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Royal tours of Australia

Royal tours of Australia by the British royal family have been taking place since 1867. Since then, there have been over fifty visits by a member of the Royal Family, though only six of those came before 1954. Elizabeth II is the only reigning monarch of Australia to have set foot on Australian soil; she first did so on 3 February 1954, when she was 27 years old. During her sixteen journeys, the Queen visited every Australian state and the two major territories.

Queen Elizabeth II reads a speech in Sydney, 1954

19th century edit

Prince Alfred's visit 1867–1868 edit

The first member of the Royal Family to visit Australia was Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh, son of Queen Victoria, in 1867.

The trip was fraught with disaster. Prince Alfred arrived on board HMS Galatea, of which he was also Captain, as part a world cruise. On 31 October 1867, he landed at South Australia and spent three weeks there. He toured South Australia, then attended the funeral of one of his ship's crew, who had accidentally drowned at Glenelg. He departed for Melbourne on the 22nd, and was met by Governor of Victoria on board the Victoria, who escorted the Galatea back to Melbourne. He officially landed on the 25th.[1]

During the welcome ceremonies, 10,000 people gathered to meet him. An image of William of Orange defeating the Catholic armies at the Battle of the Boyne was erected on a hall in Melbourne. Someone fired shots from inside the hall into the Irish Catholic crowd who had gathered outside to throw stones at the hall, a Catholic boy was killed, and a riot between Irish Catholics and Protestants subsequently broke out.[2]

On the 27th, the public banquet the Prince was supposed to attend broke out into rioting after Prince Alfred cancelled his attendance, concerned about security. He then visited Geelong, where large crowds gathered, leading the organising committee to flee.[2] Prince Alfred then visited Bendigo, where a wooden model of the Galatea was erected as the center of a fireworks display. Three boys climbed into the model and burned to death when fireworks they let off set it on fire. A ball was then planned in the newly opened Alfred Hall, named in his honour. It caught fire and burned to the ground before the ball.[2]

 
A comic from the Sydney Punch of 22 February 1868, satirising Parkes' demonstration for the Prince

Prince Alfred then left for Tasmania on 28 November. He arrived in Hobart on 6 January, and was met by the steamship Southern Cross and escorted down the Derwent River. Hobart lit enormous bonfires on the hills around the city to mark the occasion. Prince Alfred's visit to Tasmania was relatively uneventful. He laid the foundation stone of St David's Cathedral, Hobart, and several events were held in his honour. He was then taken by road to the north of the state, and stayed at the country estate of Robert Kermode, Mona Vale. He then visited Ross, Campbell Town, Cleveland, Perth and Launceston,[3] where he planted trees in Prince's Square and turned the first sod for the construction of the Launceston railway terminus.[4]

Prince Alfred then visited Sydney for a tour. During his tour of the Australian Museum, the Colonial Secretary, Henry Parkes produced a live snake, and the museum curator Gerard Krefft, produced a 'Timor Mongoose', which subsequently ignored the snake. Parkes then produced another mongoose from a bag, which attempted to escape before fighting and killing the snake for the Prince's entertainment. The Prince then kept the mongoose as a pet, and took it with him when he left Australia.[5]

Prince Alfred then departed for Brisbane. Upon his return to Sydney in March, the Duke was shot by Henry James O'Farrell in an assassination attempt while picnicking on the beach in the Sydney suburb of Clontarf, on 12 March 1868. The Duke recovered fully and continued on to New Zealand seven months later.[2]

Other visits edit

Prince George of Wales, aged 15, visited Australia with his older brother, Prince Albert Victor of Wales, aged 17, in 1881, as midshipmen in training on HMS Bacchante. They arrived at Albany, Western Australia in May, crossed to South Australia in a passenger vessel, travelled overland to Melbourne and from there sailed on a naval vessel to Sydney.

Early 20th century (1901–1950) edit

 
In 1901, Prince George, Duke of Cornwall and York opened the first Australian parliament. Prince George visited Australia with his wife, the Duchess of Cornwall and York.

In 1901, Albert Edward, Prince of Wales and his wife Alexandra were planning an Empire tour. However, the death of Queen Victoria on 22 January 1901 meant that the couple had to prepare for a coronation in 1902. Consequently, Edward's son Prince George, Duke of Cornwall and York, and his wife, Princess Mary, were assigned to undertake the voyage instead. Arriving at Albany, Western Australia, on SS Ophir, they sailed to Melbourne, where he opened the first Australian federal parliament. The royal couple later travelled by train to Sydney. They visited Queensland from 20 to 25 May, where they laid the foundation stone of St John's Cathedral (Brisbane).[6]

1920s edit

Edward, Prince of Wales arrived in Victoria on 26 May 1920, representing his father, George V (previously Prince George, Duke of Cornwall and York), to thank Australians for their participation in the First World War. He was accompanied by Lord Louis Mountbatten.

During the tour, his railway carriage overturned near Bridgetown, Western Australia.[7][8] However, the Prince remained unharmed and made light of the situation, emerging from the wreck with some important papers and a cocktail shaker, an act which endeared him to Australians and caused them to give him the nickname the "Digger Prince".[9][10]

 
Prince Albert, Duke of York, and the Duchess of York on the balcony of State Car 4 in Victoria in 1927.

In 1926, Prince Albert, Duke of York, and wife Elizabeth had their first child, Princess Elizabeth, who would later become Queen Elizabeth II. The following year they undertook a Royal Tour without the baby. Queen Elizabeth was, in her own words, "very miserable at leaving the baby".[11] Their journey by sea took them via Jamaica, the Panama Canal and the Pacific; Elizabeth fretted constantly over her baby back in Britain, but their journey was a public relations success.[12] In New Zealand, the Yorks enjoyed the local fishing[13] in the Bay of Islands accompanied by Australian sports fisherman Harry Andreas.[14]

When they sailed into Sydney harbour on HMS Renown, they attracted Australia's first gathering of more than one million people. The principal duty of the Prince on this visit was to open the provisional Parliament House in Canberra, on 9 May 1927. They spent 12 days in New South Wales, seven in Queensland, four in Tasmania, eleven in Victoria, six in South Australia, six in Western Australia and three in the Australian Capital Territory, with the remaining 10 for travelling and recreation.

According to a report by the director-general of the royal visit, Cyril Brudenell White, "the Royal Visitors had expressed the wish that when travelling through the States they might have opportunities of seeing and of being seen by, the greatest number of the general public. They especially desired to meet returned soldiers, new settlers and school children."[citation needed] On 9 May, Prince Albert reviewed over 2,000 Australian troops with various air squadrons flying overhead. One aircraft, piloted by Flying Officer Charles Ewan, crashed, killing Ewan.

1931–1950 edit

 
The Duke of Gloucester watches Australian troops training. From 1945 to 1947, he served as the Governor General of Australia.

Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester the third son of George V, visited for an extensive 67-day tour in 1934, (4 October – December), the main purpose being to open the centenary celebrations of Victoria on 18 October. He arrived on HMS Sussex at Fremantle, then travelled by train to Adelaide and ship to Melbourne. He also visited the Australian Capital Territory, Tasmania, New South Wales and Queensland. While in Melbourne, the Duke dedicated the Shrine of Remembrance on 11 November and later opened the ANZAC War Memorial in Sydney on 24 November 1934. He sailed to New Zealand from Brisbane, before returning to England.

The Duke served as Governor-General of Australia from 20 January 1945 – 10 March 1947, the first and only royal Governor-General of Australia.

