The Maui News - Weekender

Queen makes Capt. Tom a knight

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LONDON — In the end, Sir Tom didn’t need to rise.

On a day infused with emotion, Queen Elizabeth II tapped the blade of a sword once owned by her father on the slender shoulders of 100-yearold Tom Moore, making a hero of a nation a knight of the realm Friday.

Moore captivated the British public by walking 100 laps of his garden in England and raising some $40 million for the National Health Service in April. The queen knighted him with the traditiona­l sword tap, but the World War II was not required to take a knee before the monarch.

Instead, Moore steadied himself against his now-famous walker and wheeled himself across the grass to stand in front of Elizabeth.

“I have been overwhelme­d by the many honours I have received over the past weeks, but there is simply nothing that can compare to this,” he tweeted after the ceremony. “I am overwhelme­d with pride and joy.”

The ceremony was staged outside of Windsor Castle west of London, where the 94-year old queen has been sheltering during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Moore walked into the nation’s hearts by setting a goal of marking his 100th birthday with a garden lap for each year of his life.

His family elevated the challenge by using social media and the motto #Tomorrow

WillBeAGoo­dDay to seek donations to support health care workers during the pandemic, in part a show of gratitude for the doctors and nurses who took care of Moore when he broke his hip last year.

 ?? Chris Jackson/Pool Photo via AP ?? Captain Sir Thomas Moore arrives to receive his knighthood from Britain’s Queen Elizabeth, during a ceremony at Windsor Castle on Friday.
Chris Jackson/Pool Photo via AP Captain Sir Thomas Moore arrives to receive his knighthood from Britain’s Queen Elizabeth, during a ceremony at Windsor Castle on Friday.

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