Tell us about the day you met the Queen

Queen Elizabeth II has been central to British life for longer than most of us have been alive.
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She’s been the linchpin of everything that has made our little kingdom great for the past 64 years and has never given us reason to feel anything but proud.

With her 90th birthday approaching, what better time to celebrate our longest-reigning monarch while sharing memories of her many visits to Sussex.

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We want to see your pictures and hear your memories of the day the Queen came to town.

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Or perhaps you were lucky enough to meet her at another event such as one of the garden parties at Buckingham Palace. We also want to hear about any plans you have to celebrate her 90th birthday.

Given her love of all things countryside, it should come as no surprise to know the Queen has made more than one visit to the South of England Show, in Ardingly, over the years. She is, after all, the show’s patron.

She was driven through the grounds in the back of an open-top Range Rover in 1984, much to the delight of thousands of visitors.

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A second visit was made as part of her Golden Jubilee tour in 2002. This time she made her entrance to the main arena in a horse-drawn landau flanked by members of the King’s Troop.

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It was a big day for young Kirsty Cuff as the seven-year-old was given the task of presenting the Queen with a posy of cream and yellow roses and lilies.

If Kirsty was nervous, she didn’t show it, and told reporters she had been practicing her curtsies four times a day for weeks!

In 1999, the Queen was a welcome visitor to Burgess Hill when she opened the Triangle Leisure Centre on March 29. There was no Range Rover or horse-drawn carriage this time as she and Prince Philip arrived by helicopter, landing in the grounds of Oakmeeds School.

They later visited Burgess Hill Town Council’s Help Point.

Queen visits Burgess Hill 29th March 1999. Photograph by Steve Robards ENGSUS00120120314144207Queen visits Burgess Hill 29th March 1999. Photograph by Steve Robards ENGSUS00120120314144207
Queen visits Burgess Hill 29th March 1999. Photograph by Steve Robards ENGSUS00120120314144207
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West Sussex has been a popular destination for the Queen. She attended the Maundy Service, in Chichester Cathedral on March 27 1986; visited Durrington High School, Worthing, on March 26 1999; and officially opened the revamped and extended Gatwick Airport on June 9 1958.

While she may not be coming back to celebrate her 90th birthday, some of the county’s borough and district councils have signed up for the lighting of a birthday beacon.

So far, Crawley Borough Council, Burgess Hill Town Council, Northiam Parish Council, Hunston Parish Council, Uckfield Town Council, Winchelsea Corporation, Bognor Regis Town Council and Littlehampton Town Council have pledged to do the honours in Sussex.

You can email your pictures and accounts of your memories of the day you saw the Queen to [email protected].

Queen visits Burgess Hill 29th March 1999. Photograph by Steve Robards ENGSUS00120120314144219Queen visits Burgess Hill 29th March 1999. Photograph by Steve Robards ENGSUS00120120314144219
Queen visits Burgess Hill 29th March 1999. Photograph by Steve Robards ENGSUS00120120314144219
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Or write to The Mid Sussex Times, Springfield House, Springfield Road, Horsham, West Sussex RH12 2RG. Don’t forget to tell us about any plans you have to celebrate her 90th birthday. Be it a street party or raising a glass or two at the pub, we want to hear about it.

Big plans for Her Majesty’s even bigger day

One thing the UK does well is throw a right royal knees-up.

We celebrated the Queen’s Coronation in 1952, when she took to the throne at the tender age of 25; we held street parties galore for her Silver Jubilee in 1977 and the Golden Jubilee in 2002.

We did the same thing for her Diamond Jubilee in 2012 and there will no doubt be celebrations on a massive scale in 2022 when she becomes the first monarch to reach the impressive Platinum Jubilee, at the grand old age of 95.

Given the Queen Mother lived to be 101, the smart money should be on Her Majesty making that platinum milestone with ease.

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There are big plans in place to celebrate her 90th birthday.

While the day itself falls on April 21, a four-night pageant will be held at Windsor Castle from Thursday May 12 to Sunday May 15, celebrating her life, her loves of horses, her dedication to the Commonwealth and international affairs and her deep involvement with the Navy, Army and ­­­­Air Force.

A 90-minute spectacular planned for the Sunday will be televised on ITV from around 8.30pm and will include 900 horses and more than 1,500 participants from around the UK and the World.

It will take viewers on a journey from the Queen’s birth in Bruton Street, Mayfair, in 1926, through to World War Two, when, refusing to allow her daughters to be evacuated to Canada, her mother famously said: “The children won’t go without me. I won’t leave without the King. And the King will never leave.”

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It will cover her marriage in Westminster Abbey in 1947 to Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten; her return to the Abbey for her Coronation on June 2 1953; and her reign of more than 60 years.

The festivities will not end there. The birthday girl and the Duke of Edinburgh will attend a National Service of Thanksgiving at St Paul’s Cathedral on Friday June 10. She will then be joined by other members of the Royal Family at The Queen’s Birthday Parade on Horse Guards Parade on Saturday June 11.

The long weekend will finish on Sunday June 12 with a Patron’s Lunch - a celebration of Her Majesty’s patronage of more than 600 organisations in the UK and around the Commonwealth since 1952.

That’s a hectic schedule for anyone half her age.

At a more local level, several councils have signed up for the lighting of a 90th birthday beacon. So far, Crawley Borough Council, Burgess Hill Town Council, Northiam Parish Council, Hunston Parish Council, Uckfield Town Council, Winchelsea Corporation, Bognor Regis Town Council and Littlehampton Town Council have pledged to do the honours in Sussex.

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