London Daily

Focus on the big picture.
Monday, Jun 15, 2026

Queen holds reception to mark Platinum Jubilee

Queen holds reception to mark Platinum Jubilee

The Queen has cut a cake to mark her Platinum Jubilee as she met members of the Sandringham community on the eve of the 70th anniversary of her reign.

Ahead of Accession Day, she hosted a reception for volunteer groups, pensioners and fellow members of the local Women's Institute (WI) group.

Guests included a former cookery student who helped create the original Coronation chicken recipe.

The Queen was described as being on "sparkling" form at the reception.

On Sunday, she will have reigned for 70 years, excluding Accession Day.

It also marks the day her father George VI died in 1952.

The event at Sandringham House was the largest in-person public engagement the Queen had attended since a reception at Windsor Castle in October.

There had been concerns for her health last autumn after she spent a night in hospital and was ordered to rest by royal doctors.

Vice-president of the Sandringham WI Yvonne Browne said the Queen, who laughed and joked with guests, was on "sparkling" form on Saturday.

"Seventy years on the throne shows the Queen has been a moving example to absolutely everyone in all walks of life," said Ms Browne.

"She's been a constant, compassionate and stoic, everything that makes a perfect human being, and has a great strength of character and has overcome so many things."

The Queen has been a member of the Sandringham branch of the WI since 1943 and its president since 2003.

The Queen with Angela Wood, who helped make Coronation chicken for the first time


During the reception, the Queen met Angela Wood, who was 19 when she helped create the dish that became known as Coronation chicken - a mix of cold cooked chicken, mayonnaise, curry powder and apricot.

The recipe, originally known as Poulet Reine Elizabeth - chicken Queen Elizabeth - was developed to mark the coronation in 1953, a year after her reign began.

Mrs Wood made the Queen laugh when she told her she spent "days and days altering it" for the cooks who created it.

The Queen, 95, commented that the recipe has likely evolved in the intervening years, saying: "It's probably changed because in those days we did some things quite differently."

Junior sous chef Shaun Mason created a modern take on the dish for Saturday's reception with a Coronation chicken tartlet, which he offered to the Queen and Mrs Wood.

The Queen caused laughter when she said she would "go away" while the former cookery student tried it, adding: "You can tell me [what you think] when I come back."


The Queen met some younger members of the local community during the event


The Queen, wearing a pale blue dress with white brocade and carrying her black handbag, cut an iced Victoria Sponge featuring the Platinum Jubilee logo as its decoration at the reception.

When Lady Dannatt, Lord-Lieutenant of Norfolk, told her the cake had been turned upside down so press photographers could get a good shot, the Queen joked: "I don't matter?"

"I think I might just put a knife in it," the Queen said, adding it "went in beautifully", but that she would leave it to someone else to finish cutting the cake, baked by a local resident.

She was also given a posy featuring flowers that formed part of her coronation bouquet, thanking the young girl and saying "aren't they pretty?".

The reception saw the Queen meet Sandringham Estate pensioners and their families as well as representatives from local charities Little Discoverers and West Norfolk Befriending.

Little Discoverers is an early education provider for pre-school children with movement difficulties and delayed development while the befriending group matches isolated older people with trained volunteers.

The Queen reminisced with a group of former Sandringham Estate workers about devastating floods in Norfolk in 1953.

"I remember sitting at dinner, the fire alarm went off - no fire, the sea was coming in," she said. "It's a very nasty experience."


This is a poignant weekend for the Queen, as well as a celebration.

There is the unprecedented 70th anniversary. But the hereditary principle also means that marking the start of one reign comes at the same time as remembering the demise of another.

So this has usually been a low-key, reflective moment, under the Norfolk winter skies.

For the Queen it's the anniversary of the death of her father George VI, a profound influence on her sense of duty.

Photographs for the accession weekend showed her wearing the jewellery her father gave her for her 18th birthday - and as a reminder of her long life, that was several weeks before the D-Day landings in 1944.

But the jubilee events at Sandringham are also something of a re-emergence for the Queen after a series of public appearances cancelled in the autumn because of health worries.

If not a big official event, the reception for local community groups was the nearest thing to meeting the public since October, rather than appearing on screen.

Such carefully managed appearances could set the pattern for the jubilee year ahead.

School children from across West Norfolk made a mosaic to mark the jubilee that was presented to the Queen by Mayor of King's Lynn Harry Humphrey, and music was provided by the Hunstanton Concert Band. They played Congratulations for the Queen as she left the reception.

The Queen is thought to have been staying in the Duke of Edinburgh's cottage, Wood Farm, while at Sandringham. She said her late husband "loved it" because the "sea was so close".

New pictures of the Queen were released this week, showing her looking at memorabilia from previous jubilees


One of her childhood friends, Lady Glenconner, said the Queen knew she would become a monarch "from a very young age" and was given a "wonderful example" by her father.

Anne Tennant, who was a maid of honour at the coronation, told Radio 4's Today programme the Queen would probably "look back very sadly" on the anniversary of the day she became Queen, as it also marked the death of George VI.

Lady Glenconner added he had led by example as he had put his "duty first".

