Each family has its own Christmas tradition and royal families are no exception. For seven decades, Elizabeth II enjoyed the celebrations of a family Christmas which she shaped into a traditional all of her own. As the Windsors prepare to mark the festive season, we look at how Elizabeth II made Christmas a very special time for family.
A Very Big Family Lunch
A week before Christmas, Queen Elizabeth II invited the extended Royal Family to Buckingham Palace for a lunch. These festivities were a way for the whole House of Windsor to get together ahead of the big day as many of the Queen’s cousins celebrated the big day with their own immediate kith and kin away from Sandringham.
The Queen Takes the Train
If there’s one sight that told you Christmas was actually, really and quite absolutely just around the corner, it was the image of the Queen taking the train to Sandringham. In the last years of her reign, photos of Elizabeth II, usually in headscarf and very warm coat, railing it up to Norfolk became part of the British royal Christmas season. Once she arrived at King’s Cross, for the train to King’s Lynn, the big day was definitely imminent.
Christmas Eve at Sandringham
The Royal Family always gathered at the Norfolk Estate by Christmas Eve and no one wanted to be late because this is the time Queen Elizabeth II handed out the presents. Gifts were exchanged after afternoon tea on Christmas Eve with all the neatly wrapped offerings set out on tables and then passed around.
Christmas Day Church
The focal point for many in the UK of the royal festive season was the Royal Family’s visit to church on Christmas Day morning. Queen Elizabeth II and all her house guests made the trip to St. Mary Magdalene where Mattins are held at 11 on Christmas Day. Crowds always gathered to see them arrive while afterwards, some of the children who brought flowers presented them to Queen Elizabeth II while other members of her family did walkabouts to greet more wellwishers. The images of the Windsors on Christmas Day has a prominent place on British TV news programmes, making a family outing into a national event.
Time for Turkey
Dinner was already in the oven by the time the royals headed to church and at 1pm prompt they all sat down for a traditional Christmas lunch. Turkey (a famous product of Norfolk) and all the trimmings came first with a Christmas pudding to follow for those who still have room.
The Queen’s Speech
The annual broadcast to country and Commonwealth is a fixed point in calendars around the world, not just at Sandringham. following on from the tradition begun King George V, the Monarch speaks to the nations on Christmas Day afternoon. The message, which is pre-recorded several days before Christmas, usually takes a theme relevant to the times in which it is made. It is always broadcast at 3pm, UK time.
A Family Christmas
Christmas Day evening at these festive celebrations of Elizabeth II were all about celebrating, just as it is for any other family. Games, TV and partying were always on the to do list as the Windsors enjoyed the family time that makes every Christmas special.
King Charles III will gather his family around him at Sandringham in the same way this December. The Royal Family will also be joined by the children and grandchildren of Queen Camilla. It will be a time to celebrate as a family, taking comfort in the familiarity of traditions established by Queen Elizabeth II over seventy years.