Queen Elizabeth II, longest-reigning British monarch, dead at 96

September 8, 2022

Queen Elizabeth II, the longest reigning British monarch has died.

Mark Moore, Ruth Brown, Lee Brown

As the third in line for the throne — the daughter of King George V’s second son — no one at the time expected her to ever become queen.

She enjoyed a childhood of wealth, privilege and notoriety. But the lack of expectation in these early years allowed Elizabeth — affectionately known as “Lilibet” to her family — to experience a measure of freedom before unexpectedly ascending up the royal rankings.

“They lived in a town house in Piccadilly, looking across Green Park at Buckingham Palace. I’ve always felt this had a great effect on her … That was what gave her the awe and reverence for her grandfather’s position,” said Lacey.

Queen Elizabeth II (left) and the Duke of Edinburgh, Prince Phillip (right) on the day of their coronation.
Queen Elizabeth II (left) and the Duke of Edinburgh, Prince Phillip (right) on the day of their coronation.
The Print Collector/Getty Images

“She used to long for the winter when the leaves fell off the trees and grandfather George V would come to the back of the palace and wave to her and [her younger sister Princess] Margaret. They called him ‘Grandpa England.’”

Elizabeth’s uncle, Edward, was next in line for the throne upon the death of her grandfather in 1936. But he abdicated within the year over his scandalous marriage to American divorcée Wallis Simpson, leaving Elizabeth’s dad to reluctantly assume the mantle as King George VI.

 Queen Elizabeth II (left) and Prime Minister, Boris Johnson (right) arrive to greet guests during a reception for international business and investment leaders at Windsor Castle.
Queen Elizabeth II (left) and Prime Minister, Boris Johnson (right) arrive to greet guests during a reception for international business and investment leaders at Windsor Castle.
Alastair Grant – Pool/Getty Images

Her shy father wept upon receiving the news of his new role, but the stoic Elizabeth had already developed a strong sense of duty from a young age.

“When our father became King, I said to her, ‘Does that mean you’re going to become Queen?’ She replied, ‘Yes. I suppose it does.’ She didn’t mention it again,” Princess Margaret once recalled.

Still, she famously confessed to her riding teacher a few years later that in a different life, she’d “like to be a lady, living in the country with lots of horses and dogs.”

Queen Elizabeth II (right) and Prince Philip (left) who died in the early months of 2021.
Queen Elizabeth II (right) and Prince Philip (left) who died in the early months of 2021.
Jeff Spicer/Getty Images

In 1939, Britain entered World War II, but the royal family rejected calls to move the young princesses to Canada to avoid the incessant aerial bombing by the Nazis — and instead the girls were shuffled between royal residences for the duration of the conflict.

Their decision to stay put would help restore the country’s faith in the monarchy after the blow of Edward’s abdication, according to Lacey.

“In many ways it was the saving of the royal family — you can’t claim to be divinely appointed and then just decide you don’t fancy the job because you’d rather go off with an American divorcée,” he said.

Queen Elizabeth II was also known for her love of corgis.
Queen Elizabeth II was also known for her love of corgis.
Anwar Hussein/WireImage

Elizabeth also did her bit for the war effort — raising funds to buy wool for military uniforms and, at 14, making her first radio broadcast on BBC’s Children Hour to children who had been evacuated from their homes.

“My sister Margaret Rose and I feel so much for you, as we know from experience what it means to be away from those you love most of all,” she said in her address, which was a huge hit with listeners.

It was around this time she also fell for her future husband, Philip Mountbatten, a distant cousin born into the Greek and Danish royal families.

The two spent time together in 1939 at the Royal Naval College and a smitten 13-year-old Elizabeth began corresponding regularly with the 18-year-old Philip through letters.

In 1947, when Elizabeth was 21, the couple finally married at Westminster Abbey.

But Philip proved to be a controversial choice due to his German heritage — some of his sisters had married men with Nazi ties, and were not invited to the wedding — fiery personality and, later, wandering eye.

After the ceremony — which included 2,000 guests and a worldwide audience of 200 million tuning in on the radio — Philip asked, “Am I being very brave or very foolish?”

Princess Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth II) (right) and her sister Princess Margret (left).
Princess Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth II) (right) and her sister Princess Margret (left).
Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Less than a year later, Nov. 14, 1948, Prince Charles, the heir to the throne, was born. Princess Anne followed on Aug. 15, 1950 — and they were later joined by Prince Andrew on Feb. 19, 1960 and Prince Edward on March 10, 1964

Elizabeth was just 25 and on a trip to Kenya when she learned her father had suddenly died in his sleep on Feb. 6, 1952.