On 6 March 1948 it was announced that the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth would embark on a royal tour of Australia and New Zealand the following spring, accompanied by their daughter Princess Margaret. Plans were already well advanced when, on 23 November, it was announced that the tour would have to be cancelled owing to the King's declining health. An attempt to reschedule the tour, in scaled-back form, for early 1952 also foundered and plans for Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip to visit instead were put on hold when the King died in February of that year.[15]

Late 20th century (1951–2000) edit

1950s edit

Elizabeth II was the first reigning monarch of Australia to set foot on Australian soil, coming ashore at Farm Cove, Sydney, on 3 February 1954. She had two years earlier been en route to Australia when her father died while she was on a private visit to Kenya, forcing her to return to the United Kingdom. Once finally in Australia, with her husband the Duke of Edinburgh, she undertook a journey through the Australian Capital Territory, New South Wales, Tasmania, Victoria, Queensland, South Australia and Western Australia, including greeting 70,000 ex-servicemen and women at the Melbourne Cricket Ground and opening the Australian Parliament in Canberra. In all, the Queen travelled 10,000 miles by air, making approximately 33 flights, 2000 miles by road (130 hours in cars in 207 trips), visiting all capitals except Darwin and 70 country towns, many by special "royal trains".[16] On one such train trip they visited Leuralla, at Leura, in the Blue Mountains. Twenty-seven years earlier, Harry Andreas of Leuralla had acted as a fishing guide for the Queen's parents,[14] whilst the young Princess "Lillibet" was left at home with her grandparents, King George V and Queen Mary. This extensive travel allowed some 75 per cent of the Australian population to see the Queen at least once during the tour.[17] Elizabeth was so popular with the Australian people they came out in their thousands, lining the streets for an opportunity to see her drive past or attending formal events where she was the honoured and most distinguished guest. Adoring crowds hoped for the opportunity to shake her hand, give her a posy of fresh flowers or to engage in a short conversation with her as she walked by.[18] At the conclusion of the tour the Prime Minister, Robert Menzies, stated in an article published in the Sydney Morning Herald:

 
Queen Elizabeth II arriving in Leura for her visit to Leuralla during the 1954 Australian Royal Tour

It is a basic truth that for our Queen we have within us, sometimes unrealised until the moment of expression, the most profound and passionate feelings of loyalty and devotion. It does not require much imagination to realise that when eight million people spontaneously pour out this feeling they are engaging in a great act of common allegiance and common joy which brings them closer together and is one of the most powerful elements converting them from a mass of individuals to a great cohesive nation. In brief, the common devotion to the Throne is a part of the very cement of the whole social structure.[19]

In 1956, the Duke of Edinburgh opened the Olympic Games in Melbourne, and opened the 1962 British Empire and Commonwealth Games in Perth, while on a tour through Western Australia, New South Wales and the ACT. In 1965 he opened the Royal Australian Mint, and in 1968 went to Australia to open the Duke of Edinburgh Study Conference.

Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother visited in 1958 to attend the British Empire Service League Conference in Canberra. She travelled to the Australian Capital Territory, Brisbane,[20] Sydney, Melbourne, Tasmania, Adelaide and Perth, as well as many provincial and country areas during the time of her visit 14 February – 7 March.

Princess Alexandra of Kent visited in 1959 for Queensland's centenary celebrations. She arrived at Canberra and travelled to New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland and the Northern Territory.

1960s edit

 
Queen Elizabeth II, and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh at the Sydney Showground during their 1963 royal tour of Australia.

Planned as a less formal tour than the one in 1954, the Queen and Prince Philip returned in 1963, touring all the states and territories, with the primary purpose being to lead the Canberra jubilee celebrations commemorating the 50th anniversary of the naming of the capital.[21] The Queen's itinerary was prepared around the use of the Royal Yacht Britannia to convey Her Majesty to each capital city in Australia. Having spent 8 weeks travelling to every part of Australia in 1954, the decision to use the Royal Yacht Britannia as a permanent base meant she could entertain aboard ship and rest between each port as she travelled the 9,000 miles around Australia's coastline.[22]

During this trip she also toured the Royal Flying Doctor Service of Australia base in Alice Springs. In preparation for this tour, Sir Roy Dowling, the Queen's Australian Secretary for the visit, was warned about Northern Territory mosquitoes. Dowling was warned, "You could be placed in an extremely embarrassing situation if the Queen's skin was marked and if the press published pictures and stories about those marks."[citation needed] Cities and towns visited included Hobart,[23] Melbourne,[24] Sydney,[25] Canberra,[26] Darwin,[27] Kununurra,[27] Perth,[28] Adelaide,[29] Brisbane,[29] Coolangatta,[29] and Koolan Island.[30]

Princess Marina, Duchess of Kent visited between 26 September and 8 October 1964 for the British Exhibition in Sydney and to open the new Gladesville Bridge. She travelled in New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory before leaving, with a brief stop in Brisbane on the return flight.

Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester and his wife Alice visited the Australian Capital Territory, Victoria, New South Wales, Tasmania and Queensland between 20 March and 26 April 1965. The new Tasman Bridge was opened by the Duke in Hobart. He also opened the Royal Easter Show in Sydney and a hydro-electric power station in the Snowy Mountains.

Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother attended the Adelaide Festival of Arts as its patron, and opened Flinders University, also travelling to Western Australia, the Snowy Mountains and the Australian Capital Territory between 22 March and 7 April 1966.

King Charles III attended the Timbertop campus of Geelong Grammar School for one term in 1966. This was not an official trip as the Prince was there primarily for schooling. A press release of 10 January 1966 made this clear, stating that he should be left alone by journalists: "The Prince of Wales will be engaged in full time study in Australia and will not undertake any official engagements. The Queen and the Commonwealth Government have requested that the Prince's visit should be treated as a private one and that he should be allowed the same freedom from public attention as any other schoolboy."[citation needed]

He returned in 1967 as the Queen's representative at the memorial service for Prime Minister Harold Holt, and again in 1970.

Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh helped in 1967 to organise the third Commonwealth Study Conference to be held in May 1968. He travelled to the Australian Capital Territory, Victoria and Tasmania, where he helped volunteer fire fighters to fight a local fire.

Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and his wife Katherine made a 25-day tour between 9 August and 3 September 1969, of the Australian Capital Territory, South Australia, the Northern Territory, Western Australia and Queensland as well as Papua New Guinea. The Duke opened the South Pacific Games in Port Moresby on 13 August.

1970s edit

 
Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Philip, the Prince of Wales, and Princess Anne toured the country for the bi-centenary anniversary of James Cook's first voyage to Australia.

The Queen, Prince Philip, Charles, Prince of Wales (for part of the tour only) and Princess Anne made an extensive tour of Australia in 1970 in connection with the bi-centenary of Captain James Cook sailing up the east coast of Australia in 1770. This was a very popular tour and large crowds turned out to see the Queen. One large gathering occurred when the royal yacht HMY Britannia sailed up the Brisbane River, mooring just below the historic Newstead House in Brisbane.[31] In January 2009, a retired police detective revealed an unsuccessful attempt to derail the Royal Train near Bowenfels on 29 April 1970.[32]

The Queensland tour began on 12 April when the royal yacht Britannia entered Moreton Bay at Caloundra, sailing into Newstead Wharf. Her Royal Highness Princess Anne accepted an invitation to spend three days on a working sheep station in south-west Queensland. She flew to Cunnamulla on 14 April, travelling 47 miles (76 km) by road to Talbarea Station unaccompanied. Princess Anne arrived in Cunnamulla in a government jet a little ahead of schedule. She travelled around the district in a maroon Rolls-Royce which was unloaded from the back of a Royal Australian Air Force carrier plane. Princess Anne was given a demonstration of sheep shearing and wool classing on the working property and was accompanied on a horse ride during her stay.[31]

After several days of engagements in the city of Brisbane, Queen Elizabeth II and The Duke of Edinburgh commenced their regional tour flying to Longreach on Wednesday 15 April. The primary purpose for their stopover in Longreach was to visit the first operational base of Queensland's first airline which became Australia's overseas airline. During the visit they viewed an exhibition of Qantas memorabilia, including a replica of the company's first aircraft, the AVRO 504K of 1921. The occasion marked the 50th anniversary of the founding of Qantas.[31]

Next on the tour was Mount Isa and while there the royals were driven to Kalkadoon Park where the royal couple witnessed a programmed event under the guidance of Ringmaster Mr. J. O’Shea. Kalkadoon Park was the original site of the famous Mount Isa rodeo. The following day, on 16 April, HRH The Duke of Edinburgh was taken on an underground tour of the Mount Isa mine while Queen Elizabeth stayed above ground. The Marshalling Area around R62 Shaft Winder Tower was cleaned, and a display was set up using operational mining equipment from underground so the queen could see it in action. The display was designed to demonstrate the operation of an EIMCO air powered rail mounted rocker shovel loading ore.[33]

The tour continued from Mount Isa and the Royal Family travelled to Mackay, Townsville, the Great Barrier Reef, Cooktown and Cairns. The visit to Mackay in the evening followed a late afternoon flight from Mount Isa on 16 April. Their Royal Highnesses were taken to the Anglican Parish Hall at the intersection of Sydney and Gordon Streets for a civic reception, held in honour of their arrival.

The royal party had a leisurely cruise to Townsville, taking four days to arrive after their departure from Mackay. On the morning of 20 April, the day's program began with a cavalcade of progress at the Townsville sports reserve. The grounds were filled with crowds and children waving their Australian flag. It was a spectacle for the royal visitors and the local community who came out on the day.

Following lunch on board Britannia, the royal family were driven to the site of Queensland's newest university, the James Cook University, Townsville campus. In the presence of many dignitaries, the queen formally granted autonomy to North Queensland's new educational institution. In 2020, James Cook University celebrated its 50th anniversary with a Treasures exhibition, showcasing 50 collection items from Special Collections, Eddie Koiku Mabo Library, James Cook University, Townsville.[34]

The rare collection item – 'James Cook University Development: Pimlico to the First Chancellor archival footage, 1960 – 1970' was one of the Treasures selected for the anniversary year. The 12min film preserved on NQHeritage, the University Library's Special Collections online repository, shows footage of the queen arriving at the official ceremony and being introduced to the official party.[35] Their Royal Highnesses first appear in the film at 6:06 minutes.

