. The generation­s that preceded her had never expected to rule. Her grandfathe­r was not the first-born son and only became heir apparent, and later George V, after the death of his elder brother. Elizabeth’s father was a second son and not expected to reach the throne.

But in 1936 came the unexpected abdication of King Edward VIII who gave up his throne for Wallis Warfield Simpson, an American divorcee.

That put Elizabeth’s father on the throne as King George VI. Elizabeth herself came to the throne in similarly impromptu, if less dramatic, fashion.

When her father died at Sandringha­m on Feb. 6, 1952, she was 6,500 kilometres away in the African jungle, on the first leg of what was to have been a five-month tour. It was the first time a sovereign acceded to the throne while abroad in the Commonweal­th.

She flew back to London. In her declaratio­n of accession at St. James Palace, she said: “My heart is too full for me to say more to you today than that I shall always work ... to uphold constituti­onal government and to advance the happiness and prosperity of my people, spread as they are all the world over.”

The year that followed was busy. She opened Parliament, presided over state functions at Buckingham Palace and signed up to 100 documents a day.

The climax in pomp and pageantry came on Coronation Day, June 2, 1953, the same year in which she also formally became Queen of Canada. Six kings and seven queens attended as Elizabeth drove to Westminste­r Abbey in a gilded coach and dedicated herself to her people in the world’s oldest state ceremonial.

It was the most-seen coronation in history. Only a few hundred could crowd into the ancient abbey, but millions watched on television and a colour motion picture film was shown around the world.

One of the largest crowds in London’s history acclaimed Elizabeth when she rode through the ancient, rain-drenched streets after the long ceremony. Later, at Buckingham Palace, she made six balcony appearance­s as her subjects celebrated far into the night.

For many, it was reminiscen­t of a ceremony six years before when a slim, gravefaced girl in white stood in the sanctuary of the abbey with a handsome sailor bridegroom, Philip Mountbatte­n.

There were conflictin­g stories about how the two met, but there was no conflict over the contention that this was a love match.

HER PRINCE

Marion Crawford, Elizabeth’s governess for 17 years, said the young princess was 13 at the first meeting and that she was most impressed by the 18-year-old Philip’s capacity for tucking away plates of shrimp.

Later they correspond­ed and, during one of Philip’s wartime leaves from the Royal Navy, went to a theatre together.

His red sports car was increasing­ly seen parked outside the palace and it was said that when he first asked the King for Elizabeth’s hand, the couple was advised to wait. One obstacle was the fact that Philip had been baptized into the Greek Orthodox Church. Before the marriage, he was received into the Church of England.

King George VI named Philip Duke of Edinburgh before the marriage took place, and early in 1957 the Queen made her husband a prince of the realm.

The Queen and Prince Philip had two children before and after she succeeded to the throne. Charles, the future Prince of Wales and heir to the throne, was born in November 1948, followed by Princess Anne in 1950, Prince Andrew in 1960, and Prince Edward four years later.

When the couple marked their 50th wedding anniversar­y, Philip discussed the secret to their union.

“I think the main lesson that we have learnt is that tolerance is the one essential ingredient in any happy marriage,” he said. “You can take it from me that the Queen has the quality of tolerance in abundance.”

The Queen announced the death of her “beloved husband” at the age of 99 with “deep sorrow” on April 9, 2021.

Marital stability proved elusive for most of the Queen’s children, and the sensationa­l media coverage of the Royal Family’s romantic woes proved some of the most trying and best-remembered moments of her reign.

Three of her children, Charles, Anne and Andrew, divorced, often under messy circumstan­ces.

The split between Prince Charles and his wife Diana in the 1990s marked a particular­ly painful time for the Royal Family, with revelation­s about their ill-fated marriage filling Britain’s notoriousl­y salacious tabloids.

It emerged that Diana had battled anorexia during the marriage and was desperatel­y unhappy at her husband’s ongoing affair with Camilla Parker-Bowles.

Diana’s death in 1997 was a tragedy that marked another period of strain for the Royal Family as even the Queen’s perceived lack of public grief was vexing to some of her subjects.

The initial reaction was seen as a rare misstep in judging the public’s mood, but by 2002 the monarchy witnessed a revival as Elizabeth marked her Golden Jubilee, becoming only the fifth British monarch to reign for 50 years.

LONG-SERVING MONARCH

She matched another historical milestone in 2012 by becoming the second monarch to celebrate a diamond jubilee, and made history alone in 2015 when she succeeded her great-great-grandmothe­r Queen Victoria as the longest-reigning monarch in British history. Earlier this year, she became the first monarch to celebrate a platinum jubilee, marking 70 years on the throne.

On the final day of the event, she joined other senior members of the Royal Family on the balcony of Buckingham Palace to watch a flyby by 70 military aircraft and wave to supporters who filled the street below.

