Wokingham Today

Rememberin­g The Queen, and her connection­s with Wokingham borough

- By THE EDITOR news@wokingham.today

HER MAJESTY the Queen has died. She was 96.

The longest-reigning British monarch, she has been Queen since 1952, and much-loved by Wokingham residents.

She was born on April 21, 1926 in Mayfair, and Christened in May at Buckingham Palace.

The then Princess Elizabeth grew up not expecting to be Queen, but when she was 10, her uncle, Edward VIII, abdicated and the crown switched to her father, George VI.

On the outbreak of the Second World War, a decision was made that the Royal Family would stay in Britain, rather than be evacuated to North America or Canada.

She was in Buckingham Palace when it was bombed by the Nazis in September 1940, but moved to Windsor Castle for much of the war.

As a child, she was a Girl Guide and also a Sea Ranger.

A teenager when the war started, she played her part in maintainin­g morale recording messages for BBC Radio’s Children’s Hour, and encouragin­g the Dig For Victory campaign.

When she was 16, she inspected a military regiment at a parade at Windsor Castle, and when she was 18, she joined the ATS (Auxiliary Territoria­l Service) – the women’s branch of the British Army, where she trained as a mechanic. This was based at the ATS training section in Camberley.

On VE Day, dressed in her ATS uniform, the princess slipped into the crowds gathered in London to celebrate with others.

In 1985, she told the BBC that she pulled her cap over her eyes as she was terrified of being recognised.

“It was one of the most memorable nights of my life,” she said.

This was typical of the Queen’s attitude to life.

On her 21st birthday in Cape Town, she made a speech to the Commonweal­th where she promised: “I declare before you all that my whole life, whether it be long or short, shall be devoted to your service.”

And in February 2022, in a letter to the nation and Commonweal­th to mark the 70th anniversar­y of her ascension to the throne, she signed off the letter as ‘Your servant’.

In 1947, she married Prince Philip.

They had met in 1934 at the wedding of one of his cousins. Typical of the Queen, this was a modest affair as Britain was still recovering from the war.

Her dress was made from material collected by saving clothing coupons from her ration book.

To mark the occasion, Reading’s Simonds Brewery created Old Berks Strong Ale.

Her first born, Prince Charles, was born in 1948, and Anne, the Princess Royal, in 1950.

She went on to have two more children, Prince Andrew in 1960, and Prince Edward in 1964.

Life was to change when her father, King George VI, died on February 6, 1952, following a prolonged illness.

At the time, she was staying in a remote part of Kenya. She was on a tour which was then abandoned.

Her coronation took place a year later, on June 2, 1953, and was televised, making a key moment in our country’s calendar as neighbours gathered round small screens to watch the event before holding street parties, for many, in downpours.

During her reign, Her Majesty has been a frequent visitor to the Thames Valley.

In June 1962, the Queen and Prince Philip, in a Rolls Royce, were driven through packed streets of Wokingham town centre.

Archive photos taken by our predecesso­r, Wokingham Times, show a town decorated with bunting and flags, dignitarie­s salute and the assembled crowds wave and cheer as the car goes through Market Place and Peach Street.

In 1974, she visited Wellington College in Crowthorne, to open its new buildings.

She returned to the school in October 2011, to open the Internatio­nal Round Square Conference.

She opened the Shire Hall complex in Shinfield in 1982, again joined by Prince Philip. More than 5,000 children are reported to have been in the crowds, and played a fanfare in her honour.

In her role as patron of Cinematogr­aph Trade Benevolent Fund, she visited Glebelands, in Wokingham, in April 1994.

With Prince Philip at her side, she opened new bungalows at the residentia­l and convalesce­nt home.

The Royal Berkshire Hospital welcomed her in 2006 to celebrate the merging of the Battle Hospital with the main buildings.

In 2013, she presented Maundy money at Christ Church cathedral in Oxford.

Recipients included parishione­rs from Sonning.

The queen’s jubilees – 1977, 2002 and 2012 – have been well celebrated in the borough, with street fayres, parties and special commemorat­ions.

In 2012, members of Wokingham Art Society created a 36-metre long frieze with 18 panels depicting scenes from across her reign.

A smaller replica of it is on display outside Wokingham’s railway station.

In recent years, she has remained fit and active, still carrying out visits and chairing meetings.

She contracted covid in February 2022, but recovered, and the town was able to celebrate her platinum jubilee in June with beacon lighting ceremonies, thanksgivi­ng services, street parties and celebratio­ns.

Now, the nation – and the borough – gives thanks to the country’s most faithful servant.

 ?? ?? MUCH LOVED: The Queen in 2013, at a Maundy Thursday ceremony in Christ Church Oxford. During the event, she handed out gifts to parishoner­s including a woman from Sonning
MUCH LOVED: The Queen in 2013, at a Maundy Thursday ceremony in Christ Church Oxford. During the event, she handed out gifts to parishoner­s including a woman from Sonning
 ?? Picture: Phil Creighton ??
Picture: Phil Creighton
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