The Scotsman

Prince Philip's unstuffy approach to public duties put people at their ease, as I discovered

- John Mclellan

Like the thousands of people the Duke of Edinburgh has met, my conversati­on with him made a lot more of an impression on me than it could possibly have done with him.

It was a measure of the strength of Scotsman Publicatio­ns and the connection­s of our then proprietor­s the Barclay twins, that both the Queen and Prince Philip officially opened the new Holyrood Road headquarte­rs in November 1999, all the more remarkable because, unlike most of these Royal inaugurati­ons, we had only moved in the day before.

The editors and senior managers lined up in the foyer and as the Royal couple shook hands I had a problem because I’d broken mine a few days before. “Oh, what happened to your hand?” asked the Queen. “Broke it on Saturday playing rugby, ma’am,” I replied. “An occupation­al hazard, I suppose.”

Quick as a scrum-half, Prince Philip interjecte­d. “No, this is your occupation, man, that’s your sport,” he said, and of course he was right.

We had more of a conversati­on with the Royal couple than we had with the Barclays, who we never met again, but I did have a second meeting with Prince Philip, at the Golden Jubilee reception for the Press at Windsor and again he was relaxed, despite newspaper people hardly being his favourite company, bantering about a story we’d published in Scotland on Sunday as we slurped down industrial­strength gin and tonics.

I was there, but did not hear his infamous question to then Scottish Conservati­ve leader Annabel Goldie if she had knickers made of the same tartan fabric draping the room during the Pope's 2010 visit to Holyroodho­use, but his unstuffy approach to his public duties put more people at their ease than on edge and was a reminder that the Royal Family were people with imperfecti­ons like everyone else.

There is nothing surprising about the death of a 99-yearold man who had been ill for some months, but apart from the obvious sadness about the loss of a loved one for any family, with national loss was, for me anyway, the immediate sense of an era closing.

Not closed yet, but with constituti­onal change driven by Brexit and the independen­ce argument, together with the tragedy of the pandemic, his passing after over 70 years at the heart of British public life unquestion­ably marks a significan­t moment and a portent of what’s to come . It’s easy to play up the undoubted privileges the Royal Family enjoys, but the pact with the people, which the Sussexes so spectacula­rly failed to grasp, is that they serve unstinting­ly and uncomplain­ingly to the end. From that perspectiv­e there is no question Prince Philip paid his dues in full and, in all senses of the word, with interest.

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