Daily Express

Wishing you a happy and glorious 70th year Ma’am!

- By Richard Palmer Royal Correspond­ent

THE Queen will enter the 70th year of her reign today in the inner sanctum of Windsor Castle – her lockdown home throughout the Covid crisis.

But there will be no special celebratio­n to mark her 69 years on the throne.

Instead it will be duty as always, going through at least one red box of official papers from the Government, Parliament and her private secretary – as she does every day except Christmas Day and Easter Sunday. There may be time to walk her one remaining dog, a dorgi called Candy.

Then she will spend part of Accession Day in solemn reflection, as she remembers the sad event that brought her to the throne – the death of her beloved father George VI.

He died from a blood clot in his heart on February 6, 1952, aged just 56.

Joe Little, managing editor of Majesty magazine and a longtime royal observer, said of the Queen: “It might just be her and a member of the clergy saying a few prayers in memory of the King and maybe the Queen Mother as well.”

This is an annual ritual, usually observed at Sandringha­m, for the monarch. This morning, at her favourite royal residence of Windsor, she will think back to the day on which the burdens of the state were thrust upon her at the tender age of 25 while she was in Kenya with Prince Philip, standing in for her father on an internatio­nal tour.

In a normal year she would have been at Sandringha­m since before Christmas, entertaini­ng family and friends and hosting low-key receptions for local dignitarie­s. She would also be contemplat­ing a return to public duties in London a week or so after today. But although she and Philip were given their first dose of the Covid vaccine on January 9, they remain in lockdown.

Aides say the Queen is likely to begin online engagement­s the week after next but any hopes they had of getting her back meeting the public and undertakin­g her normal duties are pretty much nil due to the risk of people mixing.

Mr Little said: “The Queen, I would say, is still a prisoner in her own castle until a time when most people have had the vaccine.”

Crowds are expected again in 2022 to mark her Platinum Jubilee.

Captain Sir Tom is not the only nonagenari­an to inspire this great nation in the last year – and nobody does it better than Her Majesty the Queen.

It is extraordin­ary to think that our monarch is now entering the 70th year of her reign, literally a lifetime of ruling over us so magnificen­tly.

The Queen has been the glue that has held this country together through both the bad times and the good. She has been a dignified and gracious face of our country who has done so much to maintain our place in the world.

We will never forget her address to us all when lockdown began last year and she continues to inspire us to this day.

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 ??  ?? Happy and glorious...clockwise from left, the Queen in 2019; with the Royal Family after her coronation in 1953; and at her previous jubilees in 2012, 2002 and 1977
Happy and glorious...clockwise from left, the Queen in 2019; with the Royal Family after her coronation in 1953; and at her previous jubilees in 2012, 2002 and 1977
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