Home Blog Page 116

Kensington Palace After Dark

0
Kensington Palace After Dark
Death, disease, love and loss – explore 300 years of secrets on a spooky tour through the shadowy world of Kensington Palace after dark.

Eerie Evening Tours: Kensington Palace After Dark

Death, disease, love and loss – explore 300 years of secrets on a spooky tour through the shadowy world of Kensington Palace after dark.

When all the gates are locked and the lights are out, is the palace truly asleep? Or are the memories of love, loss, and tragedy still echoing through the hushed corridors and empty rooms?

Join us as we explore the weird and wonderful world of Victorian spiritualism and the 19th century obsession with life after death. How did the Victorian mediums attempt to prove their supposed supernatural powers?

Be guided through the shadowy state apartments to relive the sorrow of heartbroken Kings and frustrated future Queens. You will hear accounts of medical disasters, painful illnesses, and undignified deaths and the lasting legacy they have left behind. Does the ghost of King George II still wander the palace?

Tour dates:

  • Friday 6 January 2017
  • Friday 13 January 2017
  • Friday 20 January 2017
  • Friday 27 January 2017
  • Friday 10 February 2017
  • Friday 17 February 2017
  • Friday 24 February 2017

Tickets

  • Tickets are £27.50 per person
  • The tours will run from 19.00 -20.30
  • Entrance to the palace will be from 18.45 and the tour will start promptly at 19.00
  • No children under the age of 16
  • The tour does include several flights of stairs and low light levels. If you have any special access requirements please contact Susanna Pullen in advance of your tour on 02031666105 or susanna.pullen@hrp.org.uk
  • No disabled parking available

Book your ticket by clicking here.

To get all the latest royal news delivered straight to your door, subscribe to Royal Life Magazine today.

Buckingham Palace: Exclusive Guided Tours

0
Buckingham Palace Exclusive Guided Tours

With the gilded ceilings and glittering chandeliers, the State Rooms at Buckingham Palace provide a perfect setting for the many famous masterpieces from the Royal Collection. In the company of an expert guide, you will be taken on a guided tour through these magnificent rooms when the Palace is not usually open to the public.

The tour ends with a glass of champagne, a copy of the official souvenir guide and 20% discount in the shop.

Buckingham Palace: Exclusive Guided Tours

  • Friday, 16 Dec 2016 – Sunday, 5 Feb 2017
  • Tours are available at 13:30, 14:00, 16:00 and 16:30
  • £80.00 per person
  • Adults
  • There is limited availability, with a maximum number of 30 places on each tour
  • Price includes a glass of champagne, a copy of the official guidebook and 20% discount in the shop

Click here to book your place.

To get all the latest royal news delivered straight to your door, subscribe to Royal Life Magazine today.

Princes William and Harry Attend Endeavour Fund Awards

0
Princes William and Harry Attend Endeavour Fund Awards
The Duke of Cambridge and Prince Harry talk with Joanna Worsley as they attend the Endeavour Fund Awards ceremony at the Royal Geographical Society in London. Photo credit: Press Association

A speech by The Duke of Cambridge and Prince Harry at the First Endeavour Fund Awards Ceremony

Prince Harry

Good evening everyone and welcome to our very first Endeavour Fund Awards.

William, Catherine and I are determined to support the Armed Forces Community as much as we can. Through The Royal Foundation, we established the Endeavour Fund with the aim of helping wounded, injured and sick serving personnel and veterans to use sport and adventurous challenges as part of their recovery.

It has been a remarkable few years for the Endeavour Fund and since its inception in 2012, we have supported 39 different projects; directly assisting nearly 1500 people on their recovery journeys and in turn, inspiring many thousands more.

Some of these challenges have been huge, high profile and internationally renowned such as the Invictus Games and Walking with the Wounded’s South Pole Allied Challenge. And others have been smaller and more personal, such as Team Endeavour Running Club and Beeline Britain. Everyone has their own version of an Everest challenge, and we try to support as many endeavours as possible. I would like to congratulate the 65 Degrees North team who summited Mount Vinson, the highest mountain in Antarctica, over the weekend. Even when we sit here the guys are still at it.