Events to mark the jubilee will be held around the Commonwealth - this one is in Sydney

An Aboriginal smoking ceremony was held in Sydney to mark the accession


The Queen is set to become the first British monarch in history to celebrate her Platinum Jubilee.

Sunday marks the start of the jubilee celebrations, which will culminate in a four-day UK bank holiday weekend from 2 to 5 June.

The celebrations will be marked by concerts, street parties and a Platinum Jubilee Pageant, with the private estates of Sandringham and Balmoral open to visitors across the long weekend in June.

The Queen flew to Sandringham at the end of January, a month after cancelling her traditional Christmas plans at her Norfolk estate due to the rapid spread of Omicron. Normally her winter break ends some time after accession day.


The Queen has cut a cake to mark her Platinum Jubilee on the eve of the 70th anniversary of her reign


Newsletter

Related Articles

0:00
0:00
Close
UK Parliament Opens Week of Fast-Tracked Security and Infrastructure Legislation
Northern Ireland Projects £21 Million Boost From Major Cultural and Sporting Events
UK and Japan Sign Technology Security Pact to Strengthen AI and Supply Chain Cooperation
UK Welcomes US-Iran Peace Breakthrough Aimed at Restoring Strait of Hormuz Shipping
British Forces Intercept Russian Shadow Fleet Oil Tanker in English Channel Sanctions Operation
UK to Ban Social Media for Under-16s Under Landmark Online Safety Expansion
Anti-Immigrant Riots Spread Across Belfast, Raising Security Concerns
Ministry of Defence Opens Europe's Largest Drone Testing Facility in Swindon
Kemi Badenoch Calls for Deregulation to Restore City's Global Competitiveness
UK Housing Market Posts Sharpest June Price Decline in Fourteen Years
NHS Waiting Lists Rise to 7.22 Million as Diagnostic Delays Reach New Highs
Makerfield By-Election Raises Prospect of Labour Leadership Challenge
Bank of England Expected to Hold Interest Rates at 3.75% Despite Growing Policy Divisions
Royal Marines Seize Sanctioned Russian Oil Tanker in English Channel
Prime Minister Keir Starmer Set to Ban Social Media and AI Chatbots for Under-16s
United Kingdom Markets Rally After US-Iran Deal Reopens Strait of Hormuz
Defence Secretary John Healey Resigns Over Military Spending Dispute, Triggering Cabinet Crisis
Royal Navy Takes Part in Trooping the Colour for the First Time in 350 Years
Think Tank Warns Labour's European Union Reset Could Carry Significant Economic Costs
UK Semiconductor Centre and Japan's Rapidus Forge Advanced Chip Manufacturing Partnership
UK and Japan Launch Offshore Wind Compact Backed by £9 Billion in Investment
Starmer and Trump Discuss Iran Peace Efforts and Reopening of the Strait of Hormuz
United Kingdom and Japan Sign £18 Billion Investment Partnership Focused on Clean Energy and Advanced Technology
Barclays Moves to Acquire GoHenry in Bid to Expand Youth-Focused Fintech Services
UK Lupus Patients Show Remission in NHS Genetic Therapy Trial
London Clean Air Zones Linked to Fewer Emergency Hospital Admissions for Respiratory Illness
UK World Cup Scheduling Research Suggests Energy Bill Savings From Off-Peak Usage
UK Economic Anxiety Rises Among Young People Over Long-Term Job Prospects
NHS Expands Meningitis B Vaccination Programme for School Leavers and New Students
London Ultra-Low Emission Zone Linked to Drop in Emergency Respiratory Hospital Admissions
Derbyshire Police Officer Investigated Over Alleged Use of AI-Generated Evidence in Case Files
UK Parents Back Proposed Under-16 Social Media Ban as Online Safety Concerns Grow
Four Palestine Action Activists Jailed Over Sabotage Attack on Israeli-Linked Arms Facility
Barclays to Acquire GoHenry in Push to Expand Digital Banking for Children and Teenagers
UK Government Reaffirms Defence Spending Commitment Amid Cabinet Pressure and Political Disputes
Belfast Unrest Prompts Security Review as Paramilitary Activity Comes Under Renewed Scrutiny
SpaceX IPO Pushes Elon Musk to Become World’s First Trillionaire After Record Valuation Surge
United States and Iran Near Landmark Peace Framework as Negotiations Reach Final Stages
UK Competition Watchdog Investigates Ryanair Family Seating Charges
Imperial College Study Links London Emissions Charges to Lower Hospital Admissions
Scottish First Minister Launches US Trade Initiative Ahead of World Cup Match in Boston
Fifteen Million Workers Gain Expanded Sick Pay Rights Under UK Reforms
British Retail Investors Secure Record Participation in SpaceX Share Offering
Keir Starmer and Micheál Martin Coordinate Response to Northern Ireland Violence
NHS Prepares for Major Disruption as Resident Doctors Announce Four-Day Strike
Bank of England Expected to Hold Rates as Energy Costs Complicate Inflation Outlook
Britain Moves to Ban Under-16s From High-Risk Social Media Platforms and AI Chatbots
UK Economy Contracts as Middle East Conflict Weighs on Growth
Defence Secretary John Healey Resigns Over Military Spending Dispute With Treasury
Prime Minister Keir Starmer Faces Leadership Crisis After Senior Cabinet Resignations
×