Las Vegas Review-Journal

Britain honors ‘selfless’ Prince Philip

Saluted for his loyalty to queen and country

- By Danica Kirka

LONDON — World leaders and people on the street honored Prince Philip’s life of service to his wife, Queen Elizabeth II, and the British nation Friday after hearing of the death of a man who had been at the center of public life longer than most of them have been alive.

At Buckingham Palace, the queen’s London residence, members of the public laid daffodils at the gates, and the flag was lowered to half-staff. The BBC interrupte­d programmin­g to broadcast the national anthem, “God Save the Queen.”

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Philip, 99, “earned the affection of generation­s here in Britain, across the Commonweal­th and around the world.”

“We are a kingdom united both in grief and in gratitude,” Johnson said.

“Grief at Prince Philip’s passing, and gratitude for his decades of selfless service to the country.”

Philip, who served in the Royal Navy during World War II, married the future queen in 1947 and kept up a full schedule of public appearance­s until he retired in 2017. On March 16, he was released from the hospital looking tired and gaunt after receiving treatment for an undisclose­d infection and a heart problem.

He fulfilled more than 20,000 royal engagement­s to boost British interests at home and abroad. He also led hundreds of charities, started programs that helped British schoolchil­dren, and helped raise his four children, including his eldest son, Prince Charles, the heir to the throne.

U.S. President Joe Biden offered condolence­s to the queen “on behalf of the people of the United States.”

Soon after the announceme­nt of Philip’s death, people lined up outside Buckingham Palace to see the official notice that had been attached to the gate. It was removed soon afterward because of concerns that it would attract crowds, violating social distancing rules.

“I’m quite emotional actually even just talking about it,” Louisa Crook, 41, a London resident, said outside Buckingham Palace.

 ?? Alastair Grant The Associated Press ?? Two people carry flowers Friday to place by the gate at Buckingham Palace in London to honor Prince Philip, who died at 99.
Alastair Grant The Associated Press Two people carry flowers Friday to place by the gate at Buckingham Palace in London to honor Prince Philip, who died at 99.

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