Bristol Post

Freedom of City Hundreds of sailors to march

- Lewis CLARKE lewis.clarke@reachplc.com

HUNDREDS of servicemen and women will march through the centre of Bristol next month – as the Royal Navy’s latest and largest warship is granted the Freedom of the City.

Almost 300 sailors and Royal Marines will parade through the city centre on Saturday, June 10, in recognitio­n of the 50-year link between Bristol and HMS Prince of Wales.

The ship is a fifth-generation aircraft carrier and one of the most powerful surface warships ever built in the UK with additional roles that includes disaster relief, humanitari­an aid and diplomacy. HMS Prince of Wales weighs in at 65,000 tonnes with a crew of over 700.

And with her flight deck, which measures 280 metres long and 70 metres wide, can accommodat­e 36 fighter jets and four Merlin helicopter­s.

The City and County of Bristol has been affiliated with the ship since 2016, an honour shared with Liverpool, and the relationsh­ip will last for 50 years. The link was reaffirmed in March this year, when the Freedom of the City was accepted by Captain Richard

Hewitt OBE, on behalf of the Royal Navy and the ship’s company.

The honour, when conferred on a military unit, grants them the privilege of marching through a city “with drums beating, colours flying, and bayonets fixed”.

Since first being awarded in 1888, the Freedom of the City has been bestowed on 66 individual­s and military units and Bristol is the first UK city to award the honour to a fifth-generation carrier.

The ceremony on June 10 will get under way with the Lord Mayor of Bristol presenting a freedom scroll

at a ceremony on College Green.

Then, led by His Majesty’s Band of the Royal Marines from Commando Training Centre Royal Marines, 275 sailors will march through the city to exercise the freedom rights, before returning to College Green, where there will be a blessing in Bristol Cathedral.

Lord Mayor of Bristol, Councillor Paul Goggin, said: “It was an honour for Bristol to grant the ship’s company the Freedom of the City. I am delighted to celebrate the close bond Bristol has with the HMS Prince of Wales, and people across the city look forward to strengthen­ing our ties with them.

“I look forward to welcoming them with open arms on 10 June.”

Captain Richard Hewitt OBE, Commanding Officer of HMS Prince of Wales, said: “Being able to exercise the Freedom of the City of Bristol is a significan­t honour for us. Bristol has a great maritime heritage and I know our sailors are looking forward to being on parade through the city.

“This will support the continued strong relationsh­ips between generation­s of Royal Navy sailors in HMS Prince of Wales and the City of Bristol over the next 50 years.”

Honorary Royal Navy Captain Peaches Golding OBE, Lord-Lieutenant of Bristol, said: “This ceremony and the awarding of the Freedom of the City are potent symbols of the close ties that exist between Bristol and our nation’s armed forces.

“Bristol has a long and proud history of affiliatio­n with our nation’s armed forces, a tradition that has seen eight previous units receive the Freedom of the City.”

 ?? Pic: Gareth Fuller/PA ?? The HMS Prince of Wales aircraft carrier has been given the Freedom of the City
Pic: Gareth Fuller/PA The HMS Prince of Wales aircraft carrier has been given the Freedom of the City

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