The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Royal baby adds extra sense of history at palace

- By Jill Lawless And James Brooks

LONDON » The arrival of a new royal baby imbued the pomp and pageantry of Buckingham Palace with an extra sense of history Monday as thousands of reporters, Londoners and tourists awaited the most anticipate­d birth announceme­nt in years.

Patient well-wishers held a 12-hour vigil, many of them craning for a better view and a photograph of the palace gates, where the official bulletin announcing the birth was posted on an easel. Grown men rode on friends’ shoulders. Others used step ladders.

Outside the hospital where the Duchess of Cambridge gave birth to the boy, a man dressed as a town crier in traditiona­l robes and an extravagan­t feathered hat shouted the news and rang a bell.

The car carrying the announceme­nt drove from the hospital to the palace, where it was greeted by a crowd shouting “Hip! Hip! Hooray!” and singing “For He’s a Jolly Good Fellow” while waving Union Jack flags.

David Etrillard, visiting from France, said the French “look at Britain with interest because we have no monarchy so it’s great for us. I’m so happy it happened while me and my family are on holiday here.”

The baby boy will be third in line to the throne behind Prince Charles and Prince William and is likely to be monarch one day.

The birth announceme­nt on Buckingham Palace letterhead was brought out for public inspection on the easel by Badar Azim, a footman with the royal household, and Ailsa Anderson, the queen’s press secretary, before being taken inside.

The easel was previously used to announce William’s birth in 1982. The framed sheet of paper suddenly became the target of a thousand camera flashes when a sea of people thrust their smartphone­s through the railings. Hours after the initial announceme­nt, crowds were still surging forward to get near the easel.

They no longer wield political power, but Britain’s royals are unsurpasse­d as celebritie­s and cultural icons.

“They’re sort of the celebritie­s of the world,” said Anne Frey, a beautician from Madison, Wis., watching the daily changing-of-the-guard ceremony with her husband.

“We can tell our kids one day that we were here when it happened,” said Jill Muencz, a tourist from Cleveland, Ohio. “It’s fantasy. We don’t get to experi- ence all that” as Americans.

The birth of a future monarch added to British sports successes at Wimbledon, the Tour de France cycling race and in the Ashes cricket competitio­n.

Few Britons were willing to go as far in their royalism as Terry Hutt, a carpenter from Cambridge in eastern England, who camped outside the hospital for 12 days, sleeping outside the hospital on a bench covered with a Union Jack blanket.

Hutt, who is proud to have met every royal from the late Queen Mother on, said he was doing his bit for Britain by camping outside the hospital in his red, white and blue Union Jack suit, holding flags and congratula­tory banners.

 ?? LEFTERIS PITARAKIS - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tony Appleton, a town crier, announces the birth of the royal baby, outside St. Mary’s Hospital exclusive Lindo Wing in London on Monday.
LEFTERIS PITARAKIS - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tony Appleton, a town crier, announces the birth of the royal baby, outside St. Mary’s Hospital exclusive Lindo Wing in London on Monday.

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