Some initiatives have sought to raise funds for other charities – generating nearly two and a half million pounds for other organisations supporting the wider armed forces community. While others have focused on using sport as a vehicle for qualifications, work experience or mentorship programmes.

Serious injury can lead to self-doubt, a lack of identity and fears for the future. We cannot underestimate the positive impact that sport can have on the physical, social and psychological effects of injury. Not just of the individual, but their families as well.

The men and women who have taken part in activities we’ve supported have felt significant improvements in their confidence and self-esteem. In fact, 90% said that participation in sport had had a positive impact on their recovery and rehabilitation.

Many have found job opportunities, directly or indirectly, as a result of taking part in these challenges; rediscovering the drive to seize chances where, for a time, they may have let them pass by.

With support from the Endeavour Fund, they have joined teams, established strong support networks and discovered new passions. Using the power of sport, this community has helped themselves to carve out a new life, a new direction and a new definition of self – proving to themselves and everyone else that, beyond injury, they can still achieve the extraordinary.

I would like to thank the team for working so hard to bring the Endeavour Fund to where it is today and the Advisory Board for their enduring commitment and guidance.

This evening is our opportunity to show you what these courageous men and women have been up to. Changing their lives and inspiring others while doing so. As Dave Henson once said, “Kicking the ass out of life.” The men and women that serve our country are role models that any parent would be proud for their kids to follow. Their actions post-injury epitomise resilience and what it means to be unbreakable.

Lastly, I would like to thank all those that have been involved in the endeavours; those who have taken on the responsibility to organise and run these challenges; and the participants who have been brave enough to take the positive steps of getting involved. In spite of the challenges you have already faced in your lives, you have then chosen to do it all again, often facing daunting journeys or some of the harshest conditions on earth. You are all an inspiration to us all – THANK YOU…

I would now like to hand over to the host for this evening, someone who embodies everything I have just spoken about. A former Royal Marine who suffered serious injuries as a result of an explosion in Afghanistan. His journey from the first Invictus Games in 2014 has taken him to his dream of presenting Channel 4’s coverage of the Paralympics in Rio last year…. Ladies and Gentlemen JJ Chalmers.

The Duke of Cambridge

I can only echo what has already been said about our friend Henry.  As Patron of the Shackleton Solo expedition, I eagerly followed his preparation and progress and remember meeting with Henry, Joanna, Max and Alicia at Kensington Palace just days before he set off for Antarctica.  It was plain to see how excited he was to embark on this voyage, following in the footsteps of Shackleton and, most importantly, selflessly raising money to support a cause he truly believed in.  Tonight, as we look back on everything that has been achieved, we must remember that a lot of these successes have been supported by the funds raised through Henry’s herculean efforts.

The best way that we can thank Henry, the best way we can honour his memory is to create a legacy.  The award of a prize in his name, is but a small part of this legacy, a gesture offered to show how much Henry meant to us.  A much more significant and meaningful legacy can be fulfilled by you; the community for whom Henry sacrificed so much.

You can honour Henry’s memory by making the most of the opportunities available to you in the field of sport and adventurous challenge.  You can work to support others, men and women still coming to terms with their injuries to get involved and thrive in sport, to immerse themselves in positive team environments and thus reap the benefits that we have heard so much about this evening.

Looking at the year ahead of us, the Endeavour Fund will be getting behind old favourites:  Climb2Recovery, Team Endeavour Racing and of course the UK Team at the Invictus Games.  In addition, new opportunities for new endeavours will also be swelling the ranks.  So whether it’s cycling across the Pyrenees with RAID17, lacing up your trainers with Team Endeavour Running Club or any of the other amazing sporting challenges on offer; I urge you to contribute to Henry’s legacy by using sport as a catalyst for recovery.

It gives me great pleasure to introduce Max and Alicia Worsley who will be helping me to present the Henry Worsley Award for the first time, in honour of their father.

To learn more about the Endeavour Fund, visit their website by clicking here.

To get all the latest royal news delivered straight to your door, subscribe to Royal Life Magazine today.

The Duke, The Duchess and Prince Harry Attend Heads Together Event

0
Royals Attend Heads Together Event
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge along with Prince Harry arriving at the ICA for a Heads Together charity London Marathon event, London. Photo credit: Doug Peters/EMPICS Entertainment

A speech by The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and Prince Harry at the Heads Together event

The Duke of Cambridge

Thank you to everyone here today for being enthusiastic about Heads Together. We launched the campaign last year and are extremely proud to support the life-changing work of our eight Charity Partners. We are also very grateful for the support of our Founding Partners.

Mental health matters to each and every one of us. It matters just as much as our physical health. The crews I have worked with, whether RAF Search and Rescue or Air Ambulance, must take their mental health as seriously as they do their physical health or else they would not cope – and, actually, that is true for everybody at some time or another in their life. There are times when, whoever we are, it is hard to cope with challenges – and when that happens being open and honest and asking for help is life-changing.

Talking to someone else is a positive and confident step to take – but for too long it has been a case of ‘Keep Quiet and Carry On’. As a result, too many people have suffered in silence for too long, and the effects of this can be devastating.

The three of us are really optimistic that things are changing. We believe that 2017 can mark a tipping point for mental health – a moment when more and more people no longer feel they have to bear the weight alone for fear of judgment.

It is no exaggeration to say that conversations – simple conversations – can be life-changing: in a workplace, in your kitchen at home, with a friend, family member or colleague. And that’s what Catherine, Harry and I want to do – we want more people to be having those conversations.

It is our ambition to make this year’s Virgin Money London Marathon the Mental Health Marathon – a major opportunity to help change the conversation on mental health, and to get people talking. And for that, we really need your help.

The Duchess of Cambridge

As William has said we have heard time and time again in the course of our work how talking can help heal the hidden challenges we can’t deal with alone. We have seen that two heads are better than one when dealing with a mental health problem.

Yet, the challenge that so many people have is not knowing how to take that first step of reaching out to another person for help. Admitting that they are not coping. Fear, or reticence, or a sense of not wanting to burden another, means that people suffer in silence – allowing the problem to grow larger and larger unchecked.

William, Harry and I have been very privileged to witness in the course of our work countless examples of simple conversations that have changed lives, which were the first step on a path to recovery. Just last week at the Anna Freud Centre, I heard from one mother how talking to a support worker was – in her words – like medicine. Simply by having someone there to have a conversation with helped her immensely.

So the question that William, Harry and I have asked ourselves is how we can get more people to start talking. How do we encourage people to take the first step.

What Heads Together is proposing is that in the weeks leading up to the Marathon, our campaign will showcase people from all walks of life, talking about the life-changing conversations that have helped them with their mental health challenges.

We hope that these real-life examples will serve as encouragement to others to do the same.

If we succeed with this, we will have taken a powerful step in normalizing mental health as an issue in our society, thinking about it as we do our own physical health.

Harry will explain more in a moment about what you can do to help us with this challenge.

But first I would like to introduce Jon, who is running for Heads Together in the Marathon; and Steve, who will tell you the story of how a conversation made such a big difference to their mental health.

Jon and Steve … thank you.

Prince Harry

Thank you, Jon and Steve, for sharing your conversation and the impact that it’s had on your lives; and thank you Jon for running for Heads Together. I’m reliably informed that you’ll run it in under four hours! Good luck with your training!

Over 500 people will be running for Heads Together, leading from the front (well perhaps not right at the front!), raising funds for the vital services provided by our Charity Partners. These runners will also be leading by example by starting conversations on mental health with their families, friends and colleagues.

It has been unbelievably encouraging to see that attitudes towards mental health across the country are beginning to change. In the past, the phrase ‘mental health’ would be translated to mental illness. But thankfully that is changing! As a result of family, school or work pressures, everyone’s lives are lived at a frightening pace and these stresses can often seem overwhelming.

Some will ignore the signs of stress, others will insist they’re ok after losing a loved one. Some will be afraid to ask for help, others won’t have anyone to turn to.

One thing is certain, we are all wired differently. We all have mental health; and we’ll say it again and again and again, if you want to be fit, healthy and set yourself up for success then your mental fitness is absolutely as important as your physical fitness. Everyone would get help for a broken leg, so why not seek help for an issue that could hamper you and others around you.

The truth is we can all help each other. You don’t need any qualifications to help your mate out, simply to listen to what they have to say. At the heart of this campaign is our hope that no-one should be afraid to ask for help, and no-one should worry about knowing how to help. That initial conversation could be the cure, before it has a chance to manifest itself.

The BBC have announced today that they are running a season on mental health to coincide with the Marathon, which is fantastic news. But every single one of you in this room can help too. You are all role models and highly respected people in your industries – the way you talk about mental health will have a profound effect on millions of people, whether you’re speaking from personal experience or encouraging those around you to do the same.

So please could I encourage you all to have a conversation with the Heads Together team, who are here today, and share your ideas. We need as many people as possible – famous or not – who can help showcase what it’s like to have a conversation with a friend, family or stranger. All your ideas are welcome.

I would now like to introduce Rio Ferdinand – a sporting legend but perhaps, just as importantly, someone who is leading the way in talking openly about mental health. I first met Rio last summer when he joined our Heads Together BBQ and I talked with him, his dad and friend Ben about how the support we give each other can help us through the darkest of times and come out a stronger person.

To learn more about Heads Together, visit their website by clicking here.

To get all the latest royal news delivered straight to your door, subscribe to Royal Life Magazine today.

Cambridges Visit Child Bereavement Centre

0
Child Bereavement
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge prepare to cut a cake to celebrate the one year anniversary of the charity's branch, during a visit to Child Bereavement UK's centre in Stratford, east London.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have visited one of Child Bereavement UK’s centres to mark its one year anniversary.

Prince William, who has been Child Bereavement UK’s royal patron since 2009, opened the charity’s Stratford centre in east London in 2015.

The charity supports parents who have lost children as well as helping children who are bereaved.

During the visit, the Duke and Duchess took part in a Family Support Group session, where the couple helped the children make memory jars filled with layers of different coloured salts, each layer representing a memory of the loved one they’ve lost.

Prince William also had the opportunity to meet a little girl whose dad had died from cancer. In a poignant conversation Prince William spoke of losing his mother, telling nine year old Aoife, “I lost my mummy when I was very young too”.

Child Bereavement’s chief executive, Ann Chalmers said she was “honoured” to have the duke and duchess visit the centre.

The charity was set up in 1994, and Princess Diana attended its launch.

To get all the latest royal news delivered straight to your door, subscribe to Royal Life Magazine today.

Duchess of Cambridge Resumes Royal Duties

0
Duchess of Cambridge Resumes Royal Duties
The Duchess of Cambridge, Patron of The Anna Freud Centre visits their Early Years Parenting Unit in North London. Photo credit: Doug Peters/EMPICS Entertainment

The Duchess of Cambridge has today resumed her royal duties with a visit to the Early Years Parenting Unit at the Anna Freud National Centre for Children and Families in Holloway, north London.

It was the Duchess’s second visit to the centre since she became patron in May last year and forms part of series of royal engagements designed to draw attention to child mental health issues.

The Early Years Parenting Unit, which opened in 2011, offers assessment and therapy for parents with personality disorders or difficulties and their children under five, who are on the verge of being taken into care.

Parents with personality disorders/difficulties can sometimes experience significant problems regulating their emotions and behaviours and this impacts on their capacity to provide safe, consistent parenting to their children.

The ultimate goal of the Early Years Parenting Unit is to keep families together and help parents become more aware of and responsive to their children’s needs.

On today’s visit, the Duchess met parents and children under the age of five who have both completed the programme or are currently going through the programme.

Later today the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge will visit a Child Bereavement UK Centre in Stratford, London to mark its one year anniversary.

The royal couple will meet families who have been helped by the charity when a baby or child is dying and children who have been helped after losing a parent.

To get all the latest royal news delivered straight to your door, subscribe to Royal Life Magazine today.

Queen Makes First Public Appearance Following Heavy Cold

0
Queen Makes First Public Appearance Following Heavy Cold
Queen Elizabeth II arriving to attend the morning church service at St Mary Magdalene Church in Sandringham, Norfolk.

Queen Elizabeth has made her first public appearance of 2017, attending the Sunday morning church service at St Mary Magdalene in Sandringham, Norfolk.

Having missed services on both Christmas Day and New Year’s Day due to a heavy cold, there had been much concern over the monarch’s health.

Buckingham Palace had previously said that the Queen did “not yet feel ready to attend Church as she is still recuperating from a heavy cold” and that missing the Christmas and New Year’s services was a “precautionary measure” and there was “no sense of undue concern”.

The Queen today arrived with Prince Philip at St Mary Magdalene, she was later joined by other members of the royal family, including the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, as well as the Middleton family.

To get all the latest royal news delivered straight to your door, subscribe to Royal Life Magazine today.

Buckingham Palace: New Changing the Guard Schedule

0

One of Buckingham Palace’s most iconic ceremonies – Changing the Guard – switches to fixed days in an attempt to tighten security within the park.

“This new programme allows the public, visitors, motorists and businesses to forward plan following new road closures on guard change days which were introduced in December as part of ongoing security measures aimed at keeping the public safe,” according to a Royal Parks spokesman.

From the 16th January through to March, the Changing the Guard ceremony, also known as ‘Guard Mounting’, will be held on the same days each week: Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays, rather than alternate days.

The ceremony will also take place earlier in the day, between 10:15 and 11:45 GMT, this allows for the roads to reopen in time for lunchtime traffic.

From April to July, the Changing the Guard ceremony will take place daily.

For a more detailed schedule see the British Army website. Please note that this schedule is set by the British Army and is subject to change.

Duchess of Cambridge Receives Lifetime Honorary Membership

0
Duchess of Cambridge receives lifetime honorary membership of the Royal Photographic Society
Duchess of Cambridge receives lifetime honorary membership of the Royal Photographic Society

The Duchess of Cambridge has received recognition for her beautiful family portraits and tour photos, with a lifetime honorary membership of the Royal Photographic Society.

Dr Michael Pritchard, Chief Executive of the Royal Photographic Society praised the duchess for her “talent and enthusiasm” behind the lens.

“The Duchess of Cambridge has had a long-standing interest in photography and its history,” said Dr Pritchard.

“She is the latest in a long line of royal photographers and the society is pleased to recognise her talent and enthusiasm through honorary membership.

“We look forward to a continuing relationship with her.”

Since the birth of her first child, Prince George, the Duchess of Cambridge has released a number of family photos including Prince George’s first day at nursery school and Princess Charlotte’s first birthday.

Catherine has also previously published photos from her Asian and Pacific tour with Prince William in 2012.

Prince George’s first day at nursery school
Prince George’s first day at nursery school

Other royal links to the Royal Photographic Society

Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were also patrons of the Royal Photographic Society which was founded in 1853.

The Duchess of Cambridge joins fellow lifetime members Sir Don McCullin, along with Annie Leibovitz, who has photographed the Queen.

 

The Cambridges Consider Move Back to London

0

It is rumoured that the Cambridges may be considering a move back to their London residence of Kensington Palace in 2017.

Since becoming parents only three short years ago, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have created their perfect family home at Anmer Hall in Norfolk, in an attempt to give their children the best opportunity of having a ‘normal’ childhood. However, the royal couple seem to now have their sights set on a move back to Kensington Palace in London.

It is thought that Prince William and Catherine have already put Prince George’s name down at the £6,500-a-term Wetherby School in London, just less than a mile from Kensington Palace.

Prince William and Prince Harry also attended the pre-prep school and is said to be a firm favourite of the royal couple.

As the Cambridge’s are set to take on even more royal duties in the New Year, a permanent London residence is looking like a definite possibility.

Sources close to the royal couple have said, “The Duke, in particular, has a lot of thinking to do over the Christmas and New Year period.

“He has his job as an Air Ambulance pilot, which he enjoys very much, but he also wants to take on more royal duties, as does the Duchess.

“Decisions about schooling and nurseries are all part of that.”

According to one insider, “They want to be in a position that when they are asked to do more, they are in a position to say yes.

“The Prince of Wales wants a slimmed-down monarchy and that will also have an effect in terms of the number of duties carried out by each of the core members.

“Also their ambition for their charitable side is increasing. The impact of the Heads Together mental health campaign, in particular, is making them want to be more active on the issues they care most about.”

 

 

Latest news