The Columbus Dispatch

Queen Elizabeth privately marks her 96th birthday

- Danica Kirka

LONDON – Queen Elizabeth II was marking her 96th birthday privately Thursday, retreating to the Sandringha­m estate in eastern England that has offered the monarch and her late husband, Prince Philip, a refuge from the affairs of state.

Elizabeth was expected to spend the day at the estate’s Wood Farm cottage, a personal sanctuary where she also spent her first Christmas since Philip’s death in April 2021. Philip loved the cottage, in part because it is close to the sea, she said in February when hosting a rare public event at Sandringha­m.

“I think the queen’s approach to birthdays very much embodies her ‘keep calm and carry on’ attitude,” said Emily Nash, the royal editor at HELLO! magazine. “She doesn’t like a fuss.”

This birthday came during the queen’s platinum jubilee year, marking her 70 years on the throne. Although Thursday was low-key, public celebratio­ns will take place June 2-5, when four days of jubilee festivitie­s have been scheduled to coincide with the monarch’s official birthday.

The day marks yet another milestone in a tumultuous period for the monarch, who has sought to cement the future of the monarchy amid signs of her age and controvers­y in the family. After recovering from a bout of COVID-19 earlier this year, the queen’s public appearance­s have been limited by unspecifie­d “mobility issues.” Prince Andrew’s multimilli­on-dollar settlement with a woman

who accused him of sexual exploitati­on also caused unwanted headlines for the royal family.

But the queen got an early birthday treat last week, when grandson Prince Harry and Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, paid her a joint visit for the first time since they stepped away from front-line royal duties and moved to California in 2020. Harry, in an interview with NBC, said his grandmothe­r was “on great form,” though he added that he wanted to make sure she was “protected” and had “the right people around her.”

Britain’s longest-serving monarch, Elizabeth has spent much of the past two years at Windsor Castle, west of London, where she took refuge during the pandemic.

It has been a little over a year since the death of Philip, her spouse of more than 70 years.

The queen said good-bye during a scaled down funeral in St. George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle. Coronaviru­s restrictio­ns in place at the time limited the service to 30 mourners and forced the monarch to sit alone – a poignant reminder of how she would spend her remaining years.

Last month, with the pandemic on the wane and restrictio­ns eased, the queen shrugged off recent health issues to attend a service of thanksgivi­ng for Philip at Westminste­r Abbey, entering the abbey on the arm of Andrew, her second son. Her choice of escort was seen as a vote of support for Andrew following his legal settlement.

But the in-person appearance was rare. The queen has increasing­ly relied on Prince Charles to take on public engagement­s in the twilight of her reign, most recently offering alms to senior citizens at the Royal Maundy service at St.

George’s Chapel.

Charles took on the traditiona­l task of distributi­ng specially minted coins to retirees who were being recognized for service to the church and the local community.

This year, 96 men and 96 women received the coins, one for each year of the queen’s life.

“She has a lot coming up in the next few months, so it absolutely makes sense that she enjoys her birthday quietly, privately at Sandringha­m,” Nash said. “She will no doubt have quite a lot of time to reflect on her happy times there with Prince Philip over the years. But this is really someone whose focus is still on the future, even at the age of 96.”

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Queen Elizabeth

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