Scottish Daily Mail

‘That’s fun, isn’t it!‘ Joy of Queen basking in Jubilee memories

It’s the remote spot in Kenya where, 70 years ago tonight, she slept as her father passed away at Sandringha­m. And, finds ROBERT HARDMAN, it’s had its own share of drama ever since

- By Rebecca English Royal Editor

TOMORROW she will become the first British monarch ever to celebrate a Platinum Jubilee.

And last night Buckingham Palace released wonderful new footage and images to mark the Queen’s 70 remarkable years on the throne.

Filmed in the Oak Room at Windsor Castle last month, they show her poring over a selection of memorabili­a from jubilees past and present held in the Royal Archives and the Royal Collection.

Among them was a charming handwritte­n recipe from ‘Chris, nine’ sent to mark her Golden Jubilee in 2002.

A Recipe For A Perfect Queen, the child’s letter reads. The ingredient­s are 500ml of royal blood, a dab of jewels and posh gowns, a dash of loyalty, a litre of hard work, two tablespoon­s of healthines­s, a cup of courage, a handful of royal waves and a few drops of a good smile.

It made its recipient chuckle. ‘Hahaha. That’s quite fun, isn’t it,’ the Queen remarked.

Another card, also celebratin­g her 50-year landmark, caught her eye as well. It was made from eight bottle tops and had the handwritte­n words ‘Ma’am You’re The Tops’. ‘That’s good, simple but ingenious,’ the Queen told Dr Stella Panayotova, assistant keeper of the royal archives, who joined her for the viewing.

As she examined the treasured items, her inquisitiv­e dorgi – a corgi/dachshund cross called Candy – trotted unscripted into the room. The Queen, dressed in a smart blue shift dress and sitting in an armchair, beamed with undisguise­d delight.

‘And where did you come from?’ she inquired before affectiona­tely touching Candy on the nose. As the dog left the room, clearly disappoint­ed at the lack of treats on offer, her owner chuckled: ‘I know what you want.’

Also on display were pictures

of entries to the Platinum Pudding competitio­n, just a handful of the many thousands received from amateur cooks competing to create a memorable dessert fit for the Queen and the nation.

‘We’ve had a number of Platinum Pudding competitio­n entries that have been coming in in recent weeks. People have been very creative,’ an aide told her. She replied: ‘Already? Looks like they’re all going to end with crowns on them!’

The Queen also studied an autograph fan presented to Queen Victoria to mark her Golden Jubilee in 1887 by the then Prince and Princess of Wales, later Edward VII and Queen Alexandra.

It was created without decoration so that it could be signed by some of those closest to her – a fashionabl­e activity at the time.

Between 1891 and 1900 it was added to by numerous friends and relations including ‘Alix and Nicky’ – later the tsar and tsarina of Russia – all but two of her children and statesmen the Marquess of Salisbury and Joseph Chamberlai­n. Commenting on the signatures, the Queen said: ‘Quite a gathering.’ Traditiona­lly the Queen does not publicly ‘celebrate’ her Accession Day as it marks the loss of her beloved father, George VI, on February 6, 1952. But this year aides are keen to mark her seven decades of unwavering service to the country, realms and Commonweal­th.

In the new pictures the Queen pays a touching tribute to her father by wearing the aquamarine and diamond clip brooches, worn separately in a diagonal setting, which were an 18th birthday present from her beloved ‘Papa’ in April 1944. The two art deco-style pieces were made by Boucheron from baguette, oval and round diamonds and aquamarine­s.

Of all the places on Earth that can boast ‘Queen Elizabeth Slept Here’, none comes anywhere close to the epic significan­ce of this one. Even when we are all long gone, school children will still be learning the story of the young woman who went up a tree as a princess and came down a queen.

and it all happened exactly 70 years ago tonight, on the very spot where I am standing now.

It was here, overlookin­g this same muddy watering hole, that Princess Elizabeth was in a treehouse in the branches of a giant mgumu fig tree, when King George VI died in his sleep in the early hours of february 6, 1952.

Entranced by elephants, baboons, duelling rhino and much else besides, the 25-year-old mother-of-two had no idea that she had just become Queen of much of the planet. Yet it was here — at the very heart of the Commonweal­th to which she has devoted her life — that the longest reign in our history began.

This, then, really is ground zero for the modern monarchy.

Seven decades on, there is still a dramatic, eerie grandeur about this corner of Kenya’s vast aberdare National Park, where thick forest meets open bush next to a murky pool — a place forever after known as Treetops.

Yet it has a melancholy aura these days. The original tree, along with the treehouse where the Queen was staying that night, has long gone. It was torched by anti-British Mau Mau guerrillas soon after her visit. Even the commemorat­ive tree which she planted on her return three decades later has gone, too, bulldozed by disrespect­ful elephants, along with the commemorat­ive plaque. a mess of mangled fence is all that remains.

The replacemen­t for that original treehouse, a wooden hotel-on-stilts, was erected on the other side of the watering hole in 1957 and soon became a world-famous safari lodge. for the past two years, however, Treetops Mk II has stood empty, a monument to Covid-19, closed off to the outside world behind miles of electric fencing and padlocked steel gates.

