|
Her
Majesty Queen Elizabeth, The Queen Mother is the mother of
Queen Elizabeth II, the present British Queen,
and the widow of the late King George VI. She was
born the Hon. Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes-Lyon on 4 August 1900.
She is the daughter of Lord Glamis, later 14th Earl of Strathmore and
Kinghorne. She spent her early childhood at the country home of her
parents St Paul's Waldenbury in Hertfordshire, north of London. The
Bowes-Lyon family is descended from the Royal House of Scotland. One of The
Queen Mother's 14th-century ancestors became Thane of Glamis, home of
Macbeth 300 years before, and Glamis Castle is the family seat.
From childhood days The Queen Mother and her older sisters
had been friendly with the children of King George V and Queen Mary.
Occasionally members of the Royal family stayed at Glamis Castle. In 1922
Lady Elizabeth acted as one of the bridesmaids at the wedding of their
daughter, Princess Mary. In January 1923 came the announcement of her
engagement to HRH The Duke of York, The King and Queen's second son. They
were married on 26 April 1923 in Westminster Abbey. They had two children,
Princess Elizabeth (the present Queen), born on 21 April 1926 at the
Strathmores' London home, 17 Bruton Street, and Princess Margaret, born on
21 August 1930 at Glamis Castle.
When King Edward VIII
abdicated on 11 December 1936, the accession of the Duke and Duchess was
proclaimed and they assumed the responsibilities of the throne. Their
coronation took place on 12 May 1937.
With the outbreak of war in 1939, it was thought that the
Queen and her daughters should evacuate to North America, but throughout the
Second World War they remained in Britain even though Buckingham Palace was
bombed in September 1940. The Queen and the King visited badly damaged areas
throughout the country after the air-raids, and toured Britain visiting
hospitals, factories and troops.
In 1948 the King and Queen celebrated their Silver
Wedding. Broadcasting to the nation, the King spoke movingly of the
inspiration that he had received from his marriage. The last major public
occasion that he and the Queen attended together was the opening of the
Festival of Britain in May 1951. In autumn 1951, Princess Elizabeth and The
Duke of Edinburgh took his place on a tour of Canada, and did so again the
following January on a postponed visit to Australia and New Zealand. It was
at the beginning of this trip that the King died peacefully at Sandringham,
on 6 February 1952.
The Queen Mother meets Chelsea Pensioners at the Royal
Hospital Chelsea on Founder's Day. This is held each year to mark the
Hospital's foundation by Charles II in 1682 as a
home for old soldiers. The Pensioners wear sprigs of oak to commemorate
Charles II when he hid from Cromwell's forces in an oak tree after the
Battle of Worcester in 1651.
In 1995, The Queen Mother officially opened the VE
(Victory in Europe) 50th anniversary commemorations in Hyde Park, London;
she appeared on the balcony at Buckingham Palace with her daughters, as they
had in 1945.
In 1952 Queen Elizabeth moved out of Buckingham Palace to
Clarence House in St James's. In 1953 she bought the Castle of Mey, in the
extreme north-east of Scotland, and spends time there in August and October
every year. The Queen Mother also finds time to pursue her love of the
countryside and sport; she has been a keen and expert fisherwoman and enjoys
horse-racing. She remains at the centre of the Royal family's life,
retaining the closest links with every generation. Honours The Queen Mother
was created a Lady of the Garter in 1936, when she became Queen. At the time
of the coronation she became, as a Scottish Queen, the first Lady of the
Thistle ever created.
In 2000 she celebrated her 100th birthday. She died
peacefully in her sleep on 30th March 2002 aged 101.
|