The Sunday Telegraph

The perfect excuse to get the Silver Jubilee bunting out once again

- By Peter Stanford

They’ve used the same red, white and blue bunting to decorate Sheredan Road in Highams Park, East London, for every royal occasion since the Queen’s Silver Jubilee.

And it is fluttering overhead as the residents gather around picnic tables, barbecues and gazebos in the middle of this quiet side street of Thirties semis to raise a toast to Harry and Meghan. “I love the Queen,” enthuses Ria Grand, a 66-year-old grandmothe­r of seven, resplenden­t in regal red dress and tiara. “But what I really love is getting together.”

“I love Harry,” says Carole Pugh, 77, her friend and neighbour from the other side of the street these past four decades. “He’s had a hard time in life, losing his mother.”

Earlier, her three grandchild­ren and a posse of friends were watching the service in Carole’s front room.

“All the terrible things in the world,” says Carole, “this lightens it.” “I loved the dress,” Ria chips in, refilling the glasses with prosecco. “Very Grace Kelly. I bet they’ve got copies in the shops already.”

But she wasn’t so keen on the sermon by Bishop Michael Curry. “He went on a bit, didn’t he?” she says.

They do, however, approve of the latest royal bride.

“It’s important,” says Reuben, Ria’s husband, “that Harry’s marrying someone who is mixed race. That’s the society we live in now.”

Carole, though, is concerned about one thing. “But I wish Meghan’s mum hadn’t looked so alone in the chapel.”

Ria and Carole got together to arrange the first street party here 41 years ago in 1977, the year of the Queen’s Silver Jubilee. Back then, they had to pay the local authority £50 to close Sheredan Road off for the day. Now Waltham Forest council does it for nothing and even sends a truck to clean the street first thing. It is one of 10 street parties happening across this outer London borough.

“There’s always been a strong sense of community here,” explains Ria. “I grew up in the East End of London. It’s that thing of getting the piano out in the street and having a party. That’s all we wanted to do.”

And it’s worked so well that they’ve been doing it ever since – for the weddings of Prince Charles and Diana in 1981, Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson in 1986, Prince William and Kate in 2011, as well as the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee and 90th birthday.

Just as the coming generation of royals was centre stage at the wedding in Windsor, here in Sheredan Road there is also a baton being handed on.

Michelle Lawfull, Carole’s 42-yearold daughter, has done all the organising this time around.

There’s more use of WhatsApp to get neighbours to pull their weight, not to mention the shop-bought wedding cake, but otherwise it is the same as it has always been. And that, for her, is the point.

“I’ve got such happy memories of me playing in the street all day at those parties,” Michelle says. “I wanted my children to have the same as I had.”

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