Later, she took part in a beacon lighting ceremony at Windsor Palace, the culminatio­n of events that spanned the Commonweal­th. The prince and his wife Camilla, now known as Queen Consort, travelled to

Canada in May as part of the celebratio­ns of the Queen’s platinum jubilee.

Canada was a popular destinatio­n for the Queen since her first visit here in 1951 as a princess.

In 2010, the Queen made her 22nd trip to Canada with a nine-day stay that included an address that hailed Canada’s modern developmen­t.

“This vast, rich and varied country has inspired its own and attracted many others by its adherence to certain values. Some are enshrined in law, but I should imagine just as many are simply found in the hearts of ordinary Canadians,” she said.

The Queen continued to tour Canada frequently and her visits sometimes became embroiled in the controvers­ies surroundin­g Quebec’s role in the Canadian federation. In 1990, for instance, her Canada Day visit to Ottawa and neighbouri­ng Gatineau, Que., was seen by some as an insult to Quebec.

The visit had been timed to celebrate the ratificati­on of the Meech Lake accord, which was meant to address many of Quebec’s constituti­onal concerns. As it turned out, the accord officially died a few days before her visit to the capital. Although pro-sovereignt­ist sentiment within Quebec was running high, the Queen’s visit continued as planned, without violence.

Many of the Queen’s visits coincided with major national events: in 1967, for the country’s Centennial and Expo 67; in 1976, for the Montreal Olympics; in 1982, for the signing of the Constituti­on; and in 1992, briefly, for Canada’s 125th anniversar­y.

The Queen’s calm acceptance of personal hazards – whether travelling or at home – was an inheritanc­e from her father, who firmly refused to leave London during the worst of the bombing in the Second World War. During the war, she served as an army

mechanic.

Later in her reign, the Queen navigated the Royal Family through allegation­s of racism made by her grandson Prince Harry and his wife Meghan in a television interview in the United States, where the Duke and Duchess of Sussex live after stepping away from their royal duties.

When Princess Elizabeth acceded to the monarchy on the early death of her father in 1952, Winston Churchill, who was then prime minister, described her as “a gleaming figure who providence has brought to us at a time when the present is hard and the future is veiled.”

In a publicity-conscious era, one of the Queen’s most ticklish problems was how to strike a balance between reserve and familiarit­y. There were occasional complaints from newspapers and broadcaste­rs of difficulty in obtaining royal news.

Some felt – on the other hand – that too close an interest was being shown in the personal affairs of the Royal Family by the energetic British press. The Queen was known to have an intense distaste for any probing

into her private life. Her character was forceful, some said somewhat Victorian, and there was speculatio­n that this may have been responsibl­e for much of the royal reticence.

But Elizabeth, partly because of the period during which she ruled, ushered the Royal Family into a new era of 24-hour news cycles and the television age. At a luncheon to mark her 50th wedding anniversar­y in 1997, the Queen indicated that the Royal Family had learned from its mistakes, a poignant message just a couple of months after Diana’s death.

Noting that a hereditary monarchy only exists “with the support and consent of the people,” she acknowledg­ed that was sometimes difficult to read for an institutio­n so steeped in tradition, unlike politician­s who get their consent clearly through the ballot box.

“For us… the message is often harder to read, obscured as it can be by deference, rhetoric or the conflictin­g currents of public opinion. But read it we must,” she said.

 ?? PENTICTON MUSEUM AND ARCHIVES/Special to The Herald ?? Queen Elizabeth II greets part of the crowd of thousands of well-wishers who turned out at Penticton’s airport during a Royal visit to the Okanagan on May 6, 1971. In its glowing coverage of the day, The Herald described the Queen’s visit as transformi­ng Penticton “into a wonderland of fantasy,” and the Queen herself appearing “as if she descended from a cloud covered sky into an Eden with its white and pink orchard blossoms, its officials smart and polished, and its setting lush and inspiring, as only the Okanagan in spring can be.”
PENTICTON MUSEUM AND ARCHIVES/Special to The Herald Queen Elizabeth II greets part of the crowd of thousands of well-wishers who turned out at Penticton’s airport during a Royal visit to the Okanagan on May 6, 1971. In its glowing coverage of the day, The Herald described the Queen’s visit as transformi­ng Penticton “into a wonderland of fantasy,” and the Queen herself appearing “as if she descended from a cloud covered sky into an Eden with its white and pink orchard blossoms, its officials smart and polished, and its setting lush and inspiring, as only the Okanagan in spring can be.”
 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Queen Elizabeth II shown here in an official portrait. Britain’s longest serving monarch died Thursday at age 96.
The Canadian Press Queen Elizabeth II shown here in an official portrait. Britain’s longest serving monarch died Thursday at age 96.
 ?? ?? The Canadian Press
Flowers sit on the pedestal of the Centennial flame in front of the Peace tower with a message thanking the Queen for her service on yesterday in Ottawa.
The Canadian Press Flowers sit on the pedestal of the Centennial flame in front of the Peace tower with a message thanking the Queen for her service on yesterday in Ottawa.

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