According to the formal schedule, the Royal Yacht Britannia arrived off Green Island on the morning of 21 April, after leaving Townsville the day before. The scheduled visit to Green Island was dependent on the weather. All three members of the Royal family were taken by Royal Barge to the Green Island jetty. The visit only lasted 30mins, before Britannia left for Cooktown by 10:15am the same day.

Timed to coincide with the Australian Bicentenary celebrations of James Cook's landing in Cooktown two hundred years earlier in 1770, the Far North Queensland Bicentenary Committee planned a re-enactment of Cook's landing for the royal visitors. The esplanade alongside the Endeavour River was filled with spectators expecting to see the Royal family during their short stopover in Cooktown. Following the re-enactment, the queen officially opened the newly renovated James Cook Museum which was established in 1888 as the St Mary's Convent and boarding school run by the Sisters of Mercy originally from Dungarvan, Ireland. Since that time, the James Cook Museum has been renamed Cooktown Museum, acknowledging the First Nations history and culture that is intrinsically linked to the iconic region.

The Royal family arrived at Berth No. 3, Cairns Wharf the next day on the morning of 23 April. To catch a glimpse of the Royal family, spectators crowded the wharf car park and lined the streets along the official route to the airport. A Ceremonial Farewell was conducted at Cairns Airport involving Governor Alan Mansfield and Premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen. After the queen inspected the Guard of Honour, the official party were escorted to their plane in preparation for the flight to Canberra.[36]

The Queen returned to Australia again in 1973 to open the Sydney Opera House and also in 1974 to open the Australian Parliament in Canberra. This time the Queen returned to London on 28 February for a General Election in Britain, cutting short the tour, which the Duke of Edinburgh completed.

A royal tour of Australia was made in March 1977 as part of the Silver Jubilee of the queen's reign.

Prince Charles made a brief visit in May 1978 to attend the funeral of former Prime Minister Sir Robert Menzies. Wearing the full dress uniform of a commander of the Royal Navy, the prince read from the book of Ecclesiasticus chapter 44: "Let us now praise famous men . . .". He arrived and departed at Melbourne Airport aboard a Royal Air Force Vickers VC10.[37][38][39]

1980s edit

 
Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip meeting Roger Woodward, Paul Hogan, and Olivia Newton-John at a Sydney concert in 1980.

In the 1980s the Queen made short tours to open the new High Court of Australia building in 1980 as well the City Square in Melbourne, then again to open the new National Gallery of Australia in 1982 and the Parramatta Stadium in 1986. During the 1986 visit, at a ceremony held in Government House, Canberra, she signed a proclamation that brought into effect the Australia Act 1986, which severed the final constitutional link between Australia and the United Kingdom.

Lady Diana Spencer, later Princess of Wales, made a short private visit to Australia with her mother and step-father to their sheep station at Yass, north of Canberra, in early February 1981. Prince Charles had proposed to her less than a week before.

The Prince of Wales visited Australia shortly after the announcement of his engagement and prior to his July wedding in 1981.

The Queen attended the 1981 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM), held in Melbourne in September.

 
Her Majesty The Queen at Brisbane Airport, 1982
 
Her Majesty The Queen surrounded by children in Queen Street Mall, Brisbane City, 1982

On 20 March 1983, the Prince of Wales, this time with the Princess of Wales, and their son Prince William, landed in Alice Springs for an official visit. 26 October – 8 November 1985 visited Victoria for 150th anniversary of the state. This tour included visits to Brisbane and Canberra. The Prince and Princess of Wales also made a visit during the bicentenary celebrations in 1988.

The Duke and Duchess of Kent visited Queensland in April 1985 to open the Performing Arts Complex at Southbank. They visited Toowoomba on 24 April following an invitation by Steven Rafter to visit the Toowoomba Grammar School.

The Queen and Prince Philip also made a popular visit in 1988 as part of the bicentenary celebrations. On Saturday 30 April 1988, the Queen opened the World Expo in Brisbane before opening the new permanent Parliament House in Canberra on Monday 9 May.

During the bicentenary celebrations, Australia was also visited by The Prince and Princess of Wales, The Duke and Duchess of York and The Duke and Duchess of Kent.

1990s edit

In 1992 the Queen returned to the sesquicentenary of the incorporation of the city of Sydney. This tour included visits to regional towns, in Dubbo she visited the Western Plains Zoo.[40]

In the last years of the decade she did not visit the country to avoid being embroiled in the debate about future of the monarchy. Her next tour was timed to be made well after the 1999 referendum on the republic. The Australian government of John Howard had advised the Queen on the timing.[41]

In 1994, Charles III then Prince of Wales, visited Australia. He was giving a speech in Darling Harbour during the Australia day celebrations. David Kang ran up to the Prince and fired two blanks before falling onto the ground; he was arrested by many police officers. The Prince was unhurt and was ushered off the podium.[42]

After her divorce in 1996, Diana, Princess of Wales made one subsequent visit prior to her death in 1997.

21st century edit

 
Anne, Princess Royal, passes in front of the Princess Anne Banner at the Royal Australian Corps of Signals during their 75th anniversary, 2000.

In 2000 the Queen made an extended tour in the states of Australia which was followed by another visit in 2002 when she attended the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 2002: the second such meeting held in Australia.

On 11 March 2006, Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex visited Australia to announce the winners of the Commonwealth Writers' Prize. He also had lunch with the Prime Minister, John Howard, visited a neo-natal unit in Heidelberg, visited victims of bush fires in Victoria and attended the opening and closing ceremonies of the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne.

One day later, the Queen and Prince Philip arrived in Melbourne where the Queen opened the Commonwealth Games. As well, the royal couple opened a new section of the Sydney Opera House, attended a Commonwealth Day ceremony in Sydney, had official meetings with the Prime Minister, Governor-General and Leader of the Opposition at Government House in Canberra, lunched with former governors-general, met with firefighters in Canberra, attended and made a formal speech at an official dinner at Parliament House in Canberra to commemorate her 80th birthday and watched some of the events at the games.

Anne, Princess Royal attended the memorial in Rod Laver Arena, Melbourne, Victoria on Sunday, 22 February 2009, for victims of the 2009 Victorian bushfires.

2010s edit

On 19 January 2010, Prince William arrived in Sydney for a three-day visit to Australia.[43]

A visit was made in early 2011 by Prince William to flood damaged areas of Queensland and Victoria.

 
Queen Elizabeth II emerges from St John's Church, Reid, ACT after attending the service on 23 October 2011.

In October 2011, Queen Elizabeth II visited a number of cities in her role as Queen of Australia and Head of the Commonwealth. At a reception in her honour held at Parliament House in Canberra on 21 October 2011, the Prime Minister, Julia Gillard, described the Queen as "a vital constitutional part of Australian democracy".[44] The Queen in her speech at the same reception stated that,

"It has been a difficult year for this country in many ways despite the successes. The world witnessed the anguish of Australians as they lived through a summer of national disasters. We were all inspired by the courage and resolution shown by those affected in the face of crippling desolation. Ever since I first came here in 1954 I have watched Australia grow and develop at an extraordinary rate. This country has made dramatic progress economically in social scientific and industrial endeavours and above all in self-confidence."[45]

The Queen visited Canberra, Brisbane, Melbourne and Perth during the tour. In Perth she attended the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.

Prince Charles travelled to Australia in November 2012 with the Duchess of Cornwall as part of a visit to Papua New Guinea, Australia and New Zealand on behalf of the Queen of each respective Realm in the year of the Queen's Diamond Jubilee. Also in 2012 Prince Edward, Duke of Kent visited from 28 January to 1 February[46] and Prince Richard, Duke of Gloucester visited from 21 to 26 May.[47]

In October 2013, Prince Harry visited Sydney for the centenary celebrations of the Royal Australian Navy. Representing his grandmother, the Queen, he took the salute from HMAS Leeuwin alongside Governor-General Quentin Bryce. The prince made a further visit to SAS forces in Perth before departing for the United Kingdom.

In November 2014, Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex, visited Australia at the invitation of The Duke of Edinburgh's International Award – Australia. He attended 18 engagements in Sydney, Brisbane and Perth.[48][49]

In April 2014, Prince William arrived in Australia for a ten-day tour with his wife, the Duchess of Cambridge, and their son, Prince George. The family's itinerary took them to Sydney, Brisbane, Canberra, Uluru and Adelaide.[50]

Before reporting for duty to the Australian Defence Force (ADF), Harry visited the Australian War Memorial in Canberra on 6 April 2015.[51] In May 2015, Prince Harry made a farewell walkabout at the Sydney Opera House and visited Macquarie University Hospital.[52][53] In November 2015, Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall visited Adelaide, Canberra, Sydney, Albany and Perth.[54] Prince Charles and the Duchess returned again in 2018 for events associated with the Gold Coast Commonwealth Games.

In April 2018 Prince Edward visited Australia to attend the Gold Coast Commonwealth Games as Vice Patron of the Commonwealth Games Federation. Whilst in Australia Prince Edward, in his capacity as Chair of the Trustees of the International Award Foundation he attended 40 functions to support the development of The Duke of Edinburgh's International Award – Australia. Prince Edward visited Melbourne, Ballarat, Romsey, Hobart, Brisbane, Adelaide, Seppeltsfield. Prince Edward continued his international fund raising challenge playing a set of Real Tennis on every real tennis court in the world, including the 5 courts in Australia. In addition to visiting schools and youth organisations to promote the Duke of Ed, he also conducted round table meetings with the university sector, business and sporting organisations.[55][56]

In June 2018, Kensington Palace announced that Prince Harry and his wife the Duchess of Sussex would tour Australia around the time of the Invictus Games which was held in Sydney in October 2018.[57][58] Later, Prince Andrew, Duke of York undertook a 9-day tour of the country's eastern states in November.[59] During this trip, Meghan announced that she and Harry were expecting their first child.

In September 2019 Prince Edward visited Australia to in his capacity as Chair of the Trustees of the International Award Foundation to assist celebrate the 60th Anniversary of the Duke of Edinburgh's International Award in Australia. He attended 25 functions in Sydney, Wollongong, Alice Springs and Darwin, including presenting nearly 400 Gold Awards at a ceremony held in Sydney Town Hall.[60] Prince Andrew also visited Western Australia in October 2019 as part of his Pitch@Palace initiative, although the Prince did no media interviews during the tour and kept a low profile during the visit due to controversy surrounding his association with Jeffrey Epstein.[61]

2020s edit

The Princess Royal and her husband Vice Admiral Sir Timothy Laurence, toured Australia from 9 to 11 April 2022.[62] On the first day of her visit, she opened the 200th Sydney Royal Easter Show, which she first opened with her parents and brother Charles in 1970. She had last attended the event in 1988.[62] She had an engagement as patron of the Royal Agricultural Society of the Commonwealth, before attending a dinner at the Sydney Olympic Park.[62] The couple also met with representatives of the New South Wales Rural Fire Service, the Royal Australian Corps of Signals and Royal Australian Corps of Transport.[62]

Visits to external territories edit

The Queen visited the Cocos (Keeling) Islands in 1954 while the territory was still administered by Singapore. A visit was made to Norfolk Island in 1974.

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ a b c d "National Museum of Australia – First royal visit". nma.gov.au. National Museum Australia. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Launceston Examiner (Tas. : 1842 – 1899) – 25 Jan 1868 – p2". Launceston Examiner. 25 January 1868. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  4. ^ "THE DUKE OF EDINBURG IN TASMANIA". The Tasmanian Times. 18 January 1868. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  5. ^ Brainwood, Linda (5 September 2014). "Mr Parkes's mongoose". Dictionary of Sydney. State Library of New South Wales. Retrieved 28 November 2021.
  6. ^ "Royal visits to Queensland, an historic essay". Queensland State Archives. from the original on 17 September 2013. Retrieved 11 October 2013.
  7. ^ "THE ROYAL TRAIN SENSATIONAL DISASTER". Western Mail. Perth. 8 July 1920. p. 29. Retrieved 25 October 2011 – via National Library of Australia.
  8. ^ "Royal Train Derailment in Western Australia from the Diary of Lord Louis Mountbatten". Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin: 479–482. December 1998.
  9. ^ Haynes, Jim (27 December 2016). "The Aussie train wreck which turned the Prince of Wales into the 'Digger Prince'". The Daily Telegraph. London (Sydney). Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  10. ^ Dingle, John (13 August 2020). "HRH Edward "Our Digger Prince"". State Library Of Queensland. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  11. ^ Elizabeth's diary, 6 January 1927, quoted in Shawcross, p. 264
  12. ^ Shawcross, pp. 266–296
  13. ^ Shawcross, pp. 281–282
  14. ^ a b "ROYAL ANGLERS". The Register. Adelaide. 25 February 1927. p. 9. Retrieved 1 September 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
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  17. ^ "Defining Moments – Queen Elizabeth II". National Museum of Australia. 11 May 2022. Retrieved 27 May 2022.
  18. ^   This Wikipedia article incorporates text from Hear ye! Hear ye! It's 1954 and Her Majesty is coming! (4 February 2022) published by the State Library of Queensland under CC BY licence, accessed on 27 May 2022.
  19. ^ "The Queen's Visit Is First by a Reigning Monarch". The Sydney Morning Herald. 4 February 1954. p. 2 Supplement: Royal Tour Supplement. Retrieved 10 March 2015 – via National Library of Australia.
  20. ^ "Footage of the Queen Mother at St John's Cathedral, Brisbane, 1958". State Library of Queensland. 23 November 2018. Retrieved 7 October 2020.
  21. ^ Scheu, Anne (14 March 2022). "Ahoy! Ahoy! – Her Majesty returns in 1963!". State Library Of Queensland. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  22. ^   This Wikipedia article incorporates text from Ahoy! Ahoy! – Her Majesty returns in 1963! (14 March 2022) published by the State Library of Queensland under CC BY licence, accessed on 27 May 2022.
  23. ^ Programme https://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-3067370076/view?partId=nla.obj-3067370957#page/n0/mode/1up
  24. ^ Itinerary </[1]>
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External links edit

  Media related to Royal visits by the Monarchy of the Commonwealth to Australia at Wikimedia Commons

royal, tours, australia, british, royal, family, have, been, taking, place, since, 1867, since, then, there, have, been, over, fifty, visits, member, royal, family, though, only, those, came, before, 1954, elizabeth, only, reigning, monarch, australia, have, f. Royal tours of Australia by the British royal family have been taking place since 1867 Since then there have been over fifty visits by a member of the Royal Family though only six of those came before 1954 Elizabeth II is the only reigning monarch of Australia to have set foot on Australian soil she first did so on 3 February 1954 when she was 27 years old During her sixteen journeys the Queen visited every Australian state and the two major territories Queen Elizabeth II reads a speech in Sydney 1954 Contents 1 19th century 1 1 Prince Alfred s visit 1867 1868 1 2 Other visits 2 Early 20th century 1901 1950 2 1 1920s 2 2 1931 1950 3 Late 20th century 1951 2000 3 1 1950s 3 2 1960s 3 3 1970s 3 4 1980s 3 5 1990s 4 21st century 4 1 2010s 4 2 2020s 5 Visits to external territories 6 See also 7 References 8 External links19th century editPrince Alfred s visit 1867 1868 edit The first member of the Royal Family to visit Australia was Prince Alfred Duke of Edinburgh son of Queen Victoria in 1867 The trip was fraught with disaster Prince Alfred arrived on board HMS Galatea of which he was also Captain as part a world cruise On 31 October 1867 he landed at South Australia and spent three weeks there He toured South Australia then attended the funeral of one of his ship s crew who had accidentally drowned at Glenelg He departed for Melbourne on the 22nd and was met by Governor of Victoria on board the Victoria who escorted the Galatea back to Melbourne He officially landed on the 25th 1 During the welcome ceremonies 10 000 people gathered to meet him An image of William of Orange defeating the Catholic armies at the Battle of the Boyne was erected on a hall in Melbourne Someone fired shots from inside the hall into the Irish Catholic crowd who had gathered outside to throw stones at the hall a Catholic boy was killed and a riot between Irish Catholics and Protestants subsequently broke out 2 On the 27th the public banquet the Prince was supposed to attend broke out into rioting after Prince Alfred cancelled his attendance concerned about security He then visited Geelong where large crowds gathered leading the organising committee to flee 2 Prince Alfred then visited Bendigo where a wooden model of the Galatea was erected as the center of a fireworks display Three boys climbed into the model and burned to death when fireworks they let off set it on fire A ball was then planned in the newly opened Alfred Hall named in his honour It caught fire and burned to the ground before the ball 2 nbsp A comic from the Sydney Punch of 22 February 1868 satirising Parkes demonstration for the PrincePrince Alfred then left for Tasmania on 28 November He arrived in Hobart on 6 January and was met by the steamship Southern Cross and escorted down the Derwent River Hobart lit enormous bonfires on the hills around the city to mark the occasion Prince Alfred s visit to Tasmania was relatively uneventful He laid the foundation stone of St David s Cathedral Hobart and several events were held in his honour He was then taken by road to the north of the state and stayed at the country estate of Robert Kermode Mona Vale He then visited Ross Campbell Town Cleveland Perth and Launceston 3 where he planted trees in Prince s Square and turned the first sod for the construction of the Launceston railway terminus 4 Prince Alfred then visited Sydney for a tour During his tour of the Australian Museum the Colonial Secretary Henry Parkes produced a live snake and the museum curator Gerard Krefft produced a Timor Mongoose which subsequently ignored the snake Parkes then produced another mongoose from a bag which attempted to escape before fighting and killing the snake for the Prince s entertainment The Prince then kept the mongoose as a pet and took it with him when he left Australia 5 Prince Alfred then departed for Brisbane Upon his return to Sydney in March the Duke was shot by Henry James O Farrell in an assassination attempt while picnicking on the beach in the Sydney suburb of Clontarf on 12 March 1868 The Duke recovered fully and continued on to New Zealand seven months later 2 Other visits edit Prince George of Wales aged 15 visited Australia with his older brother Prince Albert Victor of Wales aged 17 in 1881 as midshipmen in training on HMS Bacchante They arrived at Albany Western Australia in May crossed to South Australia in a passenger vessel travelled overland to Melbourne and from there sailed on a naval vessel to Sydney Early 20th century 1901 1950 edit nbsp In 1901 Prince George Duke of Cornwall and York opened the first Australian parliament Prince George visited Australia with his wife the Duchess of Cornwall and York In 1901 Albert Edward Prince of Wales and his wife Alexandra were planning an Empire tour However the death of Queen Victoria on 22 January 1901 meant that the couple had to prepare for a coronation in 1902 Consequently Edward s son Prince George Duke of Cornwall and York and his wife Princess Mary were assigned to undertake the voyage instead Arriving at Albany Western Australia on SS Ophir they sailed to Melbourne where he opened the first Australian federal parliament The royal couple later travelled by train to Sydney They visited Queensland from 20 to 25 May where they laid the foundation stone of St John s Cathedral Brisbane 6 1920s edit Edward Prince of Wales arrived in Victoria on 26 May 1920 representing his father George V previously Prince George Duke of Cornwall and York to thank Australians for their participation in the First World War He was accompanied by Lord Louis Mountbatten During the tour his railway carriage overturned near Bridgetown Western Australia 7 8 However the Prince remained unharmed and made light of the situation emerging from the wreck with some important papers and a cocktail shaker an act which endeared him to Australians and caused them to give him the nickname the Digger Prince 9 10 nbsp Prince Albert Duke of York and the Duchess of York on the balcony of State Car 4 in Victoria in 1927 In 1926 Prince Albert Duke of York and wife Elizabeth had their first child Princess Elizabeth who would later become Queen Elizabeth II The following year they undertook a Royal Tour without the baby Queen Elizabeth was in her own words very miserable at leaving the baby 11 Their journey by sea took them via Jamaica the Panama Canal and the Pacific Elizabeth fretted constantly over her baby back in Britain but their journey was a public relations success 12 In New Zealand the Yorks enjoyed the local fishing 13 in the Bay of Islands accompanied by Australian sports fisherman Harry Andreas 14 When they sailed into Sydney harbour on HMS Renown they attracted Australia s first gathering of more than one million people The principal duty of the Prince on this visit was to open the provisional Parliament House in Canberra on 9 May 1927 They spent 12 days in New South Wales seven in Queensland four in Tasmania eleven in Victoria six in South Australia six in Western Australia and three in the Australian Capital Territory with the remaining 10 for travelling and recreation According to a report by the director general of the royal visit Cyril Brudenell White the Royal Visitors had expressed the wish that when travelling through the States they might have opportunities of seeing and of being seen by the greatest number of the general public They especially desired to meet returned soldiers new settlers and school children citation needed On 9 May Prince Albert reviewed over 2 000 Australian troops with various air squadrons flying overhead One aircraft piloted by Flying Officer Charles Ewan crashed killing Ewan 1931 1950 edit nbsp The Duke of Gloucester watches Australian troops training From 1945 to 1947 he served as the Governor General of Australia Prince Henry Duke of Gloucester the third son of George V visited for an extensive 67 day tour in 1934 4 October December the main purpose being to open the centenary celebrations of Victoria on 18 October He arrived on HMS Sussex at Fremantle then travelled by train to Adelaide and ship to Melbourne He also visited the Australian Capital Territory Tasmania New South Wales and Queensland While in Melbourne the Duke dedicated the Shrine of Remembrance on 11 November and later opened the ANZAC War Memorial in Sydney on 24 November 1934 He sailed to New Zealand from Brisbane before returning to England The Duke served as Governor General of Australia from 20 January 1945 10 March 1947 the first and only royal Governor General of Australia On 6 March 1948 it was announced that the King George VI and Queen Elizabeth would embark on a royal tour of Australia and New Zealand the following spring accompanied by their daughter Princess Margaret Plans were already well advanced when on 23 November it was announced that the tour would have to be cancelled owing to the King s declining health An attempt to reschedule the tour in scaled back form for early 1952 also foundered and plans for Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip to visit instead were put on hold when the King died in February of that year 15 Late 20th century 1951 2000 edit1950s edit Elizabeth II was the first reigning monarch of Australia to set foot on Australian soil coming ashore at Farm Cove Sydney on 3 February 1954 She had two years earlier been en route to Australia when her father died while she was on a private visit to Kenya forcing her to return to the United Kingdom Once finally in Australia with her husband the Duke of Edinburgh she undertook a journey through the Australian Capital Territory New South Wales Tasmania Victoria Queensland South Australia and Western Australia including greeting 70 000 ex servicemen and women at the Melbourne Cricket Ground and opening the Australian Parliament in Canberra In all the Queen travelled 10 000 miles by air making approximately 33 flights 2000 miles by road 130 hours in cars in 207 trips visiting all capitals except Darwin and 70 country towns many by special royal trains 16 On one such train trip they visited Leuralla at Leura in the Blue Mountains Twenty seven years earlier Harry Andreas of Leuralla had acted as a fishing guide for the Queen s parents 14 whilst the young Princess Lillibet was left at home with her grandparents King George V and Queen Mary This extensive travel allowed some 75 per cent of the Australian population to see the Queen at least once during the tour 17 Elizabeth was so popular with the Australian people they came out in their thousands lining the streets for an opportunity to see her drive past or attending formal events where she was the honoured and most distinguished guest Adoring crowds hoped for the opportunity to shake her hand give her a posy of fresh flowers or to engage in a short conversation with her as she walked by 18 At the conclusion of the tour the Prime Minister Robert Menzies stated in an article published in the Sydney Morning Herald nbsp Queen Elizabeth II arriving in Leura for her visit to Leuralla during the 1954 Australian Royal TourIt is a basic truth that for our Queen we have within us sometimes unrealised until the moment of expression the most profound and passionate feelings of loyalty and devotion It does not require much imagination to realise that when eight million people spontaneously pour out this feeling they are engaging in a great act of common allegiance and common joy which brings them closer together and is one of the most powerful elements converting them from a mass of individuals to a great cohesive nation In brief the common devotion to the Throne is a part of the very cement of the whole social structure 19 In 1956 the Duke of Edinburgh opened the Olympic Games in Melbourne and opened the 1962 British Empire and Commonwealth Games in Perth while on a tour through Western Australia New South Wales and the ACT In 1965 he opened the Royal Australian Mint and in 1968 went to Australia to open the Duke of Edinburgh Study Conference Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother visited in 1958 to attend the British Empire Service League Conference in Canberra She travelled to the Australian Capital Territory Brisbane 20 Sydney Melbourne Tasmania Adelaide and Perth as well as many provincial and country areas during the time of her visit 14 February 7 March Princess Alexandra of Kent visited in 1959 for Queensland s centenary celebrations She arrived at Canberra and travelled to New South Wales Victoria Queensland and the Northern Territory 1960s edit nbsp Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh at the Sydney Showground during their 1963 royal tour of Australia Planned as a less formal tour than the one in 1954 the Queen and Prince Philip returned in 1963 touring all the states and territories with the primary purpose being to lead the Canberra jubilee celebrations commemorating the 50th anniversary of the naming of the capital 21 The Queen s itinerary was prepared around the use of the Royal Yacht Britannia to convey Her Majesty to each capital city in Australia Having spent 8 weeks travelling to every part of Australia in 1954 the decision to use the Royal Yacht Britannia as a permanent base meant she could entertain aboard ship and rest between each port as she travelled the 9 000 miles around Australia s coastline 22 During this trip she also toured the Royal Flying Doctor Service of Australia base in Alice Springs In preparation for this tour Sir Roy Dowling the Queen s Australian Secretary for the visit was warned about Northern Territory mosquitoes Dowling was warned You could be placed in an extremely embarrassing situation if the Queen s skin was marked and if the press published pictures and stories about those marks citation needed Cities and towns visited included Hobart 23 Melbourne 24 Sydney 25 Canberra 26 Darwin 27 Kununurra 27 Perth 28 Adelaide 29 Brisbane 29 Coolangatta 29 and Koolan Island 30 Princess Marina Duchess of Kent visited between 26 September and 8 October 1964 for the British Exhibition in Sydney and to open the new Gladesville Bridge She travelled in New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory before leaving with a brief stop in Brisbane on the return flight Prince Henry Duke of Gloucester and his wife Alice visited the Australian Capital Territory Victoria New South Wales Tasmania and Queensland between 20 March and 26 April 1965 The new Tasman Bridge was opened by the Duke in Hobart He also opened the Royal Easter Show in Sydney and a hydro electric power station in the Snowy Mountains Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother attended the Adelaide Festival of Arts as its patron and opened Flinders University also travelling to Western Australia the Snowy Mountains and the Australian Capital Territory between 22 March and 7 April 1966 King Charles III attended the Timbertop campus of Geelong Grammar School for one term in 1966 This was not an official trip as the Prince was there primarily for schooling A press release of 10 January 1966 made this clear stating that he should be left alone by journalists The Prince of Wales will be engaged in full time study in Australia and will not undertake any official engagements The Queen and the Commonwealth Government have requested that the Prince s visit should be treated as a private one and that he should be allowed the same freedom from public attention as any other schoolboy citation needed He returned in 1967 as the Queen s representative at the memorial service for Prime Minister Harold Holt and again in 1970 Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh helped in 1967 to organise the third Commonwealth Study Conference to be held in May 1968 He travelled to the Australian Capital Territory Victoria and Tasmania where he helped volunteer fire fighters to fight a local fire Prince Edward Duke of Kent and his wife Katherine made a 25 day tour between 9 August and 3 September 1969 of the Australian Capital Territory South Australia the Northern Territory Western Australia and Queensland as well as Papua New Guinea The Duke opened the South Pacific Games in Port Moresby on 13 August 1970s edit nbsp Queen Elizabeth II Prince Philip the Prince of Wales and Princess Anne toured the country for the bi centenary anniversary of James Cook s first voyage to Australia The Queen Prince Philip Charles Prince of Wales for part of the tour only and Princess Anne made an extensive tour of Australia in 1970 in connection with the bi centenary of Captain James Cook sailing up the east coast of Australia in 1770 This was a very popular tour and large crowds turned out to see the Queen One large gathering occurred when the royal yacht HMY Britannia sailed up the Brisbane River mooring just below the historic Newstead House in Brisbane 31 In January 2009 a retired police detective revealed an unsuccessful attempt to derail the Royal Train near Bowenfels on 29 April 1970 32 The Queensland tour began on 12 April when the royal yacht Britannia entered Moreton Bay at Caloundra sailing into Newstead Wharf Her Royal Highness Princess Anne accepted an invitation to spend three days on a working sheep station in south west Queensland She flew to Cunnamulla on 14 April travelling 47 miles 76 km by road to Talbarea Station unaccompanied Princess Anne arrived in Cunnamulla in a government jet a little ahead of schedule She travelled around the district in a maroon Rolls Royce which was unloaded from the back of a Royal Australian Air Force carrier plane Princess Anne was given a demonstration of sheep shearing and wool classing on the working property and was accompanied on a horse ride during her stay 31 After several days of engagements in the city of Brisbane Queen Elizabeth II and The Duke of Edinburgh commenced their regional tour flying to Longreach on Wednesday 15 April The primary purpose for their stopover in Longreach was to visit the first operational base of Queensland s first airline which became Australia s overseas airline During the visit they viewed an exhibition of Qantas memorabilia including a replica of the company s first aircraft the AVRO 504K of 1921 The occasion marked the 50th anniversary of the founding of Qantas 31 Next on the tour was Mount Isa and while there the royals were driven to Kalkadoon Park where the royal couple witnessed a programmed event under the guidance of Ringmaster Mr J O Shea Kalkadoon Park was the original site of the famous Mount Isa rodeo The following day on 16 April HRH The Duke of Edinburgh was taken on an underground tour of the Mount Isa mine while Queen Elizabeth stayed above ground The Marshalling Area around R62 Shaft Winder Tower was cleaned and a display was set up using operational mining equipment from underground so the queen could see it in action The display was designed to demonstrate the operation of an EIMCO air powered rail mounted rocker shovel loading ore 33 The tour continued from Mount Isa and the Royal Family travelled to Mackay Townsville the Great Barrier Reef Cooktown and Cairns The visit to Mackay in the evening followed a late afternoon flight from Mount Isa on 16 April Their Royal Highnesses were taken to the Anglican Parish Hall at the intersection of Sydney and Gordon Streets for a civic reception held in honour of their arrival The royal party had a leisurely cruise to Townsville taking four days to arrive after their departure from Mackay On the morning of 20 April the day s program began with a cavalcade of progress at the Townsville sports reserve The grounds were filled with crowds and children waving their Australian flag It was a spectacle for the royal visitors and the local community who came out on the day Following lunch on board Britannia the royal family were driven to the site of Queensland s newest university the James Cook University Townsville campus In the presence of many dignitaries the queen formally granted autonomy to North Queensland s new educational institution In 2020 James Cook University celebrated its 50th anniversary with a Treasures exhibition showcasing 50 collection items from Special Collections Eddie Koiku Mabo Library James Cook University Townsville 34 The rare collection item James Cook University Development Pimlico to the First Chancellor archival footage 1960 1970 was one of the Treasures selected for the anniversary year The 12min film preserved on NQHeritage the University Library s Special Collections online repository shows footage of the queen arriving at the official ceremony and being introduced to the official party 35 Their Royal Highnesses first appear in the film at 6 06 minutes According to the formal schedule the Royal Yacht Britannia arrived off Green Island on the morning of 21 April after leaving Townsville the day before The scheduled visit to Green Island was dependent on the weather All three members of the Royal family were taken by Royal Barge to the Green Island jetty The visit only lasted 30mins before Britannia left for Cooktown by 10 15am the same day Timed to coincide with the Australian Bicentenary celebrations of James Cook s landing in Cooktown two hundred years earlier in 1770 the Far North Queensland Bicentenary Committee planned a re enactment of Cook s landing for the royal visitors The esplanade alongside the Endeavour River was filled with spectators expecting to see the Royal family during their short stopover in Cooktown Following the re enactment the queen officially opened the newly renovated James Cook Museum which was established in 1888 as the St Mary s Convent and boarding school run by the Sisters of Mercy originally from Dungarvan Ireland Since that time the James Cook Museum has been renamed Cooktown Museum acknowledging the First Nations history and culture that is intrinsically linked to the iconic region The Royal family arrived at Berth No 3 Cairns Wharf the next day on the morning of 23 April To catch a glimpse of the Royal family spectators crowded the wharf car park and lined the streets along the official route to the airport A Ceremonial Farewell was conducted at Cairns Airport involving Governor Alan Mansfield and Premier Joh Bjelke Petersen After the queen inspected the Guard of Honour the official party were escorted to their plane in preparation for the flight to Canberra 36 The Queen returned to Australia again in 1973 to open the Sydney Opera House and also in 1974 to open the Australian Parliament in Canberra This time the Queen returned to London on 28 February for a General Election in Britain cutting short the tour which the Duke of Edinburgh completed A royal tour of Australia was made in March 1977 as part of the Silver Jubilee of the queen s reign Prince Charles made a brief visit in May 1978 to attend the funeral of former Prime Minister Sir Robert Menzies Wearing the full dress uniform of a commander of the Royal Navy the prince read from the book of Ecclesiasticus chapter 44 Let us now praise famous men He arrived and departed at Melbourne Airport aboard a Royal Air Force Vickers VC10 37 38 39 1980s edit nbsp Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip meeting Roger Woodward Paul Hogan and Olivia Newton John at a Sydney concert in 1980 This section needs expansion with visit by The Queen and The Duke of Edinburgh for the 1982 Commonwealth Games in Brisbane You can help by adding to it July 2021 In the 1980s the Queen made short tours to open the new High Court of Australia building in 1980 as well the City Square in Melbourne then again to open the new National Gallery of Australia in 1982 and the Parramatta Stadium in 1986 During the 1986 visit at a ceremony held in Government House Canberra she signed a proclamation that brought into effect the Australia Act 1986 which severed the final constitutional link between Australia and the United Kingdom Lady Diana Spencer later Princess of Wales made a short private visit to Australia with her mother and step father to their sheep station at Yass north of Canberra in early February 1981 Prince Charles had proposed to her less than a week before The Prince of Wales visited Australia shortly after the announcement of his engagement and prior to his July wedding in 1981 The Queen attended the 1981 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting CHOGM held in Melbourne in September nbsp Her Majesty The Queen at Brisbane Airport 1982 nbsp Her Majesty The Queen surrounded by children in Queen Street Mall Brisbane City 1982 On 20 March 1983 the Prince of Wales this time with the Princess of Wales and their son Prince William landed in Alice Springs for an official visit 26 October 8 November 1985 visited Victoria for 150th anniversary of the state This tour included visits to Brisbane and Canberra The Prince and Princess of Wales also made a visit during the bicentenary celebrations in 1988 The Duke and Duchess of Kent visited Queensland in April 1985 to open the Performing Arts Complex at Southbank They visited Toowoomba on 24 April following an invitation by Steven Rafter to visit the Toowoomba Grammar School The Queen and Prince Philip also made a popular visit in 1988 as part of the bicentenary celebrations On Saturday 30 April 1988 the Queen opened the World Expo in Brisbane before opening the new permanent Parliament House in Canberra on Monday 9 May During the bicentenary celebrations Australia was also visited by The Prince and Princess of Wales The Duke and Duchess of York and The Duke and Duchess of Kent 1990s edit In 1992 the Queen returned to the sesquicentenary of the incorporation of the city of Sydney This tour included visits to regional towns in Dubbo she visited the Western Plains Zoo 40 In the last years of the decade she did not visit the country to avoid being embroiled in the debate about future of the monarchy Her next tour was timed to be made well after the 1999 referendum on the republic The Australian government of John Howard had advised the Queen on the timing 41 In 1994 Charles III then Prince of Wales visited Australia He was giving a speech in Darling Harbour during the Australia day celebrations David Kang ran up to the Prince and fired two blanks before falling onto the ground he was arrested by many police officers The Prince was unhurt and was ushered off the podium 42 After her divorce in 1996 Diana Princess of Wales made one subsequent visit prior to her death in 1997 21st century edit nbsp Anne Princess Royal passes in front of the Princess Anne Banner at the Royal Australian Corps of Signals during their 75th anniversary 2000 In 2000 the Queen made an extended tour in the states of Australia which was followed by another visit in 2002 when she attended the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 2002 the second such meeting held in Australia On 11 March 2006 Prince Edward Earl of Wessex visited Australia to announce the winners of the Commonwealth Writers Prize He also had lunch with the Prime Minister John Howard visited a neo natal unit in Heidelberg visited victims of bush fires in Victoria and attended the opening and closing ceremonies of the Commonwealth Games in Melbourne One day later the Queen and Prince Philip arrived in Melbourne where the Queen opened the Commonwealth Games As well the royal couple opened a new section of the Sydney Opera House attended a Commonwealth Day ceremony in Sydney had official meetings with the Prime Minister Governor General and Leader of the Opposition at Government House in Canberra lunched with former governors general met with firefighters in Canberra attended and made a formal speech at an official dinner at Parliament House in Canberra to commemorate her 80th birthday and watched some of the events at the games Anne Princess Royal attended the memorial in Rod Laver Arena Melbourne Victoria on Sunday 22 February 2009 for victims of the 2009 Victorian bushfires 2010s edit On 19 January 2010 Prince William arrived in Sydney for a three day visit to Australia 43 A visit was made in early 2011 by Prince William to flood damaged areas of Queensland and Victoria nbsp Queen Elizabeth II emerges from St John s Church Reid ACT after attending the service on 23 October 2011 In October 2011 Queen Elizabeth II visited a number of cities in her role as Queen of Australia and Head of the Commonwealth At a reception in her honour held at Parliament House in Canberra on 21 October 2011 the Prime Minister Julia Gillard described the Queen as a vital constitutional part of Australian democracy 44 The Queen in her speech at the same reception stated that It has been a difficult year for this country in many ways despite the successes The world witnessed the anguish of Australians as they lived through a summer of national disasters We were all inspired by the courage and resolution shown by those affected in the face of crippling desolation Ever since I first came here in 1954 I have watched Australia grow and develop at an extraordinary rate This country has made dramatic progress economically in social scientific and industrial endeavours and above all in self confidence 45 The Queen visited Canberra Brisbane Melbourne and Perth during the tour In Perth she attended the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting Prince Charles travelled to Australia in November 2012 with the Duchess of Cornwall as part of a visit to Papua New Guinea Australia and New Zealand on behalf of the Queen of each respective Realm in the year of the Queen s Diamond Jubilee Also in 2012 Prince Edward Duke of Kent visited from 28 January to 1 February 46 and Prince Richard Duke of Gloucester visited from 21 to 26 May 47 In October 2013 Prince Harry visited Sydney for the centenary celebrations of the Royal Australian Navy Representing his grandmother the Queen he took the salute from HMAS Leeuwin alongside Governor General Quentin Bryce The prince made a further visit to SAS forces in Perth before departing for the United Kingdom In November 2014 Prince Edward Earl of Wessex visited Australia at the invitation of The Duke of Edinburgh s International Award Australia He attended 18 engagements in Sydney Brisbane and Perth 48 49 In April 2014 Prince William arrived in Australia for a ten day tour with his wife the Duchess of Cambridge and their son Prince George The family s itinerary took them to Sydney Brisbane Canberra Uluru and Adelaide 50 Before reporting for duty to the Australian Defence Force ADF Harry visited the Australian War Memorial in Canberra on 6 April 2015 51 In May 2015 Prince Harry made a farewell walkabout at the Sydney Opera House and visited Macquarie University Hospital 52 53 In November 2015 Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall visited Adelaide Canberra Sydney Albany and Perth 54 Prince Charles and the Duchess returned again in 2018 for events associated with the Gold Coast Commonwealth Games In April 2018 Prince Edward visited Australia to attend the Gold Coast Commonwealth Games as Vice Patron of the Commonwealth Games Federation Whilst in Australia Prince Edward in his capacity as Chair of the Trustees of the International Award Foundation he attended 40 functions to support the development of The Duke of Edinburgh s International Award Australia Prince Edward visited Melbourne Ballarat Romsey Hobart Brisbane Adelaide Seppeltsfield Prince Edward continued his international fund raising challenge playing a set of Real Tennis on every real tennis court in the world including the 5 courts in Australia In addition to visiting schools and youth organisations to promote the Duke of Ed he also conducted round table meetings with the university sector business and sporting organisations 55 56 In June 2018 Kensington Palace announced that Prince Harry and his wife the Duchess of Sussex would tour Australia around the time of the Invictus Games which was held in Sydney in October 2018 57 58 Later Prince Andrew Duke of York undertook a 9 day tour of the country s eastern states in November 59 During this trip Meghan announced that she and Harry were expecting their first child In September 2019 Prince Edward visited Australia to in his capacity as Chair of the Trustees of the International Award Foundation to assist celebrate the 60th Anniversary of the Duke of Edinburgh s International Award in Australia He attended 25 functions in Sydney Wollongong Alice Springs and Darwin including presenting nearly 400 Gold Awards at a ceremony held in Sydney Town Hall 60 Prince Andrew also visited Western Australia in October 2019 as part of his Pitch Palace initiative although the Prince did no media interviews during the tour and kept a low profile during the visit due to controversy surrounding his association with Jeffrey Epstein 61 2020s edit The Princess Royal and her husband Vice Admiral Sir Timothy Laurence toured Australia from 9 to 11 April 2022 62 On the first day of her visit she opened the 200th Sydney Royal Easter Show which she first opened with her parents and brother Charles in 1970 She had last attended the event in 1988 62 She had an engagement as patron of the Royal Agricultural Society of the Commonwealth before attending a dinner at the Sydney Olympic Park 62 The couple also met with representatives of the New South Wales Rural Fire Service the Royal Australian Corps of Signals and Royal Australian Corps of Transport 62 Visits to external territories editThe Queen visited the Cocos Keeling Islands in 1954 while the territory was still administered by Singapore A visit was made to Norfolk Island in 1974 See also editList of official openings by Elizabeth II in Australia Transportation of the Prime Minister of Australia Victorian Railways Royal TrainReferences edit Illustrated Sydney News NSW 1853 1872 16 Dec 1867 p1 Trove 16 December 1867 Retrieved 28 November 2021 a b c d National Museum of Australia First royal visit nma gov au National Museum Australia Retrieved 28 November 2021 Launceston Examiner Tas 1842 1899 25 Jan 1868 p2 Launceston Examiner 25 January 1868 Retrieved 28 November 2021 THE DUKE OF EDINBURG IN TASMANIA The Tasmanian Times 18 January 1868 Retrieved 28 November 2021 Brainwood Linda 5 September 2014 Mr Parkes s mongoose Dictionary of Sydney State Library of New South Wales Retrieved 28 November 2021 Royal visits to Queensland an historic essay Queensland State Archives Archived from the original on 17 September 2013 Retrieved 11 October 2013 THE ROYAL TRAIN SENSATIONAL DISASTER Western Mail Perth 8 July 1920 p 29 Retrieved 25 October 2011 via National Library of Australia Royal Train Derailment in Western Australia from the Diary of Lord Louis Mountbatten Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin 479 482 December 1998 Haynes Jim 27 December 2016 The Aussie train wreck which turned the Prince of Wales into the Digger Prince The Daily Telegraph London Sydney Retrieved 15 January 2021 Dingle John 13 August 2020 HRH Edward Our Digger Prince State Library Of Queensland Retrieved 23 June 2023 Elizabeth s diary 6 January 1927 quoted in Shawcross p 264 Shawcross pp 266 296 Shawcross pp 281 282 a b ROYAL ANGLERS The Register Adelaide 25 February 1927 p 9 Retrieved 1 September 2012 via National Library of Australia Royalty and Australian society Records relating to the British monarchy held in Canberra PDF National Archives of Australia Retrieved 25 May 2021 Bull Tony May 2008 The Last Hurrah Australian Railway History 151 158 Defining Moments Queen Elizabeth II National Museum of Australia 11 May 2022 Retrieved 27 May 2022 nbsp This Wikipedia article incorporates text from Hear ye Hear ye It s 1954 and Her Majesty is coming 4 February 2022 published by the State Library of Queensland under CC BY licence accessed on 27 May 2022 The Queen s Visit Is First by a Reigning Monarch The Sydney Morning Herald 4 February 1954 p 2 Supplement Royal Tour Supplement Retrieved 10 March 2015 via National Library of Australia Footage of the Queen Mother at St John s Cathedral Brisbane 1958 State Library of Queensland 23 November 2018 Retrieved 7 October 2020 Scheu Anne 14 March 2022 Ahoy Ahoy Her Majesty returns in 1963 State Library Of Queensland Retrieved 23 June 2023 nbsp This Wikipedia article incorporates text from Ahoy Ahoy Her Majesty returns in 1963 14 March 2022 published by the State Library of Queensland under CC BY licence accessed on 27 May 2022 Programme https nla gov au nla obj 3067370076 view partId nla obj 3067370957 page n0 mode 1up Itinerary lt 1 gt CIVIC WELCOME The Australian Women s Weekly Vol 30 no Australia 13 March 1963 p 13 Retrieved 8 March 2017 via National Library of Australia Queen Confers Honours on 23 The Canberra Times Vol 37 no 10 484 Australian Capital Territory Australia 14 March 1963 p 5 Retrieved 8 March 2017 via National Library of Australia a b Queen Sees Ord Project The Canberra Times Vol 37 no 10 487 Australian Capital Territory Australia 18 March 1963 p 1 Retrieved 8 March 2017 via National Library of Australia Queen Calls On Leper Hunter The Canberra Times Vol 37 no 10 488 Australian Capital Territory Australia 19 March 1963 p 3 Retrieved 8 March 2017 via National Library of Australia a b c Where the Queen goes there goes A LOYAL ROYAL BROLLY The Australian Women s Weekly Vol 30 no 42 Australia 20 March 1963 p 7 Retrieved 8 March 2017 via National Library of Australia QUEEN LANDS AT KOOLAN ISLAND The Canberra Times Vol 37 no 10 492 Australian Capital Territory Australia 23 March 1963 p 1 Retrieved 8 March 2017 via National Library of Australia a b c Scheu Anne 6 May 2022 The state of Queensland welcomes royalty in 1970 Part 1 The Inland Tour State Library Of Queensland Retrieved 23 June 2023 republicans tried to assassinate Queen in Lithgow The Daily Telegraph 28 January 2009 nbsp This Wikipedia article incorporates text from The state of Queensland welcomes royalty in 1970 Part 1 The Inland Tour 6 May 2022 published by the State Library of Queensland under CC BY licence accessed on 16 May 2022 Scheu Anne 6 May 2022 The state of Queensland welcomes royalty in 1970 Part 2 The Coastal Tour State Library Of Queensland Retrieved 23 June 2023 James Cook University Development Pimlico to the first Chancellor archival footage 1960 1970 James Cook University NQHeritage JCU Retrieved 16 May 2022 nbsp This Wikipedia article incorporates text from The state of Queensland welcomes royalty in 1970 Part 2 The Coastal Tour 6 May 2022 published by the State Library of Queensland under CC BY licence accessed on 16 May 2022 Sir Robert Menzies is farewelled National Archives of Australia 19 May 1978 Archived from the original on 17 June 2019 Retrieved 17 June 2019 Prince Charles due tonight Canberra Times Vol 52 no 15 580 Australian Capital Territory Australia 18 May 1978 p 14 Retrieved 17 June 2019 via National Library of Australia SIR ROBERT GORDON MENZIES 1894 1978 Canberra Times Vol 52 no 15 582 Australian Capital Territory Australia 20 May 1978 p 13 Retrieved 17 June 2019 via National Library of Australia Dubbo Photo News 10 02 2022 Jolly Joanna 9 April 1999 Queen s visit to Australia is timed to avoid referendum The Independent London Archived from the original on 25 October 2012 Retrieved 22 May 2010 Shots fired at Prince Charles 1994 RetroFocus via YouTube Prince William lands in Sydney Australian Broadcasting Corporation 19 January 2010 Speech by Prime Minister Julia Gillard at reception for Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II Parliament House Canberra 21 October 2011 Office of the Prime Minister Speech by HM The Queen of Australia reception at Parliament House Canberra 21 October 2011 Royal visits Governor of South Australia Archived from the original on 27 December 2014 Retrieved 6 January 2015 Governor General welcomes The Duke of Gloucester Governor General of Australia 24 May 2012 Archived from the original on 6 January 2015 Retrieved 6 January 2015 Prince Edward meets disadvantaged young people in northern Adelaide ABC News 17 April 2018 Archived from the original on 6 September 2019 Retrieved 17 August 2019 Double dose of royals for Australia News com au 30 September 2014 Archived from the original on 17 August 2019 Retrieved 17 August 2019 Royal visit Prince William and Kate arrive in Sydney with Prince George for 10 day Australian tour ABC News 16 April 2014 Archived from the original on 16 April 2014 Retrieved 16 April 2014 Prince Harry arrives in Australia Prince of Wales official website 6 April 2015 Archived from the original on 10 April 2015 Retrieved 8 April 2015 Prince Harry farewells Australia greets fans at Sydney Harbour ABC 7 May 2015 Archived from the original on 19 September 2018 Retrieved 26 October 2018 Prince Harry thanks Australia for its warm welcome Prince of Wales Website 7 May 2015 Archived from the original on 15 May 2015 Prince Charles and Camilla to visit Australia and New Zealand 14 October 2015 Archived from the original on 9 November 2015 Retrieved 8 November 2015 ANNOUNCEMENT HRH The Prince Edward Earl of Wessex KG GCVO to tour Australia in support of The Duke of Edinburgh s International Award Dukeofed 5 April 2018 Archived from the original on 17 August 2019 Retrieved 17 August 2019 His Royal Highness The Prince Edward Earl of Wessex visiting Hobart premier tas gov au Archived from the original on 17 August 2019 Retrieved 17 August 2019 Prince Harry and Meghan Markle to visit Australia Fiji ABC News 11 June 2018 Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 18 June 2018 Yeung Jessie 11 June 2018 Meghan and Harry to tour Australia and New Zealand CNN Archived from the original on 18 June 2018 Retrieved 18 June 2018 HRH The Duke of York KG visits Australia Day 1 The Duke of York official website 19 November 2018 Archived from the original on 1 December 2018 Retrieved 30 November 2018 I taught him how to hold the ball Students school Prince Edward on art of Aussie Rules Australian Broadcasting Corporation 17 September 2019 Archived from the original on 29 September 2019 Retrieved 1 October 2019 Prince Andrew s invisible Australian tour continues amid Epstein probe controversy The New Daily 3 October 2019 Archived from the original on 4 October 2019 Retrieved 10 February 2022 a b c d Princess Anne starts Australian tour by opening 200th Sydney Royal Easter Show The Telegraph 9 April 2022 Retrieved 10 April 2022 External links edit nbsp Media related to Royal visits by the Monarchy of the Commonwealth to Australia at Wikimedia Commons Footage of 1970 Royal Visit as part of the Bill Rahmann Films collection 1948 ca 1987 State Library of Queensland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Royal tours of Australia amp oldid 1191733445 2010s, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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