However, the management have agreed to give me an exclusive tour of the place. I look around the hotel and find it all clean and tidy. The 36 rooms, including the snug ‘Princess Elizabeth Suite’, have been mothballed, with a view to reopening at some point. from here it is a short walk around the watering hole to the site of the original treehouse, but I still have to be accompanie­d by an armed ranger looking out for big beasts.

THE only possible threat is a huge buffalo slurping at the water’s edge. It gives us a beady eye but nothing more. Between us and it is the macabre sight of a pair of horns resting on a patch of thick mud. It’s all that remains of another buffalo which let itself get bogged down in the mire last week. Once its legs became stuck, the poor thing was jumped on by a pack of hyenas which ate it alive. The hotel caretaker was the only witness.

at least the animals are still here, even if the humans have gone. Indeed, the wildlife is almost a parable for this reign.

for so much has changed since Elizabeth II became Queen on this spot. Whole empires have fallen while technology has transforme­d our lives. Every single world leader in 1952 is no more — except, that is, for one.

like the elephant and the buffalo, Elizabeth II remains reassuring­ly the same.

It is why I have come here to retrace her footsteps; to find out what has happened to the place where it all started and to see how this part of Kenya will be marking its moment in the history books. for, as I soon discover, they cherish the royal links in these parts — from the roll of Coronation carpet still preserved in the local church to the nearby forest clearing still called ‘Prince Charles Campsite’ (where he grew his first beard while on his first safari).

It was on february 1, 1952 that Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh landed in Nairobi on the first leg of a round-the-world tour on behalf of the ailing King.

Before their planned onward voyage, by sea, to australia, they travelled 100 miles north of the Kenyan capital to spend a few days at Sagana lodge, a bungalow which had been a wedding present from the Kenyan government. from there, they travelled to the town of Nyeri for a spot of polo, followed by lunch at the Outspan Hotel and then a night in the jungle.

‘Our whole school came out to welcome the Princess and the Duke on their way to Treetops,’ says Jas Singh, now 84, who has lived in Nyeri all his life. ‘She drove past in this Humber with all the windows down. She was going very slowly so as not to create a cloud of dust. There she was, waving in the back.’

He proudly shows me the ‘E II R’ medals and pencil box which every child in his school received the following year after the new Queen’s Coronation.

In later life, Mr Singh worked as an accountant for the Princess’s host that day, Eric Sherbrooke Walker. a colourful ex-British army officer married to an earl’s daughter, Walker had opened the Outspan Hotel in Nyeri in 1928.

He then built a two-storey treehouse in the nearby national park as a wildlife-viewing platform for his guests and called it Treetops. It was not for the faintheart­ed. Visitors faced a steep, uphill 600-yard walk through the forest from the nearest vehicle track before they

reached the 30ft ladder up to the treehouse. Wooden slats were hammered into trees along the way, offering a means of escape from dangerous animals.

They only offered limited protection, however. Not only could a leopard climb them faster than a human but, just two days after the Princess’s visit, four ‘escape’ trees were uprooted by elephants.

Walker was taking no chances with his royal guests when they arrived 70 years ago this very day. He had asked the famous big game hunter, Jim Corbett, to act as royal escort. Corbett was something of a colonial era celebrity, famous for tracking down some of the most prolific man-eating big cats ever recorded. He was looking out for anything which might endanger the Princess, be it animals or Mau Mau insurgents.

He was not alone. ‘Sherbrooke Walker also recruited his neighbours to help out, too,’ recalls Mike Prettejohn, 89, a retired cattle rancher, still chuckling at what happened next. ‘My friend, Robin Camm, farmed near Treetops. He was on guard duty in the forest and had been waiting for hours and was relieving himself when the Princess suddenly appeared. He found himself trying to hold up his trousers and bow at the same time!’

SHoRTly before his death in 1955, Corbett published a short account of the visit which he called ‘Treetops’. In it, he described his alarm as several bull elephants came charging through the forest just as the royal party turned up. one was a mere ten yards from the Princess as she reached the ladder but she held her nerve.

once in the treehouse, she was gripped by all the animals below — including an elephant blowing dust at a flock of doves. When tea was served inside the treehouse, the Princess replied: ‘oh, please may I have it here. I don’t want to miss a moment of this.’ Corbett later wrote that she was filming it all with a cine camera. He also remembered her touching confidence in her father’s recovery.

‘I have heard it said that when the Princess waved goodbye to His Majesty at london airport, she knew she would never see him again,’ he wrote. ‘This I do not believe. I am convinced that the young Princess who spoke of her father that night with such great affection and pride... never had the least suspicion that she would not see him again.’

The following morning, she was up at first light, still filming everything that moved. A page from the visitors’ book now hangs in a frame on the wall of the new Treetops. Signed ‘Elizabeth’ and ‘Philip’, it lists ‘animals seen’, including ‘Rhinos all night (eight at a time) — in the morning two bulls fighting.’ After a late breakfast of scrambled eggs and bacon, the Princess climbed back down the ladder, bound for Sagana lodge and the coast.

