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-Queen Elizabeth II is Britain'slongest-reigning monarch.
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00:00:22,815 --> 00:00:24,507
75 years ago,
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00:00:24,541 --> 00:00:27,682
she stood on this same balcony
at Buckingham Palace,
6
00:00:27,717 --> 00:00:30,720
celebrating the end
of the Second World War.
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00:00:33,861 --> 00:00:37,037
This shy princess
had been transformed
8
00:00:37,071 --> 00:00:41,696
by the demands
of six years of war...
9
00:00:41,731 --> 00:00:45,286
a war that had seen
her own home bombed
10
00:00:45,321 --> 00:00:48,082
and her parents nearly killed,
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00:00:48,117 --> 00:00:51,672
a war that saw this quiet child
find the courage
12
00:00:51,706 --> 00:00:56,573
to broadcast to evacuees in
the United States and Canada...
13
00:00:56,608 --> 00:01:01,130
-Remember, it will be for us,
the children of today,
14
00:01:01,164 --> 00:01:05,444
to make the world of tomorrow
a better and happier place.
15
00:01:05,479 --> 00:01:06,997
-We thought they were
in the wireless.
16
00:01:07,032 --> 00:01:11,105
I remember my sister and I sort
of looking behind the wireless,
17
00:01:11,140 --> 00:01:13,314
wondering where they were.
18
00:01:13,349 --> 00:01:16,352
-...a war that saw
her famous sense of duty
19
00:01:16,386 --> 00:01:20,321
emerging with new
ceremonial roles...
20
00:01:20,356 --> 00:01:23,255
appear in pantomimes
for the war effort...
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00:01:23,290 --> 00:01:25,637
and support royal charities.
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00:01:25,671 --> 00:01:29,227
-It gives me great pleasure
to come here today
23
00:01:29,261 --> 00:01:31,919
to open
the Aberdeen Sailors Home.
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-...and saw her threatened
25
00:01:35,750 --> 00:01:40,100
by one of the war's
most terrifying weapons.
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00:01:40,134 --> 00:01:42,550
-The girls threw themselves
on the ground.
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00:01:42,585 --> 00:01:45,381
The thought the worst
was going to happen.
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00:01:45,415 --> 00:01:47,521
Princess Elizabeth
was really starting
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00:01:47,555 --> 00:01:50,765
to show signs of strain.
30
00:01:50,800 --> 00:01:53,630
-Eager to throw herself
into the war effort,
31
00:01:53,665 --> 00:01:55,908
the national crisis
turned this young woman
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00:01:55,943 --> 00:01:59,809
into the leader
her country needed.
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00:01:59,843 --> 00:02:01,880
-War made her.
34
00:02:01,914 --> 00:02:05,297
It made her closer to people,
35
00:02:05,332 --> 00:02:10,578
and it made us closer to her
because she's one of us.
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00:02:10,613 --> 00:02:14,410
-The Second World War
transformed a shy princess
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00:02:14,444 --> 00:02:17,171
into a legendary queen.
38
00:02:32,324 --> 00:02:35,327
-Elizabeth Alexandra
Mary Windsor
39
00:02:35,362 --> 00:02:40,781
was born April 21, 1926.
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00:02:40,815 --> 00:02:42,369
As the daughter
of the Duke of York,
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00:02:42,403 --> 00:02:44,612
who was second in line
to the throne,
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00:02:44,647 --> 00:02:47,615
nobody expected Elizabeth
to become queen.
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00:02:47,650 --> 00:02:50,031
Instead, she would lead
a quiet life
44
00:02:50,066 --> 00:02:52,586
away from the glare
of publicity.
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00:02:57,211 --> 00:03:00,732
But everything changed
when her uncle, Edward VIII,
46
00:03:00,766 --> 00:03:03,942
renounced the throne in favor
of Elizabeth's father,
47
00:03:03,976 --> 00:03:08,049
who became King George VI.
48
00:03:08,084 --> 00:03:13,227
10-year-old Elizabeth was now
next in line to the throne.
49
00:03:13,262 --> 00:03:16,782
-Back in 1936, 10-year-olds
were still children,
50
00:03:16,817 --> 00:03:20,269
and she was still a child,
51
00:03:20,303 --> 00:03:23,168
because, as she told
her sister, Margaret,
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00:03:23,203 --> 00:03:24,480
"Uncle David's going away,
53
00:03:24,514 --> 00:03:27,448
and Papa is to be king."
54
00:03:27,483 --> 00:03:30,555
And Margaret's response
to that was,
55
00:03:30,589 --> 00:03:33,109
"Does that mean
you're going to be queen?"
56
00:03:33,143 --> 00:03:38,045
And she said, "Yes, one day."
57
00:03:38,079 --> 00:03:40,772
-But Elizabeth's father,
the Duke of York,
58
00:03:40,806 --> 00:03:44,983
was reluctant to take
his elder brother's place.
59
00:03:45,017 --> 00:03:47,468
-He was a man
who doubted himself.
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00:03:47,503 --> 00:03:48,504
Could he be king?
61
00:03:48,538 --> 00:03:51,369
He'd never been
trained for this.
62
00:03:51,403 --> 00:03:52,956
-The peaceful home life
63
00:03:52,991 --> 00:03:56,063
Elizabeth and her family
had enjoyed up until now
64
00:03:56,097 --> 00:03:58,617
was shattered forever.
65
00:03:58,652 --> 00:03:59,860
-She was too young
66
00:03:59,894 --> 00:04:04,036
for her parents to conceal
their own distress.
67
00:04:04,071 --> 00:04:06,349
She'd have lived through it
at the dining table,
68
00:04:06,384 --> 00:04:08,593
lunch table, with them.
69
00:04:08,627 --> 00:04:11,078
When she heard what was due
to happen to her
70
00:04:11,112 --> 00:04:12,459
as heir to the throne,
71
00:04:12,493 --> 00:04:16,532
she started desperately praying
for a baby brother,
72
00:04:16,566 --> 00:04:18,568
who would have got,
in those days --
73
00:04:18,603 --> 00:04:21,399
have jumped ahead of her
in succession.
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00:04:21,433 --> 00:04:22,745
A nice little baby boy
75
00:04:22,779 --> 00:04:25,679
would have taken the load
off her shoulders beautifully.
76
00:04:30,511 --> 00:04:36,206
-On May 12, 1937,
George VI was crowned king.
77
00:04:40,659 --> 00:04:46,527
Elizabeth later wrote
a detailed account of the day.
78
00:04:46,562 --> 00:04:49,841
-She talks about Mummy and Daddybeing consumed
79
00:04:49,875 --> 00:04:53,120
in a haze of wonder,
80
00:04:53,154 --> 00:04:59,402
and that clearly expressed how
she herself was moved deeply,
81
00:04:59,437 --> 00:05:04,165
spiritually, by this -- this --this mission that now lay ahead.
82
00:05:07,928 --> 00:05:10,620
-Princess Elizabeth
came to terms with the fact
83
00:05:10,655 --> 00:05:13,554
she would one day
follow her father and mother
84
00:05:13,589 --> 00:05:16,971
into that haze of wonder.
85
00:05:17,006 --> 00:05:18,214
Her parents were determined
86
00:05:18,248 --> 00:05:22,805
she and her sister
enjoy their childhood.
87
00:05:22,839 --> 00:05:25,601
But suddenly everything changed.
88
00:05:28,120 --> 00:05:30,640
-The Royal Family were on
their Scottish holiday,
89
00:05:30,675 --> 00:05:31,952
as usual,
90
00:05:31,986 --> 00:05:35,956
at the beginning of September
1939 when war broke out.
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00:05:35,990 --> 00:05:40,788
And the king and the queen
went straight down to London
92
00:05:40,823 --> 00:05:43,757
to see the prime minister.
93
00:05:43,791 --> 00:05:47,381
The girls stayed up in Scotland.
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00:05:52,628 --> 00:05:56,701
-For the second time
in the lives of most of us,
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00:05:56,735 --> 00:05:58,910
we are...
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00:05:58,944 --> 00:06:01,809
at war.
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00:06:01,844 --> 00:06:05,606
There may be dark days ahead,
98
00:06:05,641 --> 00:06:11,612
and war can no longer
be confined to the battlefield.
99
00:06:14,339 --> 00:06:17,169
-The towns and cities of Britainwere expected
100
00:06:17,204 --> 00:06:21,484
to bear the brunt
of death and destruction.
101
00:06:21,519 --> 00:06:24,314
Within the first three days
of the war,
102
00:06:24,349 --> 00:06:27,387
1 1/2 million children,
pregnant women,
103
00:06:27,421 --> 00:06:31,218
and the infirm were evacuated
to the countryside.
104
00:06:33,289 --> 00:06:35,084
While the princesses
were getting used
105
00:06:35,118 --> 00:06:37,535
to being separated
from their parents,
106
00:06:37,569 --> 00:06:40,572
other children were
preparing to leave theirs.
107
00:06:43,403 --> 00:06:45,266
-Many of the children thought
they were going on holiday.
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00:06:45,301 --> 00:06:47,924
One or two children
had a bucket and spade.
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00:06:47,959 --> 00:06:50,617
They took that away from them,
but we had to just carry
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00:06:50,651 --> 00:06:53,516
one change of clothes,
and that's all.
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00:06:58,072 --> 00:07:01,421
-Aware of the suffering
evacuation was causing,
112
00:07:01,455 --> 00:07:06,115
Elizabeth's mother shared
her own feelings about it.
113
00:07:06,149 --> 00:07:10,671
-Many of you have had to see
your family life broken up,
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00:07:10,706 --> 00:07:15,504
your children evacuated
to places of greater safety.
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00:07:15,538 --> 00:07:16,988
The king and I know
116
00:07:17,022 --> 00:07:21,199
what it means to be parted
from our children,
117
00:07:21,233 --> 00:07:24,513
and we can sympathize
with those of you
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00:07:24,547 --> 00:07:27,619
who have bravely consented
to this separation
119
00:07:27,654 --> 00:07:29,483
for the sake
of your little ones.
120
00:07:32,210 --> 00:07:35,351
-Looked after by their
governess, Marion Crawford,
121
00:07:35,385 --> 00:07:37,387
Princesses Elizabeth
and Margaret
122
00:07:37,422 --> 00:07:39,493
were moved from Balmoral Castle
123
00:07:39,528 --> 00:07:44,015
to the less obvious target
of Birkhall nearby.
124
00:07:44,049 --> 00:07:45,361
They were about to experience
125
00:07:45,395 --> 00:07:49,607
what life as an evacuee was likefor ordinary children.
126
00:07:49,641 --> 00:07:54,991
-Quite soon, evacuees were beingtaken out of Glasgow
127
00:07:55,026 --> 00:07:58,547
and being set up in houses
on the Balmoral Estate
128
00:07:58,581 --> 00:08:01,826
that the king had opened up.
129
00:08:01,860 --> 00:08:03,690
-In the first weeks of the war,
130
00:08:03,724 --> 00:08:08,936
hundreds of Glaswegian evacuees
descended on rural Scotland.
131
00:08:08,971 --> 00:08:12,284
As World War II progressed,
it would draw people together
132
00:08:12,319 --> 00:08:14,528
from very different backgrounds.
133
00:08:14,563 --> 00:08:18,118
This didn't come naturally
to the princess.
134
00:08:18,152 --> 00:08:20,845
-Elizabeth was never quite at
ease with some of the children
135
00:08:20,879 --> 00:08:22,812
because I think they were
136
00:08:22,847 --> 00:08:25,539
very, very different
from the princesses,
137
00:08:25,574 --> 00:08:28,162
and she was a little bit
awkward with them.
138
00:08:31,062 --> 00:08:33,513
-Elizabeth and Margaret
each decided
139
00:08:33,547 --> 00:08:37,551
to donate one of their coats
to the evacuees.
140
00:08:37,586 --> 00:08:41,486
This simple gesture
made the headlines.
141
00:08:41,521 --> 00:08:44,765
Glasgow evacuees Isa Kelly
and Betty Murphy
142
00:08:44,800 --> 00:08:48,597
were the lucky recipients
of the coats.
143
00:08:48,631 --> 00:08:50,840
-I remember Betty Murphy
144
00:08:50,875 --> 00:08:55,293
just because of the coat,
I suppose.
145
00:08:55,327 --> 00:08:57,847
-A year younger
than Princess Elizabeth,
146
00:08:57,882 --> 00:09:02,680
local resident Zan Grant got
to know some of the evacuees.
147
00:09:02,714 --> 00:09:05,441
-They were from the poorest partof Glasgow,
148
00:09:05,475 --> 00:09:07,581
I would think, near the Clyde.
149
00:09:07,616 --> 00:09:11,654
Yes, and, of course,
their picture was in the paper.
150
00:09:11,689 --> 00:09:13,000
Couldn't believe it, you know?
151
00:09:13,035 --> 00:09:16,072
It was really something
special at the time.
152
00:09:19,282 --> 00:09:22,976
-While the princess was getting
to know her future subjects,
153
00:09:23,010 --> 00:09:27,083
the predicted bombing
didn't happen.
154
00:09:27,118 --> 00:09:32,641
By early 1940, many evacuees
had returned to the cities.
155
00:09:32,675 --> 00:09:34,919
Princess Elizabeth
and her sister
156
00:09:34,953 --> 00:09:37,784
also secretly returned
to England
157
00:09:37,818 --> 00:09:40,234
to be closer to their parents.
158
00:09:40,269 --> 00:09:43,548
They caught up on the first
major event of the war
159
00:09:43,583 --> 00:09:46,586
by watching newsreels
in a private screening room.
160
00:09:53,420 --> 00:09:55,525
-The evacuation of the BEF
from Flanders
161
00:09:55,560 --> 00:09:57,389
has been virtually completed.
162
00:09:57,424 --> 00:09:59,115
Once again,
Hitler had underrated
163
00:09:59,150 --> 00:10:00,979
the power of the Royal Navy.
164
00:10:03,188 --> 00:10:06,536
-The German invasion's progress
through Western Europe
165
00:10:06,571 --> 00:10:11,403
led to the Dunkirk evacuation
of Allied Forces.
166
00:10:11,438 --> 00:10:12,991
In just six weeks,
167
00:10:13,026 --> 00:10:17,375
Hitler captured Paris
on June 14th.
168
00:10:17,409 --> 00:10:20,654
The German army was now
at the English Channel.
169
00:10:31,596 --> 00:10:34,564
Holkham Hall,
near Sandringham in Norfolk,
170
00:10:34,599 --> 00:10:38,810
lived under the threat
of Nazi invasion by sea.
171
00:10:38,845 --> 00:10:42,676
It was the family home
of Ladies Anne and Carey Coke,
172
00:10:42,711 --> 00:10:46,266
friends of Princess Elizabeth
and her sister, Margaret.
173
00:10:46,300 --> 00:10:47,301
-When we were very young,
174
00:10:47,336 --> 00:10:48,855
when the princesses
were very young,
175
00:10:48,889 --> 00:10:51,685
I was young,
we used to go on the beach,
176
00:10:51,720 --> 00:10:56,103
you know, which was lovely, andswim and dig, make sand castles.
177
00:10:56,138 --> 00:10:59,451
Princess Elizabeth then
was more serious
178
00:10:59,486 --> 00:11:02,316
and did say,
"Margaret, what are you doing?"
179
00:11:02,351 --> 00:11:04,698
or "Anne,
you shouldn't do that."
180
00:11:04,733 --> 00:11:08,012
I mean, we definitely thought
Hitler was going to land.
181
00:11:08,046 --> 00:11:10,255
So my sister and I
had this wonderful plan
182
00:11:10,290 --> 00:11:12,464
that we were actually
gonna kill Hitler,
183
00:11:12,499 --> 00:11:15,640
and we had what we called
Hitler's mess,
184
00:11:15,675 --> 00:11:19,333
which was a jam jar
that we kept under our bed.
185
00:11:19,368 --> 00:11:21,991
Anything really disgusting
we'd put in there.
186
00:11:24,580 --> 00:11:26,099
And we had it all planned.
187
00:11:26,133 --> 00:11:28,860
We used to practice with
our Teddy bear being Hitler.
188
00:11:28,895 --> 00:11:32,726
And we'd say, "Ooh, Mr. Hitler,
how lovely to see you.
189
00:11:32,761 --> 00:11:35,729
We've got a delicious drink
that we've got for you."
190
00:11:35,764 --> 00:11:38,076
We never thought beyond
actually killing him.
191
00:11:38,111 --> 00:11:41,010
I mean, we just thought
we would succeed.
192
00:11:41,045 --> 00:11:43,426
Luckily, we didn't have
to put it into practice.
193
00:11:47,741 --> 00:11:50,295
-With their famous houses
and palaces,
194
00:11:50,330 --> 00:11:55,300
the Royal Family were vulnerabletargets for Nazi assassins.
195
00:11:55,335 --> 00:11:57,578
Fear of invasion was growing.
196
00:11:57,613 --> 00:12:00,340
The government repeatedly
advised the Royal Family
197
00:12:00,374 --> 00:12:03,308
to move their children abroad.
198
00:12:03,343 --> 00:12:04,482
-They were not sent to Canada,
199
00:12:04,516 --> 00:12:06,760
like a lot of girls
of their age,
200
00:12:06,795 --> 00:12:08,797
on the grounds that,
as is well known,
201
00:12:08,831 --> 00:12:10,764
the Queen Mother said,
"They won't leave without me,
202
00:12:10,799 --> 00:12:13,180
and I won't leave without theking, and the king won't leave."
203
00:12:13,215 --> 00:12:14,423
And, you know,
you can understand it,
204
00:12:14,457 --> 00:12:16,770
that if the king and queen
are still in London,
205
00:12:16,805 --> 00:12:20,325
things aren't too bad.
206
00:12:20,360 --> 00:12:22,431
-The precise location
of the Royal Family
207
00:12:22,465 --> 00:12:27,539
was a matter of great
national secrecy and security.
208
00:12:27,574 --> 00:12:30,715
-So, the newsreels told
everybody at the time
209
00:12:30,750 --> 00:12:34,063
the princesses were somewhere
in the country.
210
00:12:38,033 --> 00:12:43,141
Now of course we know
it was Windsor Castle.
211
00:12:43,176 --> 00:12:47,456
-They knew that they wereprobably fairly safe at Windsor,
212
00:12:47,490 --> 00:12:51,909
but they did have a safe house,
as well, further north,
213
00:12:51,943 --> 00:12:53,945
and it was kept there
the whole of the war.
214
00:12:53,980 --> 00:12:55,775
So if there was an invasion,
215
00:12:55,809 --> 00:12:59,054
and everybody thought that therewas going to be an invasion,
216
00:12:59,088 --> 00:13:01,470
the princesses and the queen
217
00:13:01,504 --> 00:13:03,644
could immediately
be sent up north.
218
00:13:03,679 --> 00:13:06,268
They would then take a boat
from Liverpool
219
00:13:06,302 --> 00:13:07,856
so that they could
get out of the country
220
00:13:07,890 --> 00:13:08,891
if they needed to be.
221
00:13:08,926 --> 00:13:12,792
But, fortunately,
that never happened.
222
00:13:12,826 --> 00:13:15,173
-While she was safe
in Windsor Castle,
223
00:13:15,208 --> 00:13:18,073
Princess Elizabeth worried
about her father and mother,
224
00:13:18,107 --> 00:13:22,422
who remained
in Buckingham Palace.
225
00:13:22,456 --> 00:13:24,769
And in the Blitz to come,
226
00:13:24,804 --> 00:13:29,601
they would become the prime
target for Hitler's Luftwaffe.
227
00:13:34,399 --> 00:13:39,508
In July 1939, two months
before the outbreak of war,
228
00:13:39,542 --> 00:13:43,753
13-year-old Princess Elizabethand the rest of the Royal Family
229
00:13:43,788 --> 00:13:46,998
sailed to Dartmouth in Devon
on the royal yacht.
230
00:13:49,518 --> 00:13:50,657
This was a day
231
00:13:50,691 --> 00:13:55,248
that would transform
the life of the princess.
232
00:13:55,282 --> 00:13:57,388
The Royal Family were here
to pay a visit
233
00:13:57,422 --> 00:13:59,390
to the Royal Naval College,
234
00:13:59,424 --> 00:14:02,772
where Princess Elizabeth's
father and grandfather trained
235
00:14:02,807 --> 00:14:06,155
as naval cadets.
236
00:14:06,190 --> 00:14:09,365
Michael Vaughan
was a 13-year-old recruit.
237
00:14:09,400 --> 00:14:11,574
He recalls the visit.
238
00:14:11,609 --> 00:14:15,509
-We would keep a keen eye open
in case any of the royal party
239
00:14:15,544 --> 00:14:20,238
came anywhere near us,
whereupon we would tremble.
240
00:14:22,827 --> 00:14:27,142
It seemed to youngsters like us
that he was a good chap
241
00:14:27,176 --> 00:14:30,007
and that his wife
was really pleasant
242
00:14:30,041 --> 00:14:33,113
and there might be some prospectin the princesses.
243
00:14:36,945 --> 00:14:38,118
-Dartmouth is where
244
00:14:38,153 --> 00:14:40,914
the country's
naval officers are trained.
245
00:14:40,949 --> 00:14:44,918
One in particular stood out
from the crowd.
246
00:14:44,953 --> 00:14:50,096
-This tall 18-year-old
blond chap appeared
247
00:14:50,130 --> 00:14:53,202
that was
Prince Philip of Greece.
248
00:14:53,237 --> 00:14:54,686
-Prince Philip was asked
249
00:14:54,721 --> 00:14:57,586
to entertain
the king and queen's daughters.
250
00:14:57,620 --> 00:15:01,970
-Philip suggested that they go
and jump over the tennis nets
251
00:15:02,004 --> 00:15:04,489
on the tennis courts.
252
00:15:04,524 --> 00:15:07,872
-The princesses' governess,
Marion Crawford,
253
00:15:07,907 --> 00:15:10,185
kept a sharp eye on the girls.
254
00:15:10,219 --> 00:15:12,877
-Princess Elizabeth said,
"Oh, Crawfie,
255
00:15:12,912 --> 00:15:18,538
look at how high he jumps," whenhe jumped over the tennis net.
256
00:15:18,572 --> 00:15:21,437
-Once he'd proved
his athletic skills,
257
00:15:21,472 --> 00:15:24,199
Prince Philip suggested
a game of croquet.
258
00:15:27,685 --> 00:15:30,377
Shortly afterwards,
a journalist captured
259
00:15:30,412 --> 00:15:33,553
a photograph
of them together, alone.
260
00:15:36,521 --> 00:15:40,870
The following day, the royal
party rejoined the royal yacht,
261
00:15:40,905 --> 00:15:44,253
but their departure
didn't go unnoticed.
262
00:15:44,288 --> 00:15:46,531
-A lot of the cadets
rowed afterwards
263
00:15:46,566 --> 00:15:49,810
in a sort of show of thanks
264
00:15:49,845 --> 00:15:52,503
to say goodbye
to the royal party.
265
00:15:52,537 --> 00:15:54,160
-Just as they were sort of
pulling right away
266
00:15:54,194 --> 00:15:57,266
and all the boats were
going back to the harbor,
267
00:15:57,301 --> 00:16:02,271
the king happened to notice
one boy really rowing away.
268
00:16:02,306 --> 00:16:04,825
-And the king was looking
through his binoculars.
269
00:16:04,860 --> 00:16:06,586
"Who's that bloody fool
still rowing?
270
00:16:06,620 --> 00:16:08,174
Go back."
271
00:16:08,208 --> 00:16:10,003
And it was Philip, of course,
272
00:16:10,038 --> 00:16:14,352
and I think the princess
has never forgot that.
273
00:16:14,387 --> 00:16:18,943
-If you were wondering
whether romance was blossoming,
274
00:16:18,978 --> 00:16:22,015
I would say that
almost everybody believed
275
00:16:22,050 --> 00:16:24,949
that that was happening.
276
00:16:24,984 --> 00:16:30,644
-Elizabeth herself just 13 then,and at this very moment,
277
00:16:30,679 --> 00:16:33,785
she meets the man, um,
278
00:16:33,820 --> 00:16:37,927
with whom she fell in love
that day.
279
00:16:39,964 --> 00:16:42,518
-Rising up the ranks
to first lieutenant,
280
00:16:42,553 --> 00:16:46,246
Philip would patrol the perilouswaters of the Mediterranean
281
00:16:46,281 --> 00:16:49,491
and the Indian Ocean.
282
00:16:49,525 --> 00:16:54,082
Princess Elizabeth kept up aregular correspondence with him.
283
00:16:54,116 --> 00:16:56,463
-Whatever it meant
to her personally,
284
00:16:56,498 --> 00:16:59,984
it gave her this same sense
of identity
285
00:17:00,019 --> 00:17:04,782
with so many British women
during the war.
286
00:17:04,816 --> 00:17:08,958
Their man -- husband, fiancé,
boyfriend --
287
00:17:08,993 --> 00:17:13,860
was away risking his life,
which Philip did.
288
00:17:13,894 --> 00:17:17,208
-For the next five years,
the princess kept a photo
289
00:17:17,243 --> 00:17:20,867
of a bearded Prince Philip
on her mantelpiece.
290
00:17:20,901 --> 00:17:23,870
"There you are, Crawfie,"
she said to her nanny.
291
00:17:23,904 --> 00:17:27,322
"I defy anyone to recognize
who that is."
292
00:17:31,257 --> 00:17:33,397
A year into
the Second World War,
293
00:17:33,431 --> 00:17:37,539
life in Britain appeared
to carry on as normal.
294
00:17:37,573 --> 00:17:41,370
It became known
as "the phony war."
295
00:17:41,405 --> 00:17:45,892
But it came to an end
on September 7, 1940.
296
00:17:55,867 --> 00:18:00,113
The Blitz began
with heavy raids on London.
297
00:18:00,148 --> 00:18:03,185
Mass air attacks
on numerous towns, cities,
298
00:18:03,220 --> 00:18:07,603
and industrial targets followed
over the next eight months.
299
00:18:11,745 --> 00:18:15,784
Between September 1940
and May 1941,
300
00:18:15,818 --> 00:18:20,651
more than 40,000 people died,
almost half of them in London.
301
00:18:24,931 --> 00:18:28,141
-Princess Elizabeth was aware
of this, I mean,
302
00:18:28,176 --> 00:18:30,385
'cause they were at Windsor.
303
00:18:30,419 --> 00:18:34,043
But they could hear
some of the bombing.
304
00:18:34,078 --> 00:18:36,425
The king felt
that she needed to know.
305
00:18:36,460 --> 00:18:40,947
And she would see Pathé News,
and she would see newspapers,
306
00:18:40,981 --> 00:18:44,330
although she was protected
from the real horrors of it.
307
00:18:46,435 --> 00:18:49,611
-Things move with lightning
swiftness in this Nazi war,
308
00:18:49,645 --> 00:18:51,302
but at the moment
of recording these pictures,
309
00:18:51,337 --> 00:18:53,477
London is still enduring
the nightly bombardment
310
00:18:53,511 --> 00:18:55,444
by Hitler and his gangsters.
311
00:18:55,479 --> 00:18:57,101
The casualties have been heavy,
312
00:18:57,136 --> 00:19:00,449
both in human lives
and materials.
313
00:19:00,484 --> 00:19:03,625
-Newsreels helped Princess
Elizabeth to get a sense
314
00:19:03,659 --> 00:19:07,146
of what ordinary children
were going through.
315
00:19:07,180 --> 00:19:10,010
Ron Batchelor was a schoolboy
living in central London
316
00:19:10,045 --> 00:19:12,323
during the worst
of the air raids.
317
00:19:12,358 --> 00:19:14,187
-When a building was hit,
318
00:19:14,222 --> 00:19:16,500
as children,
we would go and have a look,
319
00:19:16,534 --> 00:19:19,192
and they were bringing
people out on stretchers
320
00:19:19,227 --> 00:19:20,780
and covering them up.
321
00:19:20,814 --> 00:19:22,540
A doctor had to certify
that they were dead
322
00:19:22,575 --> 00:19:24,680
before they carted them away.
323
00:19:24,715 --> 00:19:27,614
We were watching it just like
it was an everyday thing.
324
00:19:27,649 --> 00:19:30,169
At first,
I was worried about it.
325
00:19:30,203 --> 00:19:31,963
I'd never seen a dead person.
326
00:19:31,998 --> 00:19:34,380
But you do.
You get used to these things.
327
00:19:34,414 --> 00:19:37,106
You get used to bombing.
328
00:19:37,141 --> 00:19:40,765
-The Second World War brought
home death and destruction
329
00:19:40,800 --> 00:19:42,905
on a hideous scale
330
00:19:42,940 --> 00:19:45,460
right onto our doorsteps
and into our homes
331
00:19:45,494 --> 00:19:48,877
in a way that had never been
seen before in this country.
332
00:19:48,911 --> 00:19:51,431
You heard stories of
going to work in the morning,
333
00:19:51,466 --> 00:19:55,366
you see limbs
lying on the street.
334
00:19:55,401 --> 00:19:59,681
The hideousness of a dead baby
or a dead child
335
00:19:59,715 --> 00:20:03,823
lying exploded in a mass of gutson the pavement.
336
00:20:10,381 --> 00:20:13,246
-On September 13, 1940,
337
00:20:13,281 --> 00:20:16,594
German bombers embarked
on a secret mission.
338
00:20:19,701 --> 00:20:21,806
-Imagine you're
a Luftwaffe pilot.
339
00:20:21,841 --> 00:20:24,395
You're a bomber pilot.
340
00:20:24,430 --> 00:20:28,192
You are now carrying out anotherbombing raid on London itself,
341
00:20:28,227 --> 00:20:32,886
but you've found a key feature
in the form of the mall there.
342
00:20:32,921 --> 00:20:34,957
What is at the other end?
343
00:20:34,992 --> 00:20:37,097
One of the most famous,
if not themost famous
344
00:20:37,132 --> 00:20:40,929
landmark in London itself --
Buckingham Palace.
345
00:20:40,963 --> 00:20:44,139
That is the target.
346
00:20:44,173 --> 00:20:47,073
-Princess Elizabeth's mother
described the drama
347
00:20:47,107 --> 00:20:50,628
of what happened next
in a letter to Queen Mary.
348
00:20:50,663 --> 00:20:54,218
-My darling Mama, I hardly know
how to begin to tell you
349
00:20:54,253 --> 00:20:57,877
of the horrible attack on
Buckingham Palace this morning.
350
00:20:57,911 --> 00:21:00,604
Bertie and I arrived there
at about quarter to 11:00,
351
00:21:00,638 --> 00:21:03,158
and he and I went up
to our poor windowless rooms
352
00:21:03,192 --> 00:21:06,161
to collect a few odds and ends.
353
00:21:06,195 --> 00:21:07,576
At this moment,
354
00:21:07,611 --> 00:21:11,891
we heard the unmistakable
"whir, whir" of a German plane.
355
00:21:11,925 --> 00:21:14,549
We said, "Ah, a German."
356
00:21:14,583 --> 00:21:16,723
And before anything else
could be said,
357
00:21:16,758 --> 00:21:20,624
there was the noise of aircraft
diving at great speed.
358
00:21:20,658 --> 00:21:23,661
-They saw this bomber
coming towards them.
359
00:21:23,696 --> 00:21:25,387
Then they suddenly realized,
actually --
360
00:21:25,422 --> 00:21:26,492
the king suddenly realized --
361
00:21:26,526 --> 00:21:28,252
"Good heavens,
it's coming to us!"
362
00:21:30,530 --> 00:21:34,396
-Imagine the sound of that,
when you're sat in your home,
363
00:21:34,431 --> 00:21:36,329
regardless of whether
it's Buckingham Palace.
364
00:21:36,364 --> 00:21:40,471
You're sat at your home, and youcan hear the bombs coming down.
365
00:21:40,506 --> 00:21:43,129
-"It all happened so quickly
that we only had time
366
00:21:43,163 --> 00:21:47,167
to look foolishly at each other
when the scream hurtled past us
367
00:21:47,202 --> 00:21:50,757
and exploded with a tremendous
crash in the quadrangle.
368
00:21:56,073 --> 00:21:59,559
-The king and queen
were lucky to survive.
369
00:21:59,594 --> 00:22:02,735
But instead of retreating
to their daughters in Windsor,
370
00:22:02,769 --> 00:22:07,291
they ventured out
to inspect the damage.
371
00:22:07,326 --> 00:22:10,018
-The bombing of Buckingham
Palace was a tremendous
372
00:22:10,052 --> 00:22:12,469
personal shock
to the Royal Family,
373
00:22:12,503 --> 00:22:16,783
but it legitimized them, also.
374
00:22:16,818 --> 00:22:19,890
The Queen Mother, as you now
remember, famously said,
375
00:22:19,924 --> 00:22:22,513
"I'm glad we have been bombed.
376
00:22:22,548 --> 00:22:27,725
I feel we can look the East End
in the face."
377
00:22:27,760 --> 00:22:30,452
-Having shared the suffering
of the Blitz,
378
00:22:30,487 --> 00:22:35,457
the king and queen met ordinaryLondoners with a new confidence.
379
00:22:35,492 --> 00:22:38,943
As they chatted to people
in bomb-damaged areas,
380
00:22:38,978 --> 00:22:40,255
a more informal way
381
00:22:40,289 --> 00:22:44,432
of presenting themselves
to the public was emerging.
382
00:22:44,466 --> 00:22:47,780
The newsreel cameras
captured their every move.
383
00:22:47,814 --> 00:22:50,645
-They saw the cruel damage
inflicted by the Nazis,
384
00:22:50,679 --> 00:22:52,129
and they chatted
with many of the people
385
00:22:52,163 --> 00:22:53,441
whose homes have been destroyed
386
00:22:53,475 --> 00:22:55,857
by the savage
and indiscriminate raids.
387
00:22:55,891 --> 00:22:57,652
-When we see those pictures
388
00:22:57,686 --> 00:23:00,931
of the king and queen
meeting the crowds,
389
00:23:00,965 --> 00:23:05,211
it is the outgoing queen
who's always setting the pace,
390
00:23:05,245 --> 00:23:10,492
as it were, and George VI
naturally being a step behind.
391
00:23:12,839 --> 00:23:16,291
People came to find that
rather appealing and human.
392
00:23:19,777 --> 00:23:21,607
-Keeping the king and queen safe
393
00:23:21,641 --> 00:23:23,643
while traveling
around the country
394
00:23:23,678 --> 00:23:27,060
became increasingly challenging.
395
00:23:27,095 --> 00:23:31,133
-Whilst they commuted, really,
from Windsor to London
396
00:23:31,168 --> 00:23:34,689
by armored car every day,
397
00:23:34,723 --> 00:23:37,968
they also, during the war years,
398
00:23:38,002 --> 00:23:43,629
undertook no fewer
than 300 regional tours
399
00:23:43,663 --> 00:23:48,461
and covered 4,000 miles
in the Royal Train
400
00:23:48,496 --> 00:23:52,983
specifically to meet people,
to cheer them, to raise morale,
401
00:23:53,017 --> 00:23:55,848
to comfort
in whatever way they could.
402
00:23:58,437 --> 00:24:00,991
-One of the people
who saw the king and queen
403
00:24:01,025 --> 00:24:03,787
was Ron Batchelor.
404
00:24:03,821 --> 00:24:06,583
-I was standing
in the playground,
405
00:24:06,617 --> 00:24:09,689
and somebody said, "Look!"
406
00:24:09,724 --> 00:24:11,898
And he pointed,
and we looked up,
407
00:24:11,933 --> 00:24:15,523
and about 50 yards away,
I suppose,
408
00:24:15,557 --> 00:24:21,494
we saw the queen
and the king in his uniform.
409
00:24:21,529 --> 00:24:23,151
The queen had a fur coat on.
410
00:24:23,185 --> 00:24:25,464
I remember that --
a fur wrap around here --
411
00:24:25,498 --> 00:24:27,811
but it was a kind
of a fur thing.
412
00:24:27,845 --> 00:24:31,021
That -- I remember that
quite well.
413
00:24:31,055 --> 00:24:33,782
And I couldn't wait
to tell my mum, so I left.
414
00:24:33,817 --> 00:24:35,957
When they disappeared,
I went running up to my mum,
415
00:24:35,991 --> 00:24:39,029
and I said to my mother,
"Mama," I said, "guess what?"
416
00:24:39,063 --> 00:24:41,238
She said, "What?"
I said, "The queen's come."
417
00:24:41,272 --> 00:24:42,584
And she said,
"What do you mean?"
418
00:24:42,619 --> 00:24:46,105
I said, "I've seen her
walking up the other end."
419
00:24:46,139 --> 00:24:49,177
She said to me, "I hope
you had your socks pulled up."
420
00:24:51,559 --> 00:24:53,768
-Everywhere, Their Majestiesfound the spirit of these people
421
00:24:53,802 --> 00:24:56,356
still undaunted,
while they, for their part,
422
00:24:56,391 --> 00:24:59,359
sincerely appreciated the king
and queen's true sympathy.
423
00:25:01,534 --> 00:25:04,779
-They were a very good
double act,
424
00:25:04,813 --> 00:25:06,125
and we know
425
00:25:06,159 --> 00:25:10,716
that Elizabeth studied
the newsreels of the time,
426
00:25:10,750 --> 00:25:15,168
and these were projected
privately to the Royal Family
427
00:25:15,203 --> 00:25:16,376
in Buckingham Palace
and Windsor.
428
00:25:16,411 --> 00:25:17,895
After all,
they were participants
429
00:25:17,930 --> 00:25:20,035
and wanted to see themselves.
430
00:25:20,070 --> 00:25:23,487
-Visitors were wholeheartedly
welcomed everywhere they went.
431
00:25:23,522 --> 00:25:26,110
-Their appearance
in the newsreels revealed
432
00:25:26,145 --> 00:25:28,181
the different characters
and backgrounds
433
00:25:28,216 --> 00:25:31,184
of Princess Elizabeth's parents.
434
00:25:31,219 --> 00:25:34,878
-Her mother had had a very
different upbringing --
435
00:25:34,912 --> 00:25:38,744
aristocratic as opposed
to royal, a big family,
436
00:25:38,778 --> 00:25:42,575
a big rumbustious family,
the Bowes-Lyons,
437
00:25:42,610 --> 00:25:47,891
and very full of warmth and fun.
438
00:25:47,925 --> 00:25:50,549
By contrast, of course,
George VI --
439
00:25:50,583 --> 00:25:53,586
his parents,
George V and Queen Mary --
440
00:25:53,621 --> 00:25:57,314
it wasn't that they weren't
loving people, essentially,
441
00:25:57,348 --> 00:26:00,006
but not terribly good
at showing it.
442
00:26:03,562 --> 00:26:04,839
-Up until then,
they were figures
443
00:26:04,873 --> 00:26:08,428
that you just saw
all dressed up at the palace,
444
00:26:08,463 --> 00:26:12,225
having their photograph taken
for some royal event.
445
00:26:12,260 --> 00:26:15,194
The popularity
of the king and queen
446
00:26:15,228 --> 00:26:18,369
and the Royal Family increased.
447
00:26:18,404 --> 00:26:22,891
They'd become more open
and more accessible.
448
00:26:22,926 --> 00:26:25,238
And suddenly my family
became Royalists,
449
00:26:25,273 --> 00:26:27,171
and that was common everywhere.
450
00:26:29,208 --> 00:26:32,591
-The Royal Family's appearances
in cinema newsreels
451
00:26:32,625 --> 00:26:35,352
increased dramatically
during the war.
452
00:26:38,527 --> 00:26:41,323
Princess Elizabeth
was the first monarch
453
00:26:41,358 --> 00:26:45,051
to grow up in the perpetual gazeof the media,
454
00:26:45,086 --> 00:26:48,503
and she would soon be making
a more demanding contribution
455
00:26:48,537 --> 00:26:50,091
to the war effort.
456
00:26:53,612 --> 00:26:56,304
Before the outbreak
of the Second World War,
457
00:26:56,338 --> 00:26:59,721
over 14,000 children
from wealthy families
458
00:26:59,756 --> 00:27:03,691
were sent to safetyin the United States and Canada.
459
00:27:03,725 --> 00:27:07,177
-The reason we are in America
is because
460
00:27:07,211 --> 00:27:10,559
we have been
evacuated from England,
461
00:27:10,594 --> 00:27:12,976
and our mothers
did not think it was safe
462
00:27:13,010 --> 00:27:15,150
to go and stay in England.
463
00:27:15,185 --> 00:27:20,846
-I came here because the war
broke out, to be safe.
464
00:27:20,880 --> 00:27:23,158
-Two children
who weren't dispatched
465
00:27:23,193 --> 00:27:25,229
to safety across the Atlantic
466
00:27:25,264 --> 00:27:29,924
were Princess Elizabeth
and her sister.
467
00:27:29,958 --> 00:27:34,376
-My sister and I, being so proudthat they were still in England,
468
00:27:34,411 --> 00:27:38,380
because a lot of our friends hadbeen sent to America and Canada.
469
00:27:40,555 --> 00:27:44,352
-Back home, nearly 8,000
children were killed
470
00:27:44,386 --> 00:27:46,665
in the mass bombings
of the Blitz,
471
00:27:46,699 --> 00:27:50,082
and many more
were seriously injured.
472
00:27:50,116 --> 00:27:52,774
When the government funded
overseas evacuation
473
00:27:52,809 --> 00:27:56,571
for 24,000 children
from the inner cities,
474
00:27:56,605 --> 00:27:59,160
sending children abroad
was no longer seen
475
00:27:59,194 --> 00:28:01,093
as the preserve of the wealthy.
476
00:28:04,579 --> 00:28:07,375
On September 13, 1940,
477
00:28:07,409 --> 00:28:10,481
90 children boarded a ship
like this one
478
00:28:10,516 --> 00:28:13,968
to take them to safety
in Canada.
479
00:28:14,002 --> 00:28:18,697
The SS City of Benares
was four days into its voyage
480
00:28:18,731 --> 00:28:22,562
when it was spotted
by a German U-boat.
481
00:28:33,090 --> 00:28:38,855
It was reported that only 7
of the 90 children survived.
482
00:28:38,889 --> 00:28:41,374
The prime minister,
Winston Churchill,
483
00:28:41,409 --> 00:28:47,208
canceled all future plansto ship British children abroad.
484
00:28:47,242 --> 00:28:50,176
-Buckingham Palace realized
that these two girls
485
00:28:50,211 --> 00:28:52,696
themselves living somewhere
in the country,
486
00:28:52,731 --> 00:28:57,149
having had their own house
bombed in London,
487
00:28:57,183 --> 00:29:01,049
created a real identity
with children.
488
00:29:04,052 --> 00:29:06,641
-On October 13, 1940,
489
00:29:06,675 --> 00:29:10,403
barely a month after the sinkingof SS City of Benares,
490
00:29:10,438 --> 00:29:13,372
Princess Elizabeth recorded
a radio broadcast
491
00:29:13,406 --> 00:29:15,650
for the BBC's "Children's Hour,"
492
00:29:15,684 --> 00:29:17,445
transmitted around the world
493
00:29:17,479 --> 00:29:21,863
and heard by evacueesin the United States and Canada.
494
00:29:21,898 --> 00:29:26,972
-My sister, Margaret Rose,
and I feel so much for you,
495
00:29:27,006 --> 00:29:30,182
as we know from experience
what it means
496
00:29:30,216 --> 00:29:34,393
to be away from those we love
most of all.
497
00:29:34,427 --> 00:29:36,705
-For that 14-year-old,
498
00:29:36,740 --> 00:29:40,157
it would have been
a demanding thing to have done.
499
00:29:40,192 --> 00:29:45,507
It demonstrated some
pretty serious qualities
500
00:29:45,542 --> 00:29:49,063
for a very, very young teenager.
501
00:29:49,097 --> 00:29:52,169
-To you living
in new surroundings,
502
00:29:52,204 --> 00:29:55,483
we send a message
of true sympathy,
503
00:29:55,517 --> 00:30:00,246
and, at the same time, we would
like to thank the kind people
504
00:30:00,281 --> 00:30:04,906
who have welcomed you
to their homes in the country.
505
00:30:04,941 --> 00:30:06,459
-And we thought they were
in the wireless.
506
00:30:06,494 --> 00:30:10,532
I remember my sister and I sort
of looking behind the wireless,
507
00:30:10,567 --> 00:30:11,844
wondering where they were.
508
00:30:11,879 --> 00:30:14,640
-All of us children
who are still at home...
509
00:30:14,674 --> 00:30:16,573
-I thought,
"Oh, that's Princess Elizabeth
510
00:30:16,607 --> 00:30:17,885
talking to us on the radio."
511
00:30:17,919 --> 00:30:20,335
It was wonderful. Wonderful.
512
00:30:20,370 --> 00:30:21,681
-...think continually
513
00:30:21,716 --> 00:30:24,857
of our friends and relations
who have gone --
514
00:30:24,892 --> 00:30:28,861
-A lot of people commented that
she sounds just like her mother
515
00:30:28,896 --> 00:30:31,622
and said what a marvelous,
authoritative,
516
00:30:31,657 --> 00:30:34,487
and mellow voice she had.
517
00:30:34,522 --> 00:30:35,695
-The king was delighted
518
00:30:35,730 --> 00:30:39,078
because she sounded
very much like his wife.
519
00:30:39,113 --> 00:30:43,842
-Many of you have had to see
your family life broken up.
520
00:30:43,876 --> 00:30:47,984
-To you, we send a message
of true sympathy.
521
00:30:48,018 --> 00:30:51,642
-She also spoke about how,
"when peace comes,
522
00:30:51,677 --> 00:30:54,507
it is for us, the children
of this generation,
523
00:30:54,542 --> 00:30:57,579
to ensure that war
doesn't happen again,"
524
00:30:57,614 --> 00:31:03,654
and that in itself marked her asthe leader for her generation.
525
00:31:03,689 --> 00:31:07,141
-And when peace comes, remember,
526
00:31:07,175 --> 00:31:10,523
it will be for us,
the children of today,
527
00:31:10,558 --> 00:31:15,218
to make the world of tomorrow
a better and happier place.
528
00:31:15,252 --> 00:31:18,221
-It was a huge success,
'cause, basically,
529
00:31:18,255 --> 00:31:20,775
it was to America and Canada,
530
00:31:20,809 --> 00:31:24,054
and Elizabeth, being
the sort of person she was,
531
00:31:24,089 --> 00:31:26,056
added a little amendment
at the end
532
00:31:26,091 --> 00:31:29,059
and brought
Princess Margaret into it.
533
00:31:29,094 --> 00:31:31,751
-My sister is by my side,
534
00:31:31,786 --> 00:31:34,996
and we are both going to say
good night to you.
535
00:31:35,031 --> 00:31:38,689
Come on, Margaret.
-Good night, children.
536
00:31:38,724 --> 00:31:41,727
-Good night, and good luck
to you all.
537
00:31:43,763 --> 00:31:46,145
-Well, in America,
they loved it so much that,
538
00:31:46,180 --> 00:31:49,390
"Ah, come on, Margaret"
became a catchphrase.
539
00:31:49,424 --> 00:31:51,047
And it was a huge success,
540
00:31:51,081 --> 00:31:53,601
and it was seen
as slightly propaganda
541
00:31:53,635 --> 00:31:55,154
because it was
sort of front page
542
00:31:55,189 --> 00:31:56,949
of all the newspapers in America
543
00:31:56,984 --> 00:32:00,953
that the princess had given
this amazing broadcast.
544
00:32:05,889 --> 00:32:08,202
-The education
of the nation's children
545
00:32:08,236 --> 00:32:11,688
suffered greatly during the war.
546
00:32:11,722 --> 00:32:14,863
But from the age of 13,
the king and queen decided
547
00:32:14,898 --> 00:32:17,556
Princess Elizabeth
should be properly prepared
548
00:32:17,590 --> 00:32:19,282
for the life ahead of her.
549
00:32:21,905 --> 00:32:24,701
Less than 3 miles
from Windsor Castle,
550
00:32:24,735 --> 00:32:29,223
Eton College
presented a solution.
551
00:32:29,257 --> 00:32:31,535
Twice a week,
Elizabeth's governess,
552
00:32:31,570 --> 00:32:36,368
Marion Crawford,
escorted her to the college.
553
00:32:36,402 --> 00:32:38,680
"Piles of books everywhere,"
554
00:32:38,715 --> 00:32:41,994
wrote Crawford
of the tutor's study.
555
00:32:42,029 --> 00:32:45,342
"Crawfie, do you mean to tell mehe's read them all?"
556
00:32:45,377 --> 00:32:48,587
asked Princess Elizabeth.
557
00:32:48,621 --> 00:32:51,417
But soon she was absorbed
in the complexities
558
00:32:51,452 --> 00:32:55,456
of the British Constitution.
559
00:32:55,490 --> 00:32:58,769
-All through
the emotional experience
560
00:32:58,804 --> 00:33:01,531
of the dangers
and terror of war,
561
00:33:01,565 --> 00:33:05,604
she's also learning thetechnicalities of the difference
562
00:33:05,638 --> 00:33:11,334
between proroguing or dissolving
or suspending Parliament,
563
00:33:11,368 --> 00:33:14,061
what the Prime Minister
has to come to the Sovereign
564
00:33:14,095 --> 00:33:17,029
to do at those times.
565
00:33:17,064 --> 00:33:21,792
And the relationship
between George VI and Churchill
566
00:33:21,827 --> 00:33:24,795
became a paradigm
which I think we can say
567
00:33:24,830 --> 00:33:27,453
the queen has followed
for the rest of her life
568
00:33:27,488 --> 00:33:34,046
of closeness
between premier and monarch.
569
00:33:34,081 --> 00:33:37,946
-The king also gave Princess
Elizabeth an introduction
570
00:33:37,981 --> 00:33:41,088
to dealing with the endless
stream of government papers
571
00:33:41,122 --> 00:33:44,298
in the famous
red dispatch boxes.
572
00:33:44,332 --> 00:33:47,853
Elizabeth's mother had
different priorities.
573
00:33:47,887 --> 00:33:49,682
She was more concerned
with developing
574
00:33:49,717 --> 00:33:53,997
her daughter's
social skills and confidence.
575
00:33:54,032 --> 00:33:57,069
She had the idea of putting
on Christmas pantomimes
576
00:33:57,104 --> 00:33:59,278
to raise money
for the war effort.
577
00:34:03,662 --> 00:34:07,079
The splendor of the Waterloo
Chamber played host
578
00:34:07,114 --> 00:34:08,598
to members of the public
579
00:34:08,632 --> 00:34:11,877
who came to see a range
of traditional pantomimes
580
00:34:11,911 --> 00:34:16,192
performed
throughout the war years.
581
00:34:16,226 --> 00:34:18,608
While Hitler was fighting
a losing battle
582
00:34:18,642 --> 00:34:22,336
with the Soviet Union
in December 1943,
583
00:34:22,370 --> 00:34:24,786
a 17-year-old
Princess Elizabeth
584
00:34:24,821 --> 00:34:29,619
was preparing to play
the role of Aladdin.
585
00:34:29,653 --> 00:34:32,449
-The girls helped to make
some of the costumes.
586
00:34:32,484 --> 00:34:34,279
It was very much
a hands-on affair,
587
00:34:34,313 --> 00:34:38,248
but, production-wise,
it was big and professional.
588
00:34:58,682 --> 00:35:00,857
Some press members
were invited in
589
00:35:00,891 --> 00:35:04,930
and spoke very,
very highly of it.
590
00:35:04,964 --> 00:35:07,105
-The Daily Mirror
printed a feature
591
00:35:07,139 --> 00:35:09,072
with a photograph
of the princesses
592
00:35:09,107 --> 00:35:14,008
described as
"the stars of the show."
593
00:35:14,042 --> 00:35:16,942
-To see the princesses dressed
as Aladdin and something,
594
00:35:16,976 --> 00:35:18,702
you know, it was lovely.
595
00:35:18,737 --> 00:35:22,913
We used to cut them out andpin them up on our bedroom wall.
596
00:35:22,948 --> 00:35:26,296
I mean, for the children
of Great Britain,
597
00:35:26,331 --> 00:35:28,609
the princesses were --
598
00:35:28,643 --> 00:35:32,613
I always wondered whether they
knew how much they meant to us.
599
00:35:34,684 --> 00:35:38,343
-What the pantomimes did do
for Princess Elizabeth
600
00:35:38,377 --> 00:35:43,969
was to bring her out
of this rather shy character
601
00:35:44,003 --> 00:35:50,251
that she was, and the pantomimesbrought her out of her shell.
602
00:35:50,286 --> 00:35:52,357
-During one performance
of "Aladdin,"
603
00:35:52,391 --> 00:35:54,082
Princess Elizabeth was pleased
604
00:35:54,117 --> 00:35:58,846
to see a certain young
naval officer in the audience.
605
00:35:58,880 --> 00:36:01,814
-Princess Elizabeth andPrince Philip have kept in touch
606
00:36:01,849 --> 00:36:03,299
during the war.
607
00:36:03,333 --> 00:36:07,993
It hasn't stopped him having
other girlfriends in between.
608
00:36:08,027 --> 00:36:11,099
But things really turn around
609
00:36:11,134 --> 00:36:15,345
when he spends Christmas
at Windsor.
610
00:36:15,380 --> 00:36:20,039
-They'd be spotted out
walking hand in hand.
611
00:36:20,074 --> 00:36:22,801
The moment they realized
somebody was looking at them,
612
00:36:22,835 --> 00:36:24,837
they separated.
613
00:36:24,872 --> 00:36:29,290
But for Elizabeth, there was
just this one man in her life.
614
00:36:29,325 --> 00:36:31,982
-There was one reporter
who interviewed him
615
00:36:32,017 --> 00:36:33,950
called Olga Franklin.
616
00:36:33,984 --> 00:36:37,333
She wrote that
"I get dizzy looking at him.
617
00:36:37,367 --> 00:36:39,335
His beauty is so dazzling.
618
00:36:39,369 --> 00:36:42,476
People don't look like this
in real life, surely.
619
00:36:42,510 --> 00:36:45,996
This Prince Philip is stunning,
with hair like gold coin,
620
00:36:46,031 --> 00:36:48,999
only paler, a sort of ash gold,
621
00:36:49,034 --> 00:36:53,521
eyes of deep blue, almost violetin the electric light,
622
00:36:53,556 --> 00:36:55,868
tall, fine-featured,
623
00:36:55,903 --> 00:37:00,770
really a shockingly beautiful
figure in naval uniform."
624
00:37:00,804 --> 00:37:06,085
So we have women who are just
being bowled over by him still.
625
00:37:08,329 --> 00:37:12,057
And yet it isn't them
that he goes for.
626
00:37:12,091 --> 00:37:13,645
It's Princess Elizabeth.
627
00:37:15,785 --> 00:37:17,304
-Her mother was not at all keen
628
00:37:17,338 --> 00:37:21,791
and had a list of eligible
young men for her,
629
00:37:21,825 --> 00:37:23,551
and as far as
they were concerned,
630
00:37:23,586 --> 00:37:26,347
Philip was a penniless prince
of Greece.
631
00:37:26,382 --> 00:37:29,108
And although his bloodlines
were very royal,
632
00:37:29,143 --> 00:37:33,665
they didn't consider him
a very good prospect.
633
00:37:33,699 --> 00:37:35,874
-But she knew from
the very beginning
634
00:37:35,908 --> 00:37:40,706
that she had to have a husband
who would help her do her job,
635
00:37:40,741 --> 00:37:46,643
And that was one of the many
attractive qualities of Philip
636
00:37:46,678 --> 00:37:50,164
in her eyes.
637
00:37:50,198 --> 00:37:54,306
Philip was ideal, so that
side of her life was sorted.
638
00:37:58,966 --> 00:38:01,865
-As the Nazis launched
a new series of raids
639
00:38:01,900 --> 00:38:05,835
on Britain's historic towns,
the king appointed his daughter
640
00:38:05,869 --> 00:38:08,562
Colonel in Chief
of the Grenadier Guards
641
00:38:08,596 --> 00:38:10,736
to mark her 16th birthday.
642
00:38:16,328 --> 00:38:18,054
Elizabeth is the only woman
643
00:38:18,088 --> 00:38:20,332
appointed to this
ceremonial role
644
00:38:20,367 --> 00:38:24,612
in one of the oldest regiments
in the British army.
645
00:38:24,647 --> 00:38:26,718
-She was pretty nervous,
646
00:38:26,752 --> 00:38:28,927
and she had to walk
up and down these ranks
647
00:38:28,961 --> 00:38:32,275
of very, very tall guardsmen
648
00:38:32,310 --> 00:38:34,726
and look as though she'd been
doing it all her life,
649
00:38:34,760 --> 00:38:36,072
which, of course, she did
650
00:38:36,106 --> 00:38:40,421
because she hadthat very disciplined character.
651
00:38:40,456 --> 00:38:44,322
-Here she is as colonel
of the Grenadier Guards.
652
00:38:44,356 --> 00:38:49,223
What a change from 13 to 16,
you know, growing --
653
00:38:49,257 --> 00:38:52,364
still a little shy,
but growing in confidence,
654
00:38:52,399 --> 00:38:56,437
and this parade must have done
an enormous amount
655
00:38:56,472 --> 00:39:02,409
for her own personal
confidence and morale.
656
00:39:02,443 --> 00:39:04,894
-Hooray!
