Tribute to HM Queen by Royal Navy
To mark the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee, a new exhibition celebrating Her Majesty’s loyal service to the Royal Navy, both official and personal, has opened at the National Museum of the Royal Navy, Portsmouth Historic Dockyard. Her Majesty’s Service takes a fascinating look at both her role as ceremonial head of the Royal Navy and as granddaughter, daughter, wife and mother of naval officers. She married Prince Philip, a serving naval officer and has spoken affectionately and publicly of her time spent as a naval wife in Malta during 1949-1951.
On display for the first time and recently donated to the museum by the HM The Queen is a naval uniform belonging to the Duke of Edinburgh alongside his Admiral’s cap. It joins other uniforms worn by the Princess Royal and a flying suit of the Prince of Wales. Newlydonated to the museum are 41 shell cases from the gun salute fired to commemorate the death of The Duke of Edinburgh in 2021.
Photographs record the decades of service when, as a princess aged just 18, she launched her first naval ship, HMS Vanguard in 1944. Since then, she has launched many others including HMS Dreadnought, the navy’s first nuclear powered submarine, on 21 October 1960.
The Queen is currently the Lady Sponsor of the frigate HMS Lancaster and the Royal Navy’s flagship, the aircraft carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth. The Queen also maintains close links with over 20 naval charities that support sailors. These include the Royal Marines Association, the Royal Naval Association and the Royal Navy Football Association.
The sheer scale and spectacle of international fleet reviews make them memorable, with seven during her reign including one for her Coronation in 1953 just off the coast of Portsmouth and most recently in 2005, to mark the the Battle of Trafalgar.
The exhibition is open all year and entry is free with a valid ticket.
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