Her private secretary, Martin Charteris, recalled finding the new Queen at her desk looking “very composed, absolute master of her fate.”

The coronation took place at Westminster Abbey on June 2, 1953, and the pomp and pageantry was broadcast on television for the first time.

As measure of her long reign, her first prime minister was Winston Churchill and she lasted through 15 political leaders, including Margaret Thatcher, Tony Blair, Theresa May, Boris Johnson and the recently sworn in Liz Truss.

After her coronation, the newly crowned Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip embarked on a seven-month world tour, hitting 13 counties and traveling more than 40,000 miles.

It was the beginning of her globe-trotting ways — and her lifelong mission to keep the British Empire’s former colonies loyal and united under the banner of the Commonwealth after decolonization.

Queen Elizabeth (far right) with her son Prince Charles (right) and his new bride, Princess Diana of Wales ( center).
Queen Elizabeth (far right) with her son Prince Charles (right) and his new bride, Princess Diana of Wales (center).
Terry Fincher/Princess Diana Archive/Getty Images

Among her many tours to the United States was a 1976 trip to celebrate America’s 200th anniversary of independence from Britain, and she ultimately rubbed shoulders with 13 U.S. presidents, starting with Herbert Hoover.

Both in England and abroad, Queen Elizabeth II impressed her subjects by getting up close and personal with them on her famed “walkabouts” — always dressed in her signature bold outfits and hats.

“When you’re around her, she’s not distant like other heads of state,” said Andrew Lannerd, a royal correspondent for US TV news networks who runs boutique tours to royal hotspots.

Queen Elizabeth II and her family watch the Trooping The Colour from Buckingham Palace.
Queen Elizabeth II and her family watch the Trooping The Colour from Buckingham Palace.
Tim Graham Photo Library via Get

“One quote of hers is: ‘I have to be seen to be believed.’ That’s true — whenever you see the Queen in person, she’s always wearing bright colors and you can always pick her out immediately.”

She was less of a success as a family matriarch, however, and the House of Windsor spent much of the 1980s and 90s mired in scandal

“Her children and grandchildren now are devoted to her, but the record of her children’s marriages are pretty disastrous,” said Lacey.

Prince Andrew (right) and his then-wife Sarah Ferguson visit Canada in July 1987.
Prince Andrew (right) and his then-wife Sarah Ferguson visit Canada in July 1987.
Georges De Keerle/Getty Images

Prince Andrew married Sarah Ferguson in 1986, but their union soon became the subject of tabloid fodder when photos surfaced of the Duchess sunbathing topless with her financial adviser.

But it was Prince Charles’ rocky marriage to Princess Diana that caused Queen Elizabeth the most heartache.

The two tied the knot in a fairy-tale ceremony billed as the “wedding of the century” in 1981, and created the picture-perfect royal family with their two sons, Prince William and Prince Harry.

Queen Elizabeth II and Princess Anne attend a service of Thanksgiving to mark the centenary of The Royal British Legion at Westminster Abbey.
Queen Elizabeth II and Princess Anne attend a service of Thanksgiving to mark the centenary of The Royal British Legion at Westminster Abbey.
Frank Augstein – WPA Pool/Getty Images

But rumors of infidelities soon shattered the fairy tale image, and their marriage spiraled to a sordid conclusion.

The Queen was reportedly dismayed by Diana’s free-spirited ways and lack of royal pretense — not to mention the fierce media attention her glamorous daughter-in-law received wherever she went.

In 1992, Prince Charles, Prince Philip and Princess Anne all split from their respective partners — and to top it off, a fire devastated Windsor Castle, the Queen’s official residence.

 Queen Elizabeth II and Prince William, Duke of Cambridge attend The Ceremony of the Keys at The Palace Of Holyroodhouse on June 28, 2021.
Queen Elizabeth II and Prince William, Duke of Cambridge attend The Ceremony of the Keys at The Palace Of Holyroodhouse on June 28, 2021.
Samir Hussein/WireImage

She dubbed it her “annus horribilis” — Latin for “horrible year.”

But things would get worse.

In 1997, Princess Diana died of injuries in a car crash with her boyfriend Dodi Fayed in Paris, and the Queen was roundly criticized for not leaving Balmoral Castle in Scotland and calming the grief-stricken country as it mourned the popular princess.

Balmoral Castle, where the Queen spends most of the summer.
Balmoral Castle, where the Queen spends most of the summer.
Andrew Milligan/PA Images via Getty Images

She didn’t address the death until days later with a five-minute televised speech from Buckingham Palace, in which she paid tribute to Diana as “an exceptional and gifted human being.”

Years later, royal watchers revealed the Queen remained behind at Balmoral after Diana’s death so she could comfort Princes William and Harry, who were then 15 and 12.

