Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

William and Kate are still madly tin love

Careful Wills opts for a ‘normal’ start to family life Kate grows into role of royalty.. and peacemaker

- BY RUSSELL MYERS Royal Editor and RYAN MERRIFIELD

KATE and William prove laughter is the key to a strong marriage in a new portrait to mark their 10th wedding anniversar­y today.

The Duchess of Cambridge, 39, was beaming as she lovingly holds the future king, 38 – who has a wide grin of his own.

In a second image the couple sit holding hands, with Kate leaning against William.

They were snapped at Kensington Palace this week by photograph­er Chris Floyd.

The couple married at Westminste­r Abbey in 2011 after dating for eight years.

In their first year as students at St Andrews University in Fife, Scotland, in 2001 they lived just a few doors apart.

But Kate first caught the 19-year-old heir to the throne’s eye when she strode down a catwalk in a sheer dress for charity.

Now celebratin­g their “tin” anniversar­y, they have three children – George, seven, Charlotte, five, and Louis, three.

■ More than three quarters of Britons believe Kate will make a good queen when the time comes, a Yougov poll found.

I believe that being friends is a massive advantage PRINCE WILLIAM ON ENGAGEMENT TO KATE

Agreen poncho slung around her neck, the Duchess of Cambridge dashed across Waitrose car park to return her trolley. Incredibly, it was just one week after her wedding day, yet the only sign casual Kate had recently trod the aisle of Westminste­r Abbey was the sapphire engagement ring glinting on her finger.

After driving off in their Aston Martin in a cloud of wedding bliss 10 years ago today, the young couple returned to their £750-a-month rented farmhouse on Anglesey to begin married life.

A honeymoon in the Seychelles would have to wait because William could not secure leave from his job as a search-and-rescue pilot.

But down-to-earth Kate didn’t seem to mind a jot. Supermarke­t or cathedral aisle, she appeared equally content.

The middle-class princess had always approached their relationsh­ip without starry eyes. At 29 she had married not a prince but a “friend”, and one she’d known for nearly 10 years.

And that’s exactly what William wanted and needed from his wife.

Speaking in their engagement interview, he said: “I now believe that being friends with one another is a massive advantage.”

He made clear he had wanted Kate to enter marriage to him with her eyes wide open, and with the maturity to make the difficult role of queen-in-waiting her own.

Asked why he had lingered so long before proposing, he explained: “I’m trying to learn from lessons done in the past and I just wanted to give Kate the chance to settle in and see what happens on the other side.”

He also clearly felt his role was to shield her. “No one is trying to fill my mother’s shoes,” he said. “It’s about making your own destiny and Kate will do a very good job of that.”

Surely their well-tested foundation explains why the couple’s union is today stronger than ever.

And why Kate is beginning to fill the role of future queen with increasing confidence.

That modest early married life they enjoyed in Anglesey, with few staff, was key.

One friend said: “They wanted to live for as long as possible like any other newly-married couple, even though their security meant they could never be completely alone.”

They enjoyed cooking roast chicken and sausages – William’s favourites – and visiting the local pub and cinema.

But royal duties could not be escaped altogether. Two months after their wedding they embarked on their first tour, to North America. Kate dazzled.

In flowing lilac at a BAFTA event, William’s university sweetheart looked every bit as glamorous as the stars – and the crowds adored her.

Royal coaching helped. Royal expert and author Katie Nicholl explains: “Kate had a great deal of support from the Royal Family which was really instructed by the Queen.”

However, while Kate never put a foot wrong in the limelight, she didn’t court it. Experts have highlighte­d her unwillingn­ess to upstage her husband. Royal biographer Penny Junor has said the Duchess was aware of the Princess of Wales’s struggles with her husband.

She said: “Charles was Prince of Wales and not used to having the limelight taken from him. That caused huge problems. Kate is being very careful to ensure she doesn’t outstrip William.

“She is a working woman doing a job. She didn’t leave the human race when she joined Planet Windsor.”

That the pair was doing something right was clear to see the following year, at the London 2012 Olympics.

Their happiness shone as they embraced in the Velodrome crowd as Team GB scooped gold, a rare PDA.

In December they announced they were expecting their first child. Prince George’s birth in July 2013 followed a

l difficult pregnancy. Kate suffered hyperemesi­s e gravidarum – acute f morning sickness.

And she has spoken of f her initial struggles as a e mum in Anglesey, as something she “totally underestim­ated”. o

But William was more hands-on than his own father had been. Princess Charlotte arrived in May 2015, and Prince Louis in April 2018.

A friend said: “William shares their bedtime routines, bath times and nappy changing.”

The couple’s precious time in Anglesey came to an end when William left the RAF and they moved to Kensington Palace, three years after their wedding.

William then joined the East Anglian Air Ambulance, prompting another move, this time to Anmer Hall, on the Queen’s Norfolk estate.

They will have been rocked by the Duke and Duchess of Sussex departing from royal duties. But Kate has been a rock, the peacemaker in the rift between William and Harry following the Sussexes’ interview with Oprah Winfrey. If Kate was hurt by Meghan’s claims she showed no sign of it as she chatted to Harry at Prince Philip’s funeral, coaxing William to join. “William is protective of Kate and can get very angry,” Penny Junor has said.

But Kate clearly soothed the tension, only wanting her husband’s happiness. Diana’s former private secretary Patrick Jephson has said: “She’d have wanted her sons to marry women who would enable them to fulfil their duties in a way that still left room for them to be happy.”

Ten years after their wedding, it is clear William did just that.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? TOUCHING Kate, in Ghost dress, leans on her husband
TOUCHING Kate, in Ghost dress, leans on her husband
 ??  ?? NEWLYWED Kate returns trolley at Waitrose
GROUNDED
Pair hug after London 2012 gold win
HANDS-ON William & Kate share parenting
SUPPORT
With the Sussexes. Right, funeral
NEWLYWED Kate returns trolley at Waitrose GROUNDED Pair hug after London 2012 gold win HANDS-ON William & Kate share parenting SUPPORT With the Sussexes. Right, funeral
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 ??  ?? SMITTEN Prince gazes at wife
SMITTEN Prince gazes at wife
 ??  ?? PORT ussexes. Right, funeral
PORT ussexes. Right, funeral
 ??  ?? FAIRY STORY Newlyweds on Canada tour in 2011
FAIRY STORY Newlyweds on Canada tour in 2011

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