60 Facts For 60 YearsHere's some facts you might already know about Queen Elizabeth's reign, and some you probably don't!
1. The Queen is the second longest serving monarch. Only five other kings and queens in British history have reigned for 50 years or more.
They are:
- Victoria (63 years)
- George III (59 years)
- Henry III (56 years)
- Edward III (50 years)
- James VI of Scotland (James I of England) (58 years)
2. The Queen is the 40th monarch since William the Conqueror obtained the
crown of England.
3. Since 1952 the Queen has given royal assent to more than 3,500 Acts of Parliament.
4. Over her reign the monarch has given regular audiences to 12 prime
ministers:
Sir Winston Churchill 1951-55, Sir Anthony Eden 1955-57, Harold
Macmillan 1957-63, Sir Alec Douglas-Home 1963-64, Harold Wilson 1964-70 and
1974-76, Edward Heath 1970-74, James Callaghan 1976-79, Margaret Thatcher
1979-90, John Major 1990-97, Tony Blair 1997-2007, Gordon Brown 2007-2010,
David Cameron 2010 – present.
5.
Tony Blair was the first prime minister born
during the Queen’s reign. He was born in May 1953 - the month before the
coronation.
6. The Queen has attended every opening of
Parliament except those in 1959 and 1963, when she was expecting the Duke of
York and Earl of Wessex respectively.
7. There have been six archbishops of Canterbury
during the Queen’s reign - Geoffrey Fisher, Michael Ramsey, Donald Coggan,
Robert Runcie, George Carey and Rowan Williams.
8. There have been six popes during the reign - Pius XII, John XXIII, Paul
VI, John Paul I, John Paul II and Benedict XVI.
9. The Queen has received two popes on visits to
the UK, John Paul II in 1982 and Benedict XVI in 2010. John Paul II’s visit in
1982 was the first papal visit to the UK for more than 450 years.
The Queen has
officially visited the Vatican twice - in 1961 visiting John XXIII and in 1980
visiting John Paul II.
10. The monarch is patron of more than 600 charities
and organisations, more than 400 of which she has held since 1952.
11. Since 1952, the Queen has conferred more than 404,500 honours and
awards.
12. The sovereign has personally held more than 610 investitures.
13. The first investiture of the Queen’s reign took place at Buckingham
Palace on February 27, 1952. The first person to be presented was Private
William Speakman who received the Victoria Cross for his actions during the
Korean War.
14. The monarch has answered around three and a half million items of
correspondence.
15. The sovereign has sent more than 175,000 telegrams to centenarians in
the UK and the Commonwealth.
16. The Queen has sent almost 540,000 telegrams to couples in the UK and the
Commonwealth celebrating their diamond wedding anniversary.
17.
The monarch and Duke of Edinburgh have sent approximately 45,000
Christmas cards during the last 60 years.
18. The sovereign has given out approximately 90,000 Christmas puddings to
staff, continuing the custom of George V and George VI.
19. During the last 60 years, the Queen has undertaken 261 official overseas
visits, including 78 state visits, to 116 different countries.
20. Many of the monarch’s official tours were undertaken on the Royal Yacht
Britannia. It was launched by the Queen on April 16, 1953 and was commissioned
for service on January 7, 1954. It was decommissioned in December 1997. During
this time, Britannia travelled more than a million miles on royal and official
duties.
21. Britannia was first used by the sovereign when she
embarked with Philip on May 1, 1954 at Tobruk for the final stage of their
Commonwealth tour returning to the Pool of London.
The last time the Queen was
on board Britannia for an official visit was on August 9, 1997 for a visit to
Arran in Scotland.
22. During her reign the Queen has made many visits to her major realms -
countries where she is head of state. She has visited Australia 18 times,
Canada 22 times, Jamaica 6 times and New Zealand 10 times.
23. The Queen’s official visits have ranged from the Cocos Islands, 5.4
square miles with a population of 596, to China, 3.7 million square miles with
a population of 1.34 billion.
24. Unusual live gifts given to the monarch on foreign tours include: two
tortoises presented in the Seychelles in 1972; a seven-year-old bull elephant
called Jumbo from the president of Cameroon in 1972 to mark the Queen’s silver
wedding anniversary; and two black beavers presented after a visit to Canada.
25. The only time the sovereign has had to interrupt an overseas tour was in
1974 during a visit to Australia and Indonesia when she was called back to the
UK from Australia when a general election in the UK was suddenly called. The
duke continued with the programme in Australia and the Queen rejoined the tour
in Indonesia.
26. The sovereign’s first Commonwealth tour as Queen began on November 24,
1953 and included visits to Canada, Bermuda, Jamaica, Panama, Fiji, Tonga, New
Zealand, Australia, the Cocos Islands, Ceylon, Aden, Uganda, Libya, Malta and
Gibraltar. The total distance covered was 43,618 miles.
27. The Queen made a historic visit to the Republic of Ireland in May 2011,
the first visit by a British monarch since Irish independence.
28. There have been 102 inward state visits from 1952 to the end of 2011, up
to and including Turkey in November 2011.
29.
The first football match the Queen attended was the
1953 FA Cup Final.
30. The Queen has laid her wreath at the Cenotaph on Remembrance Sunday
every year of her reign, except in 1959, 1961, 1963, 1968, 1983 and 1999 when
she was either pregnant or overseas on official visits.
31. The Queen has attended 56 Royal Maundy services in 43 cathedrals during
her reign. A total of 6,710 people have received Maundy Money in recognition of
their service to the church and their communities.
32. The monarch has been at the saluting base of her troops in every
Trooping the Colour ceremony since the start of her reign, with the exception
of 1955, when a national rail strike forced the cancellation of the parade.