The monarchy’s popularity plummeted during this turbulent period, but Queen Elizabeth’s steadfast presence eventually won back the populace.

Queen Elizabeth looks on with members of her family after the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton.
Queen Elizabeth looks on with members of her family after the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton.
Anwar Hussein/Getty Images

When she celebrated her 90th birthday in 2016, she enjoyed an 86 percent approval rating among Britons.

“Her essential modesty and reticence proved to be the qualities that were needed in the changing world,” says Lacey.

“The only strategy was to be herself, a lady in the country fond of horses and dogs. People said ‘how out of date,’ but she said that’s who she was. She stuck at these conventional things and succeeded.”

Queen Elizabeth and Prince Phillip attend the wedding of her grandson Prince Harry and Meghan Markle.
Queen Elizabeth and Prince Phillip attend the wedding of her grandson Prince Harry and Meghan Markle.
JONATHAN BRADY/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

During England’s coronavirus lockdown, which began in March 2020, the queen stayed at Windsor Castle, west of London, with Philip.

As Britain began to emerge from the pandemic, Elizabeth tested positive for the disease in February 2022 despite being vaccinated in 2021.

She became infected just weeks after her son, Prince Charles, and her daughter-in-law Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, both tested positive.

A portrait of Queen Elizabeth II as a baby in December 1926.
A portrait of Queen Elizabeth II as a baby in December 1926.
Popperfoto via Getty Images
Then Princess Elizabeth II with her mother Queen Elizabeth and Princess Margaret by a syringa bush at Windsor Castle, Berkshire on July 8, 1941.
Then Princess Elizabeth II with her mother Queen Elizabeth and Princess Margaret by a syringa bush at Windsor Castle, Berkshire on July 8, 1941.
Lisa Sheridan/Studio Lisa/Getty Images

While her husband was hospitalized in early 2021, Elizabeth had to deal with yet another royal scandal as her grandson Prince Harry and his wife, Meghan Markle, gave a bombshell interview about their reasons for leaving the monarchy.

The couple alleged that the palace had failed to help Markle when she had suicidal thoughts. Markle, who is biracial, also said that an unidentified member of the royal family had raised “concerns” about the color of her baby’s skin when she was pregnant with son Archie.

The queen responded to the allegations, saying that “the whole family is saddened” and that the “issues raised, particularly that of race, are concerning” and would be addressed privately by the family.

April 1940: Princess Elizabeth out riding at the Royal Lodge, Windsor.
Then Princess Elizabeth II rides at the Royal Lodge in Windsor in April 1940.
Lisa Sheridan/Studio Lisa/Getty Images
Then the Duke and Duchess of York, George VI and Elizabeth, with their daughter, Elizabeth II in 1926.
Then the Duke and Duchess of York, George VI and Elizabeth, with their daughter, Elizabeth II in 1926.
Popperfoto via Getty Images

As the fallout from this continued, Philip died in April 2021 at the age of 99.

In her 2021 Christmas address, Queen Elizabeth talked about Philip’s death and mentioned her royal family as she spoke of her late husband’s legacy.

But Prince Harry and Meghan Markle’s names went unsaid.

King George VI and Queen Elizabeth wear their coronation robes while Princess Elizabeth and Margaret wave on the balcony of Buckingham Palace on May 12, 1937.
King George VI and Queen Elizabeth wear their coronation robes while Princess Elizabeth II and Margaret wave on the balcony of Buckingham Palace on May 12, 1937.
Popperfoto via Getty Images

Then in January 2022, Elizabeth stripped her son Andrew of his military and royal titles and patronages after he became embroiled in the sex scandal involving the late financier and convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

She authorized Buckingham Palace to take the action against Andrew a day after a federal judge in Manhattan rejected his bid to have a sexual assault lawsuit filed by Virginia Roberts Giuffre thrown out.

Giuffre claimed that Epstein made her have sex with the disgraced royal three times, beginning in 2001 when she was just 17.

Then Princess Elizabeth rides her pony in Windsor Great Park in 1934.
Then Princess Elizabeth rides her pony in Windsor Great Park in 1934.
Universal History Archive/Getty Images
Then Elizabeth II drives an ambulance during her wartime service on April 10, 1945.
Then Princess Elizabeth II drives an ambulance during her wartime service on April 10, 1945.
Popperfoto via Getty Images

Andrew and Giuffre agreed to settle her lawsuit in February 2022, keeping the tawdry details at the center of the case free from public scrutiny.

While the sum of the settlement was not disclosed, a source told The Post is was estimated to be $12 million.

Philip and Elizabeth shared four children, eight grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.


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