Edmonton Journal

Queen’s Jubilee

Celebratio­ns in England, Edmonton and elsewhere mark the occasion.

- Guy Jackson

LONDON – Britain will mark the Diamond Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth with four days of celebratio­ns beginning Saturday that include a 1,000-boat river pageant and a starstudde­d concert.

The Queen starts the festivitie­s by indulging in her love of horse racing at the Epsom Derby on Saturday before she rides in a ceremonial barge on the Thames at the centre of the giant flotilla on Sunday.

One million people are expected to line the river to see the extravagan­za of steam boats and tugs, speed boats and historic vessels.

A concert in the shadow of Buckingham Palace featuring Sir Paul McCartney and other top names is the highlight on Monday before the four-day extravagan­za culminates in the pomp and splendour of a ceremonial parade on Tuesday.

Aside from the set piece events in London, millions of people up and down the country — and Canada — are commemorat­ing the jubilee by throwing a party at home.

They will be making the most of the two-day public holiday granted for a historic occasion — the queen is only the second British monarch to celebrate a diamond jubilee, after Queen Victoria, in 1897.

Union Jacks are fluttering in streets and shop windows and retailers report that red, white and blue bunting and even jubilee garden gnomes are selling fast.

“It’s a celebratio­n of what she has achieved in 60 years and it’s also a celebratio­n of the institutio­n,” said royal author Robert Jobson. “In a more informal way, it’s also celebratin­g your national identity, your national pride.”

The celebratio­ns take place as the Royal Family enjoys its highest support for decades, with a recent poll showing that 80 per cent of Britons want the country to remain a monarchy.

Those levels of support are comparable to 1953, the year of the Queen’s coronation.

Coming hot on the heels of Prince William’s wedding to the then Kate Middleton last year, the jubilee is likely to further boost the royals’ popularity.

Amid the acclaim for the Queen, it is easy to forget that just a decade ago, the picture was very different.

Following the death of Diana, princess of Wales, in a Paris car crash in 1997, the monarch was widely criticized for failing to join in the public outpouring of grief.

She did eventually bow to Diana’s coffin as it passed, a moment that historian Kate Williams says was a turning point.

Now there is a “massive surge” of affection for the Queen, both in Britain and across the Commonweal­th, said Williams, author of Young Elizabeth: The Making of our Queen.

“At the moment, the Queen’s popularity is as high as it’s ever been since her coronation,” she said.

“This is really quite incredible when you think about how extraordin­arily unpopular she was after the death of Diana.

“The amount of people in this country who were either indifferen­t or felt that the Windsors had got no point at all and should be abolished — that has all changed.

“It looks like the entirety of Britain is going to turn out in the first weekend in June.”

At the centre of the celebratio­ns is an 86-year-old greatgrand­mother, who was visiting Kenya in February 1952 when she was woken to be told by her husband, Prince Philip, that her father, King George VI, had died at the age of 56, thrusting her into the role of queen.

When she ascended to the throne in 1952 at the age of 25, Winston Churchill was prime minister of Britain, Jawaharlal Nehru led the newly independen­t India and swaths of Africa and Asia were still governed by Britain.

She has visited 116 countries over the past six decades, but in a nod to her age she and Prince Philip have given their children the task of visiting the countries of the Commonweal­th in the jubilee year.

Philip has recovered from emergency heart surgery in December and is expected to play a full part in the jubilee celebratio­ns, just a week before his 91st birthday.

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 ?? Alastair Grant, The Associated Press ?? Queen Elizabeth will celebrate her Diamond Jubilee with four days of festivitie­s.
Alastair Grant, The Associated Press Queen Elizabeth will celebrate her Diamond Jubilee with four days of festivitie­s.

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