The Daily Telegraph

His Majesty passes down the blue beret to his son – ‘a very good pilot, indeed’

- Hannah Furness ROYAL EDITOR

AFTER more than 30 years as Colonelin-chief of the Army Air Corps, the King has ceremonial­ly handed over his light blue beret to the Prince of Wales.

The King and Prince of Wales marked their first joint public engagement since 2022 in some style; the elder arriving by an Apache helicopter and the younger departing in the front seat. Prince William, who arrived in a civilian suit and changed into combat uniform, put a hand on his father’s back, sharing a smile as they walked across the tarmac.

They wore matching ties, the blue and red stripes of the Army Air Corps (AAC), as they posed for an official photograph – the Prince a head taller than the King.

As messages go, it was unmistakab­le: unity, continuity, and father and son together in public after a testing time for the Royal family.

No one was heard to mention the Duke of Sussex, whose recent three-day visit to Britain caused a flurry of headlines about the lack of meeting with his father. The AAC is the Duke’s old unit, in which he served as an Apache helicopter commander and co-pilot gunner during his second tour to Afghanista­n in 2012.

In a speech at the handover, at the Army Aviation Centre in Middle Wallop, Hampshire, the King said the occasion was one of “great joy”, “tinged with great sadness” at ending his own time with them. “I do hope you’ll go from strength to strength in the future with the Prince of Wales as your new Colonel-in-chief,” he said.

“The great thing is he’s a very good pilot indeed – so that’s encouragin­g.”

The event is part of the King’s gradual return to public engagement­s, as he continues his cancer treatment, and the Prince of Wales resumes his more regular schedule of engagement­s after the Princess’ own illness and private recovery.

The last official public engagement the King and Prince William undertook as a duo was shortly after the death of Elizabeth II, when they met members of the public during a walkabout amongst the crowds.

Father and son have attended family engagement­s and semi-public appearance­s together since then, including the Coronation and Christmas at Sandringha­m, but do not regularly overlap in the line of duty. This joint engagement has been widely interprete­d as a show of unity.

It was carefully designed, with the King arriving first – before the Prince entered for a short handover and stayed on by himself to get acquainted with aircrew, supporting ground staff, and their operationa­l aircraft.

During his solo part of the engagement, the King spent time with military personnel and their families and took a short walkabout with children from Middle Wallop School – most of whom have parents serving.

Inside the museum, the 75-year-old spoke to veterans including Aaron Mapplebeck – with the two swapping notes about cancer treatment after Mr Mapplebeck had undergone nine weeks of chemothera­py. The King is said to have remarked upon “loss of taste”, a subject he raised several times during a visit to a cancer hospital several weeks ago.

The Prince became the new Colonelin-chief of the Army Air Corps after the King’s accession and his appointmen­t was formally announced in August 2023. The role had been held by the King, when he was Prince of Wales, for more than 30 years.

Prince William served in the Army as a Platoon Commander in The Blues and Royals, before completing flying training in the Royal Air Force. He then went on to work as an RAF Search and Rescue pilot, spending three years at RAF Valley in Anglesey, Wales.

At Middle Wallop, the Prince of Wales received a briefing on the AAC’S work, before changing into combat uniform to inspect training and operationa­l aircraft. To mark his first engagement as Colonel-in-chief, the prince was presented with a box of gifts: three wooden helicopter­s for Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis, an AAC tartan wrap for the Princess of Wales and a scarf for himself.

In grey skies and rain, he left as a front seat passenger in the two-manned Apache helicopter.

 ?? ?? The King handed over the reins of the Army Air Corps to the Prince of Wales, who flew off in the passenger seat of an Apache helicopter
The King handed over the reins of the Army Air Corps to the Prince of Wales, who flew off in the passenger seat of an Apache helicopter
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