Trooping the colour kicks off Queen’s platinum jubilee celebrations

Prince of Wales takes salute on his mother’s behalf while flag-waving crowd enjoys parade and flypast

Four days of festivities for the Queen’s platinum jubilee kicked off on Thursday with a display of military pageantry, large crowds and a royal reunion, as the nation marked the 70th anniversary of the longest reigning monarch in British history at trooping the colour.

Seventy years after she took her first salute as sovereign, mobility issues dictated that the Queen break with tradition, allowing the Prince of Wales to take the salute on her behalf at Horse Guards Parade. He was joined by the Duke of Cambridge and the Princess Royal.

The monarch, 96, skipped the physically arduous inspecting of the guard and instead acknowledged the salute of the returning Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment at the end of the parade from the Buckingham Palace balcony, accompanied by the Duke of Kent, 86.

The palace announced on Thursday evening that the Queen had experienced “some discomfort” during the day’s celebrations and would miss the national service of thanksgiving at St Paul’s Cathedral in London on Friday “with great reluctance”.

She had used a new walking stick, a jubilee gift from the army, and donned sunglasses when she took to the balcony.

The Duchess of Cambridge, with Prince George, eight, Princess Charlotte, seven, and Prince Louis, four, taking part in their first carriage procession, watched the parade from offices overlooking Horse Guards.

So, too, did the Duke and Duchess of Sussex who had flown in from California with their children, Archie, three, and Lilibet, who turns one on Saturday. They were not included in the carriage procession to Horse Guards Parade but are expected to attend a service of thanksgiving at St Paul’s on Friday.

There was one glaring absentee: the Duke of York. Stripped of royal patronages and affiliations after settling a civil suit in the US over sexual assault claims, he was not due to be present, and it later transpired he had tested positive for Covid.

Family drama and scandal dictated the lineup on Buckingham Palace’s balcony for the RAF flypast marking the end of the ceremony, with no Andrew and no Harry or Meghan after “Megxit” and the couple’s accusations of racial hostility from the royal family.

Working royals only were to join the Queen on the balcony, she had decreed “after careful consideration”. On show as the Red Arrows roared over the palace trailing red, white and blue smoke above a cheering, flag-waving crowd were Charles and Camilla, William and Kate, Edward and Sophie, and Anne and her husband, Tim Laurence, joined by the less familiar faces of the Queen’s other working relatives, and the Cambridge and Wessex children.

This weekend Meghan will attend her first public engagement with the royal family since an awkward Commonwealth Day service in Westminster Abbey in March 2020. There is speculation that the Queen will meet Lilibet for the first time, or even that the Sussexes may have their daughter christened at Windsor.

The flypast of more than 70 aircraft including Apache helicopters, Typhoons and the Red Arrows thundered over a packed Mall, where crowds had gathered from early morning transforming it into a sea of red, white and blue. Union flag sellers did brisk business outside nearby tube stations. Cardboard crowns and corgis were popular. A small number of especially devout royal fans had camped overnight to secure the best vantage points. St James’s Park swiftly filled to capacity ahead of the ceremony, as did other viewing areas in central London as the Metropolitan police warned latecomers not to turn up.

This was the first major milestone the Queen has marked without Prince Philip, who died last year aged 99. Trooping the colour has marked the official birthday of the sovereign for more than 260 years, and is a staple annual event in the Queen’s diary.

Taking part were more than 1,400 soldiers and 250 horses from the British army’s Household Division. On this occasion the colour of the 1st Battalion The Irish Guards was trooped, led by their mascot, an Irish wolfhound called Seamus, in front of 7,500 ticketed spectators on Horse Guards Parade and another 7,000 at the Queen Victoria Memorial outside Buckingham Palace.

A double gun salute marked the platinum jubilee and the 69th anniversary of the Queen’s coronation on 2 June 1953.

Among world leaders sending their congratulations was Joe Biden, who said the Queen had inspired people with her “selfless devotion and service” to the UK and the Commonwealth for 70 years”. Emmanuel Macron gave the Queen a cavalry horse named Fabulous and said in a video message: “We are grateful for your courage and we share the respect and love that British people and Commonwealth have always shown you.”

Boris Johnson tweeted his congratulations and thanked the Queen for her “unwavering duty and service”. He added: “Vivat Regina Elizabetha! God Save The Queen!”

The Sinn Féin vice-president, Michelle O’Neill, wrote to the Queen to praise her “significant” contribution to the Northern Ireland peace process and acknowledge her “dedicated public service to the British people”.

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An estimated 10 million people plan to celebrate the platinum jubilee over the extended bank holiday weekend, according to the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport, with street parties, lunches, parades and live music events.

As dusk falls on Thursday evening, more than 3,000 beacons will be set ablaze across the UK and Commonwealth in tribute to the Queen, who is expected to lead the lighting of the principal jubilee beacon in a ceremony at Windsor Castle.

Contributor

Caroline Davies

The GuardianTramp

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