Scottish Daily Mail

Bells broke out a jangle of joy that said: Elizabeth is wed

Stunning scenes on day Queen-to-be wed her Duke

- November 21, 1947

ALOnDOn delirious with enthusiasm, wild with joy, blazing with pageantry, a London alight with colour. Only the day was grey when Philip Mountbatte­n, Duke of edinburgh, Knight of the Garter, and Princess elizabeth of england were married in westminste­r Abbey.

From hyde Park to Admiralty Arch; from Trafalgar Square to the houses of Parliament; from Palace Green to Victoria the crowds stood and sat, waved and cheered, rocked and swayed.

It is an occasion like this that must make the weary duty of Royalty seem really worth the doing.

The high ceremony did not start until 11am, but the hours from the drizzly dawn were tense with anticipati­on.

The people thronged to the route by train, by bus, by car, on foot. They edged and manoeuvred their way to any and every vantage point, sometimes to be summoned away from this tree, that railing, the other corner by the ubiquitous police — there were 6,750 on duty, reinforced by 300 City constables, 600 specials, and 450 plaincloth­es men.

The hours of waiting were filled, as ever, by the small incidents and excitement­s that go to make a great day. The dog that walked the length of whitehall; the men with the periscopes; the hawkers with their rosettes; the peddlers with their balloons crudely stencilled ‘elizabeth and Philip’.

And, unfailing source of interest and comment — the casualties. The faints, the collapses, the falls, and swift efficiency of the St John Ambulance Brigade, the smooth sweep of the Red Cross wagons … and, unseen, the deft ministrati­ons of the cases that were taken to hospital: 1,250 casualties were handled up to 1pm, 23 of them serious cases.

Swigs from vacuum flasks, a munch of sandwiches helped to pass the time. Strangers swapped cigarettes, shared lights. The classless comradeshi­p, obliterate­d by austerity since the glad hysteria of Ve-Day and the solidarity of the Blitz, was here again.

eight, nine, ten, when — the crowd did not know — the visiting Kings and Queens left for the Palace: Michael of Romania and his mother, Queen helen; Rene and Margaret of Bourbon-Parma, with 21-year-old Prince Michael; Don Juan of Spain, with his wife and his mother, Queen Victoria of Spain (but still Princess ena of Battenberg to London).

Out in the streets the crowd waited, taking what comfort they could from the loud-speakers’ tunes. The sun struggled to break the mass of cloud.

The momentum gathered. A cheer for ernest Bevin, massive and leonine; another for Anthony eden, sitting solitary in a huge car. Premier Attlee came and went.

But it was the Duchess of Kent, travelling in neither of the main procession­s, who gave the first real thrill to the now crazily excited crowd. with her, her children: As controlled, as carefully trained, as perfect in deportment as she herself.

Great blue Daimlers rolled up with the bridesmaid­s: Figures from a dream, ivory dresses glittering against the grey light, hair gleaming beneath the white ornaments, faces delicately etched against the cushions of the car. And then came the jingle of cavalry; the exciting clash of sabre on breastplat­e, the clop of horses’ hooves. The bridegroom passed almost unnoticed, the elder Mountbatte­n was cheered wildly. winston, his fingers in the traditiona­l V sign, was still the hero of the people.

But it was the last coach that held every eye: The Cinderella coach for a girl waiting, not dreading, that the clock would strike 12.

Timed to the fraction of a second — it was elizabeth’s great-grandfathe­r who coined the aphorism: ‘Punctualit­y is the courtesy of Princes’ — the coaches, splendid with scarlet outriders, sleek with windsor greys, rolled to the door.

The Queen — magnificen­t with the Garter blue slashing diagonally her dress of apricot. The King in the sober blue and bright gold of the navy.

But all the way from Buckingham Palace it was elizabeth who held the eye — and her father was content that it should be so.

It is a tradition of royalty that they must never seem bored. Yesterday there was no pretence. Joy radiated out of the slim figure, white-dressed, white-veiled, in its fairy coach.

Then — the anti-climax. The horse Guards and Life Guards vanished; the Captains and the Kings departed — into the great Gothic Abbey.

Then the bells broke out: Jangle of joy, the brazen tongues crying abroad the news that the heiress Presumptiv­e to the Throne was wed. The band played the national anthem thrice: Once for the bride and groom — first occasion for the new Duke to receive royal honours; once for King and Queen; once for the Queen Mother. The air was a joyous battlegrou­nd between the music of the Church and State.

The cavalry re-formed: The bride and groom drove away. The great ones of the earth followed them. And for the crowds in westminste­r and whitehall, the day was done.

Back went the royal party to the three-course wedding breakfast, the champagne, the traditiona­l toast proposed, as always, by the bride’s father. edinburgh drew the sword he had clasped throughout his drive to the Abbey — grandfathe­r Battenberg’s sword — to cut the 6ft, 500lb cake.

But outside the Palace the crowd was waiting. Patiently, not so patiently, impatientl­y.

The people of Britain began their chant of loyalty.

BUT it was not this time ‘we want the King!’ but ‘we want the Bride!’ Urgent, imperative, irresistib­le, the sound beat against the Palladian front of the palace like a great wind. The stamping of feet was as relentless as the sea.

The thrusting wall of men and women and children swept aside the police, the soldiers. It swept into the forecourt of the palace itself, cheering, chanting, shouting for the bride. But even when they broke the bounds and the cordons, this crowd was a British crowd: Good-humoured, considerat­e of humanity and human decency, even in its headlong, indistinct­ive rush.

Then, the words of the chant changed, though the rhythm remained the same. not ‘we want the Bride!’ but ‘here comes the Bride!’ naval officer and Princess, Duke and Duchess, future Queen and Consort stood together on the balcony.

The King, the Queen, Princess Margaret, the bridesmaid­s, the majestic figure of Queen Mary — all appeared. But it was only the two that — rightly in their own day — caught the eye and, with it, the heart of that single-minded mass of good-natured humanity.

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 ??  ?? Newly wed: Leaving the Abbey and, left, off for their Hampshire honeymoon
Newly wed: Leaving the Abbey and, left, off for their Hampshire honeymoon

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