SUPPORT OUR JOURNALISM: Please consider donating to keep our website running and free for all - thank you!

Royal Christmas

The year Queen Elizabeth II didn’t make a Christmas speech

Elizabeth II

Queen Elizabeth II turned the Christmas speech into an essential part of every festive season. Although it was her grandfather, King George V, who first broadcast to the nation on Christmas Day and her father, King George VI, who made the famous addresses through the difficult years of World War Two, it would be Elizabeth II who made the moment into a national institution.

In 1957, the speech became a TV event, too, and in the decades that followed, the Christmas Day broadcast of Queen Elizabeth II regularly topped the TV viewing charts at the festive season.

However, TV was the reason that Elizabeth II missed the only Christmas Day speech of her 70 year reign. In 1969, viewers had already been treated to an unprecedented behind the scenes glimpse of life with the House of Windsor in a documentary called ‘The Royal Family’. There had also been the celebrations around the investiture of her heir, Charles, as Prince of Wales that summer.

After that, Elizabeth II felt that everyone had seen quite enough of her and her relations for the year and instead opted for a written message instead at Christmas.

Her Late Majesty said ”I have received a great number of kind letters and messages of regard and concern about this year’s break with the usual broadcast at Christmas and I want you all to know that my good wishes are no less warm and personal because they come to you in a different form.

In a short time the 1960s will be over but not out of our memories. Historians will record them as the decade in which men first reached out beyond our own planet and set foot on the moon, but each one of us will have our own special triumphs or tragedies to look back on.

My own thoughts are with my older children who are entering the service of the people of this country and the Commonwealth. It is a great satisfaction and comfort to me and my husband to know that they have won a place in your affections.

We are all looking forward to our visit to Australia and New Zealand for the Cook Bi-centenary celebrations, and also to Fiji and Tonga. Later next year we hope to see something of the fascinating development of Northern Canada.

It is only natural that we should all be dazzled and impressed by the triumphs of technology, but Christmas is a festival of the spirit. At this time our concern is particularly for the lonely, the sick and the elderly. I hope they will all feel the warmth and comfort of companionship and that all of you will enjoy a very happy Christmas with your families and friends.

God bless you all.”

The TV broadcast resumed the following year and continued throughout the rest of Queen Elizabeth II’s reign. The last time she spoke to country and Commonwealth on Christmas Day was in 2021.

"; n.innerHTML = "window._taboola = window._taboola || [];_taboola.push({mode:'thumbnails-a', container:'taboola-below-article-thumbnails', placement:'Below Article Thumbnails', target_type: 'mix'});"; insertAfter(t, e); insertAfter(n, t) }injectWidgetByMarker('tbmarker');

About author

Lydia Starbuck is Jubilee and Associate Editor at Royal Central and the main producer and presenter of the Royal Central Podcast and Royal Central Extra. Lydia is also a pen name of June Woolerton who is a journalist and writer with over twenty years experience in TV, radio, print and online. Her latest book, A History of British Royal Jubilees, is out now. Her new book, The Mysterious Death of Katherine Parr, will be published in March 2024. June is an award winning reporter, producer and editor. She's appeared on outlets including BBC 5 Live, BBC Radio Ulster and BBC Local Radio and has also helped set up a commercial radio station. June is also an accomplished writer with a wide range of material published online and in print. She is the author of two novels, published as e-books. She is also a marriage registrar and ceremony celebrant.