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The Royal VisitFor about 10 years from the early-1950s, the late Allan Papworth used a Bell & Howell 8mm amateur camera to record his family’s life in and around Warkworth. One of the events captured was the visit of Queen Elizabeth to Warkworth in December 1953. It is rare footage that shows people gathering for the big occasion in a purpose-built grandstand in the vicinity of the present ANZ Bank and a stage where Sportsworld is now located. Dignitaries presented to the Queen included Town Board chairman Les Ginn. Related Story: Local Folk - Richard Papworth The Royal Visit – Summer 1953–54 The Royal Tour in the summer of 1953-54 was a momentous occasion for the whole of NZ, as the following article from www.nzhistory.net.nz records. For those New Zealanders old enough to have experienced it, the visit of the young Queen and her dashing husband, Prince Philip, to New Zealand in the summer of 1953-54, is a never-to-be forgotten event. Those who were children at the time recall the BIG Day, marked for months in the calendar, when they dressed in their posh clothes, pinned a royal tour medallion to their chests, collected a butter box to stand on, a Union Jack to wave, and perhaps a periscope to look through, and set out to ‘see’ the Queen. Perhaps three in every four New Zealanders did see her, as the Queen visited 46 towns or cities and attended 110 separate functions. One woman saw her 30 times. Crowds would turn up hours before and wait patiently for the split second when she drove past. At Tirau, a community of 600 people, there was a crowd of 10,000. At the Ellerslie and Trentham races, crowds turned their backs on the horses to gawk at the royal box. People went to extraordinary lengths to show their devotion. Sheep were dyed in the patriotic colours of red, white and blue; in New Plymouth both bowling club members and the local pony club formed into an E on the ground. Screens were erected to hide unsightly buildings, and citizens were instructed when and how to plant blue lobelias, red salvias and white begonias. Hardly a car did not sport a Union Jack, hardly a building in the main cities was not covered in bunting and flowers during the day and electric lights at night. This was truly a remarkable event. |
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