Except she had already been Queen for hours. However, the coded alert to the Kenyan authoritie­s had gone astray and communicat­ions were dreadful. Word finally reached the press corps at the outspan Hotel who, in turn, alerted her private secretary, Martin Charteris, who called the Duke’s equerry, who told the Duke, who took his young wife into the garden of Sagana lodge. There, he gently broke the news.

FAMouSly, Charteris’s first duty was to ask his boss by which name she would reign. ‘My own name, of course,’ she replied. Within hours, she was on her way home where a tearful Winston Churchill was waiting on the runway.

Back in Kenya, all these moments remain etched in the collective memory. My escort at Treetops is Amos Ndegwa, 67, the guide here for 30 years. He was not even born in 1952 but learned all the stories from his grandfathe­r, a carpenter, who built the original treehouse. Amos’s father was the outspan Hotel chef who prepared the Queen’s last lunch as a princess: ‘He told me that she was very jovial,’ says Amos.

When the Earl and Countess of Wessex came to visit during the Queen’s Golden Jubilee, it was Amos who escorted them through the bush to see the Queen’s tree. They also planted a new one, though it, too, has fallen prey to the elephants.

once Treetops closed down in 2020, staff stopped maintainin­g the fence around the royal trees and the elephants had a field day. At least someone managed to retrieve the old commemorat­ive plaque, which is now in storage.

For many years, Treetops was a magnet for British and American tourists (and other members of the Royal Family). Recently, however, the majority of tourists have been from Asia and, thanks to Covid, that market has vanished.

The company which owns Treetops also owns the outspan and has now instructed Knight Frank to put that hotel up for sale, with an asking price of £3.6 million. It remains a handsome reminder of yesteryear.

It includes the cottage where lord Baden-Powell, founder of the scouting movement, spent his final years.

The future for Treetops, however, remains unclear while owners, Aberdare Safari Hotels, asure me that they hope ‘to resume operations as soon as possible’.

Driving through the surroundin­g national park, I see the decline everywhere. Roads and tracks are in disrepair. The undergrowt­h is growing back at ‘Prince Charles Campsite’ which hasn’t seen a camper in ages. There are reports of a spike in poaching. The rhinos which enthralled Princess Elizabeth have now all but disappeare­d.

Visitors now gravitate towards private reserves such as the pretty nearby Sangare Conservanc­y and Solio Ranch, which maintain rigorous security and conservati­on programmes.

It is why so many locals look back wistfully to the time, 70 years ago,

when a wide-eyed princess put Treetops on the map. Certainly, St Philip’s Church in Naromoru will be honouring the Queen and her family tomorrow. Princess Elizabeth attended morning service here in February 1952 — her last formal act of worship before she became Defender of the Faith. Mike Prettejohn was among the congregati­on.

The Queen never forgot this Norman-style stone church. Following her Coronation in June 1953, a lot of new blue carpet was left over in Westminste­r Abbey, so the new Queen sent a roll of it to St Philip’s. To this day, it lines the aisle.

‘We love our royal history,’ says Pastor Samuel Kanyango, 45. ‘And, of course, we will be saying special prayers for the Queen.’

He adds that, thanks to the royal connection, Kenyan politician­s flock here. ‘There is a belief that any politician who kneels here gets elected,’ the pastor laughs. ‘And this is an election year.’

He shows me the Jubilee gift which church members have chosen for the Queen — a beautiful multi-coloured basket-bag called a ‘kiondo’. He is now working out how to get it to Britain.

local residents including my safari guide, wildlife expert Henry Henley, will be praying for something else, too. Everyone just wants to see visitors returning so that places including Treetops can reopen. All would be thrilled, too, to see another member of the Royal Family come back, plant a new tree and re-hang the old commemorat­ive plaque.

until then, however, it is going to be a rather sad and lonely

Platinum Jubilee here at royal ground zero.

 ?? ?? Reminiscin­g: A delighted Queen examines previous tributes in new footage
Reminiscin­g: A delighted Queen examines previous tributes in new footage
 ?? ?? Historic: The autograph fan given to Queen Victoria on her Golden Jubilee
Historic: The autograph fan given to Queen Victoria on her Golden Jubilee
 ?? ?? Cheers: Bottle tops card from 00
Cheers: Bottle tops card from 00
 ?? ?? Special visitor: The Queen pets her dorgi Candy. Inset: With her father on her 18th birthday in 1944
Special visitor: The Queen pets her dorgi Candy. Inset: With her father on her 18th birthday in 1944
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 ?? ?? Right ingredient­s: Child’s praise
Right ingredient­s: Child’s praise
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 ?? ?? Bygone era: Robert Hardman at the Treetops Lodge in Kenya
Bygone era: Robert Hardman at the Treetops Lodge in Kenya
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 ?? ?? Moments in history: Elizabeth and Philip during their visit to Kenya in 1952, above, the treehouse they stayed in
Moments in history: Elizabeth and Philip during their visit to Kenya in 1952, above, the treehouse they stayed in

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