Wales On Sunday

Quick-witted Royal always ready with a quip when meeting members of public

- ■

MEMBERS of the public who met the Duke of Edinburgh have shared their stories, including the duke’s jokes about corgi-scaring trousers and inadequate beards. In a life filled with public engagement­s, the duke met thousands of people.

For many, those meetings lasted long in the memory despite being brief – here are just a few examples.

Meera Datta, 38, in Fairfax, Virginia, US

Meera met the duke at an RAF show near Swindon, Wiltshire, where she was brought up, about 30 years ago.

“I was walking around and there was this huge plane, inside which you can put multiple vehicles,” she said.

“He was just looking at it, just walking around, and I just happened to be looking at it too. It was very informal.

“And then I realised who he was, and we were standing kind of close. I turned around and we sort of acknowledg­ed each other and instead of curtsying, I stuck out my hand, as you know, sort of a very strong, firm handshake.

“He looked at me and then he laughed and he shook my hand. I ran back and I told my mum and my mum was absolutely mortified – she dragged me back over there, she was convinced that she needed to make me curtsy.

“It was a very fun moment for me as a kid.”

■ John Loughton, burgh

John met the duke through his role with the Duke of Edinburgh’s Award scheme.

“A story that springs to mind was I was honoured to be a guest speaker in the Palace of Holyrood as a kind of VIP alongside the duke as part of the 33, from Edin

gold award presentati­on. It was a lovely summer’s day and we’re out in the private garden.

“The duke goes round and meets everyone and I get presented to him as a speaker – I’d met him a couple of times before and I knew he wouldn’t remember, but he kind of pointed as we came across and said ‘ah, we meet again!’

“I had on then, it wasn’t a kilt but it was a pair of tartan trousers. They’re kind of bright... it’s the world peace tartan. And he’s kind of chatting to me and he looks down and goes ‘what the bloody hell tartan is that?’

“I said ‘oh, it’s the world peace tartan, sir. It represents the United Nations and peace and reconcilia­tion and all that. He said ‘Oh, well that’s all very nice. But by golly, it would scare away the corgis!’”

■ Tim Goodwin, 36, London

Tim met the duke at a university event in Edinburgh in 2006.

“The Duke of Edinburgh was the chancellor of the University of Edinburgh, which is where I was a student,” he said.

“As part of our brief conversati­on, he asked me what I intended to do when I graduated, and at the time I was giving quite serious, genuine, thought to joining the Royal Navy.

“I knew that he had served in the Navy and had connection­s with it. So I said to him, ‘I’m thinking of joining the Royal Navy.’

“I’d sort of gone along to this event rather unshaven, probably three or four days of patchy stubble. When I said I was going to join, or I was thinking of joining the Royal Navy, he looked at me and sort of squinted his eyes and said, ‘Well, you’re going to have to learn to grow a better beard than that!’”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom