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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Jennifer Newton

Beaming Queen plays with beloved dog Candy in new photos to mark Platinum Jubilee

The Queen beams as she plays with her beloved dog Candy and looks through cards and gifts from well-wishers in a series of new photos shared to mark her Platinum Jubilee celebrations.

Buckingham Palace released the new photos to celebrate the Monarch's 70 years in the throne.

Taken in Windsor Castle's Oak Room a few weeks ago, the Queen sits with a display of memorabilia from the golden and platinum jubilees.

In one charming snap, an inquisitive member of her household appears to want a sneak preview of her cards - her pet dog Candy.

Candy is a dorgi – a cross between a corgi and a dachshund – and she made a lap of the room, inspecting a small group of media representatives capturing the viewing.

The Queen beams as she views a display of Golden and Platinum Jubilee memorabilia at Windsor Castle (PA)
The Queen strokes one of her dogs as she looks at jubilee cards and gifts (PA)

The Queen said: “And where did you come from? I know what you want,” likely to be a reference to a treat, and called Candy over and gave her a stroke.

The monarch, who has owned more than 30 corgis during her reign, currently has three dogs – Candy now quite elderly, a young corgi called Muick, and another corgi puppy which replaced Fergus the dorgi puppy, who died unexpectedly in May last year.

The Queen looks at a fan presented to Queen Victoria to mark her Golden Jubilee in 1887 (PA)
Some of the jubilee memorabilia the Queen looked over (PA)

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One card celebrating the 2002 Golden Jubilee caught the Queen’s eye – it was made from eight bottle tops including milk, Coca-Cola and Schweppes bottles, and had the handwritten words “Ma’am You’re The Tops”.

“That’s good, simple but ingenious,” said the Queen to Dr Stella Panayotova, librarian and assistant keeper of the royal archives, who joined her for the viewing two weeks ago.

The display included a Golden Jubilee letter from a nine-year-old boy called Chris, titled “A Recipe For A Perfect Queen”.

Some of the beautiful handmade cards the Queen has received (PA)

Its list of ingredients – which included “500ml of royal blood”, a “dab of jewels and posh gowns” and “a dash of loyalty” – made the Queen laugh and she said: “That’s quite fun, isn’t it.”

Platinum Jubilee cards were also on display and the Queen praised the design of one featuring a picture of her as a young woman surrounded by flowers with the words “70 Glorious Years”.

Recipes and pictures of entries to the Platinum Pudding competition were on display, showing the results of cooks who have risen to the challenge of creating a memorable dessert fit for the Queen and the nation.

The Queen remarked that this card was "simple but ingenious" (PA)
A picture of the Queen to celebrate her Jubilee (PA)

Another royal aide told the Queen: “We’ve had a number of Platinum Pudding competition entries that have been coming in in recent weeks. People have been very creative.”

The monarch browsed through the images of the entries and later said: “Looks like they’re all going to end with crowns on them.”

She also studied a fan presented to Queen Victoria to mark her Golden Jubilee in 1887 by the then Prince and Princess of Wales, later Edward VII and Queen Alexandra.

The Queen with her father George VI in Natal National Park in 1947 (PA)
The Queen with her father, her mother and Princess Margaret in 1937 (PA)

In the years after Victoria’s jubilee it was signed by members of her family including her eldest child, the Princess Royal, known as Vicky to her relatives, and granddaughter Princess Alix, later the Tsarina of Russia, and the then prime minister the Marquess of Salisbury.

The Queen opened the fan and remarked how easily it could have been damaged when being signed, adding: “Extraordinary isn’t it, and it still shuts.”

Commenting on the signatures she said: “Well that’s very interesting to see, quite a gathering.”

During the viewing, the Queen paid a touching tribute to her late father by wearing her aquamarine and diamond clip brooches, worn separately in a diagonal setting on her turquoise dress

They were an 18th birthday present from her beloved “Papa”, George VI, in April 1944.

The two art deco-style pieces were made by Boucheron from baguette, oval and round diamonds and aquamarines.

She also chose to wear the precious brooches when she addressed the nation on the 75th anniversary of VE Day in 2020 and for her Diamond Jubilee televised speech in 2012.

Elizabeth II came to the throne 70 years ago this Sunday when, on February 6 1952, the ailing king, who had lung cancer, died at Sandringham in the early hours.

The Queen, who is staying on the Sandringham estate, usually spends each Accession Day privately, reflecting on the bittersweet anniversary of the loss of her father and the start of her reign.

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