33. The sovereign has attended 35 Royal Variety Performances.
34. The monarch has launched 21 ships during her reign.
35. Since it was launched to mark the Queen’s golden jubilee in 2002, the
Queen’s Award for Voluntary Service has been awarded to more than 750 voluntary
organisations across all four countries in the UK.
Winners of the award have
included scout groups, community radio stations, groups who care for the
elderly and environmental charities.
36. During the past 60 years almost one and a half million people have
attended garden parties at Buckingham Palace or the Palace of Holyroodhouse.
The Queen ended debutante presentation parties in 1958.
37. The Queen has sat for 129 portraits during her reign.
38. The first royal walkabout took place during the visit by the monarch and
Philip to Australia and New Zealand in 1970. The practice was introduced to
allow them to meet as many people as possible, not simply officials and
dignitaries.
39. In 1969 the first television film about the family life of the Royal
Family was made and shown on the eve of the investiture of Charles as Prince of
Wales.
40. An important innovation during the Queen’s reign was the opening in 1962
of a new gallery at Buckingham Palace to display items from the Royal
Collection. The brainchild of the duke, the new Queen’s Gallery occupied the
space of the palace’s bomb-damaged private chapel.
It was the first time that
parts of the royal residence had been opened to the general public. The Queen’s
Gallery was redeveloped and reopened in 2002 for the golden jubilee.
41. The Queen has made a Christmas broadcast to the
Commonwealth every year of her reign except 1969, when a repeat of the film
Royal Family was shown and a written message from the monarch issued.
In 2002
the sovereign made her 50th Christmas broadcast and in 2004 she issued her
first separate broadcast for members of the British armed forces.
42. In 1953, the monarch made the first Christmas broadcast from overseas,
rather than from the UK, broadcasting live from New Zealand. The first
televised broadcast was in 1957, made live. The first pre-recorded broadcast
took place in 1960 to allow transmission around the world. In 2006 the
Christmas broadcast was first made available to download as a podcast.
43. The sovereign launched the British monarchy’s official website in 1997.
In 2007 the official British Monarchy YouTube channel was unveiled, swiftly
followed by a Twitter site (2009), Flickr page (2010) and Facebook page (also
2010).
44. The Queen hosts theme days and receptions to promote
and celebrate aspects of British culture. Recent examples from 2011 include a
reception for young people and the performing arts and for explorers.
Other
themes have included publishing, broadcasting, tourism, emergency services,
maritime, music, young achievers, British design and pioneers.
45. In an average year, the monarch will host more than 50,000 people at
banquets, lunches, dinners, receptions and garden parties at Buckingham Palace.
The sovereign also hosts more than 8,000 people each year at garden parties and
investitures at Holyroodhouse, during Holyrood Week.
46. The Queen was born at 17 Bruton Street, London, W1, on April 21, 1926,
was christened on May 29, 1926 in the private chapel at Buckingham Palace and
was confirmed on March 28, 1942 in the private chapel at Windsor Castle.
47. The monarch learnt to drive in 1945.
48. With the birth of Andrew in 1960, the Queen became the first reigning
sovereign to have a child since Queen Victoria, who had her youngest child,
Princess Beatrice, in 1857.
49. The monarch’s real birthday is on April 21, but it is celebrated
officially in June.
50. During the silver jubilee year, the Queen toured 36
counties in the UK and Northern Ireland, starting in Glasgow on May 17.
In her
golden jubilee year she toured 35 counties beginning in Cornwall on May 1.
51. The Queen’s first foreign tour of the silver jubilee year was a visit to
Western Samoa, Tonga, Fiji, New Zealand, Australia and Papua New Guinea. The
first foreign tour of her golden jubilee year was to Jamaica, New Zealand and
Australia.
52. The monarch has 30 godchildren.
53. The sovereign has owned more than 30 corgis during her
reign, starting with Susan who was a present for her 18th birthday in 1944.
A
good proportion of these have been direct descendants from Susan. The Queen
currently has three corgis - Monty, Willow and Holly.
54. The Queen also introduced a new breed of dog known as the dorgi when one
of her corgis was mated with a dachshund named Pipkin which belonged to
Princess Margaret.
55. The Queen and duke have been married for 64 years. They were married on
November 20, 1947 in Westminster Abbey.
The Queen’s wedding dress was designed
by Norman Hartnell and was woven at Winterthur Silks Limited, Dunfermline, in
the Canmore factory, using silk that had come from Chinese silkworms at
Lullingstone Castle.
56. The monarch’s wedding ring was made from a nugget of Welsh gold which
came from the Clogau St David’s mine near Dolgellau.
The official wedding cake
was made by McVitie and Price, using ingredients given as a wedding gift by
Australian Girl Guides.
57. The wedding of the Queen and Philip was the first and so far the only
time in British history that the heir presumptive to the throne had been
married.
58. The monarch’s racing colours are a purple body with gold braid, scarlet
sleeves and black velvet cap with gold fringe. They were adopted from those
used by Edward VII; one of his most successful horses was called Diamond
Jubilee.
59. Queen Victoria was the last and to date the only British monarch to
celebrate a diamond jubilee. The Queen, who will be 85 on Accession Day in
2012, will be the oldest monarch to celebrate a diamond jubilee. Queen Victoria
was 77 when she celebrated hers in 1897.
60. Only three heads of state have celebrated
diamond jubilee reigns during the Queen’s tenure.
King Bhumibol Adulyadej of
Thailand celebrated 60 years on the throne in 2006; the former Sultan of Johor,
now part of Malaysia, celebrated his in 1955; and the late Emperor Hirohito of
Japan marked his in 1986.
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