-Hooray!
657
00:39:04,928 --> 00:39:06,344
-Hip, hip, hip!
658
00:39:06,378 --> 00:39:07,414
-Hooray!
-Hooray!
659
00:39:07,448 --> 00:39:08,656
-Just four months
660
00:39:08,691 --> 00:39:11,866
after her appointment
to the Grenadier Guards,
661
00:39:11,901 --> 00:39:15,249
Princess Elizabeth's much-loved
uncle Prince George,
662
00:39:15,283 --> 00:39:19,184
Duke of Kent,was killed in a flying accident.
663
00:39:19,218 --> 00:39:22,049
-We mourn the passing
of the king's younger brother,
664
00:39:22,083 --> 00:39:24,914
who lost his life
on active service.
665
00:39:24,948 --> 00:39:26,916
The duke, who was an airman
in his own right,
666
00:39:26,950 --> 00:39:30,368
had undertaken duties concerningthe welfare of RAF personnel
667
00:39:30,402 --> 00:39:33,612
and was on his way to Iceland
when the crash occurred.
668
00:39:33,647 --> 00:39:38,548
-He was flying from Scotland
to Iceland,
669
00:39:38,583 --> 00:39:43,726
ostensibly to visit RAF bases.
670
00:39:43,760 --> 00:39:45,624
The flying conditions
were not perfect.
671
00:39:45,659 --> 00:39:47,315
There was a mist.
672
00:39:47,350 --> 00:39:51,147
And in those poor
flying conditions
673
00:39:51,181 --> 00:39:55,807
thundered into
a hillside in Caithness.
674
00:39:55,841 --> 00:40:01,053
And all bar the rear gunner,
675
00:40:01,088 --> 00:40:03,711
including, of course,
Prince George, were killed.
676
00:40:05,748 --> 00:40:09,648
-This was the first time
in more than 450 years
677
00:40:09,683 --> 00:40:13,618
that a member of the Royal
Family died on active service.
678
00:40:15,689 --> 00:40:18,795
Prince George was 39 years old.
679
00:40:18,830 --> 00:40:21,936
He left behind his wife,
Princess Marina,
680
00:40:21,971 --> 00:40:23,766
and three young children.
681
00:40:26,389 --> 00:40:30,220
-Every family in the war --
practically every family --
682
00:40:30,255 --> 00:40:32,395
lost somebody.
683
00:40:32,430 --> 00:40:34,811
From that point of view,
that wasn't unusual,
684
00:40:34,846 --> 00:40:36,882
but for the Royal Family,
685
00:40:36,917 --> 00:40:42,094
the loss of George of Kent
was just hugely devastating.
686
00:40:46,374 --> 00:40:50,068
-Loss is personal,
687
00:40:50,102 --> 00:40:54,417
and I don't think there is
any one way of dealing with it.
688
00:40:54,452 --> 00:40:56,730
Whether --
689
00:40:56,764 --> 00:41:01,389
There was a different attitude
50, 60, 70 years ago,
690
00:41:01,424 --> 00:41:06,602
and during the war, there was
a different kind of stoicism.
691
00:41:06,636 --> 00:41:10,157
I'm sure that would have appliedto the Royal Family themselves.
692
00:41:10,191 --> 00:41:13,574
I think it underlies so much
693
00:41:13,609 --> 00:41:16,404
of what one encounters
with the queen today,
694
00:41:16,439 --> 00:41:21,202
with her sense of duty
and her sense of stoicism.
695
00:41:25,137 --> 00:41:28,416
-As she grew older,
Princess Elizabeth was expected
696
00:41:28,451 --> 00:41:31,385
to take on more
and more public duties...
697
00:41:33,801 --> 00:41:36,528
...from launching ships...
698
00:41:36,563 --> 00:41:38,565
to visiting hospitals...
699
00:41:42,016 --> 00:41:44,502
...and making speech...
700
00:41:44,536 --> 00:41:47,953
-I shall like first
to thank you all very much.
701
00:41:47,988 --> 00:41:48,989
-...after speech.
702
00:41:49,023 --> 00:41:50,369
-I have now much pleasure
703
00:41:50,404 --> 00:41:54,926
in declaring
the Aberdeen Sailors Home open.
704
00:41:54,960 --> 00:41:59,309
-And now happily chatting
to one line of troops...
705
00:41:59,344 --> 00:42:01,553
after another line of troops.
706
00:42:05,143 --> 00:42:07,870
Princess Elizabeth
was growing up.
707
00:42:07,904 --> 00:42:10,562
Very soon, she'd be
defending the nation
708
00:42:10,597 --> 00:42:12,599
by serving in the military.
709
00:42:18,121 --> 00:42:22,367
June 1944, Windsor Castle,
710
00:42:22,401 --> 00:42:24,611
and the newsreels
were about to reveal
711
00:42:24,645 --> 00:42:26,578
one of the most
decisive chapters
712
00:42:26,613 --> 00:42:28,476
of the Second World War.
713
00:42:32,895 --> 00:42:36,795
D-Day saw the largest
seaborne invasion in history.
714
00:42:36,830 --> 00:42:38,659
The Allied Army was on its way
715
00:42:38,694 --> 00:42:41,973
to liberate
German-occupied France.
716
00:42:59,680 --> 00:43:02,269
Seven days after
the Normandy landings,
717
00:43:02,303 --> 00:43:04,374
a strange and terrifying sound
718
00:43:04,409 --> 00:43:07,446
was heard tearing across
the London sky.
719
00:43:09,759 --> 00:43:12,072
Then the noise stopped.
720
00:43:20,632 --> 00:43:23,531
This was the first
rocket-powered missile,
721
00:43:23,566 --> 00:43:25,603
known as the V-1.
722
00:43:25,637 --> 00:43:28,640
The "V" was for "vengeance."
723
00:43:32,506 --> 00:43:36,130
A second V-1 landed
yards from Buckingham Palace
724
00:43:36,165 --> 00:43:39,099
and in the middle
of a church service.
725
00:43:39,133 --> 00:43:42,550
-A bomb was dropped
on the Guards Chapel,
726
00:43:42,585 --> 00:43:45,623
and there were many servicemen
and -women killed
727
00:43:45,657 --> 00:43:47,590
and some civilians, too,
728
00:43:47,625 --> 00:43:50,386
including some friends
of the Royal Family.
729
00:43:50,420 --> 00:43:55,149
The Royal Family was simply
not immune at all.
730
00:43:55,184 --> 00:43:58,118
-With the V-1,
London had been plunged
731
00:43:58,152 --> 00:44:00,914
back into the dark days
of the Blitz.
732
00:44:00,948 --> 00:44:03,054
1 million people
fled the capital
733
00:44:03,088 --> 00:44:05,194
over the next few months.
734
00:44:08,507 --> 00:44:11,614
10 days after
the Guards Chapel bomb,
735
00:44:11,649 --> 00:44:16,170
Princess Elizabeth's motherrevealed her worst fears to her.
736
00:44:16,205 --> 00:44:18,690
-"My darling Lilibet,
this is just a note
737
00:44:18,725 --> 00:44:23,315
about one or two things in case
I get done in by the Germans.
738
00:44:23,350 --> 00:44:25,593
I think that I've left all
my things to be divided
739
00:44:25,628 --> 00:44:27,112
between you and Margaret,
740
00:44:27,147 --> 00:44:30,702
but I am sure you will give her
anything suitable later on,
741
00:44:30,737 --> 00:44:33,015
such as Mrs. Greville's pearls,
742
00:44:33,049 --> 00:44:34,982
as you will have
the crown ones."
743
00:44:37,329 --> 00:44:40,678
-While Princess Elizabeth's
mother feared for her life,
744
00:44:40,712 --> 00:44:44,233
she also worried about
the safety of her daughters,
745
00:44:44,267 --> 00:44:46,338
who were still in the care
of their governess,
746
00:44:46,373 --> 00:44:48,824
Marion Crawford.
747
00:44:48,858 --> 00:44:53,069
-The princesses were in WindsorGreat Park with the Girl Guides,
748
00:44:53,104 --> 00:44:55,623
and Crawfie was with them.
749
00:44:55,658 --> 00:45:00,421
They suddenly looked up,
and there was a V-1 in the air,
750
00:45:00,456 --> 00:45:04,702
and she says it was just like
being chased by a robot.
751
00:45:04,736 --> 00:45:07,152
The girls threw themselves
on the ground,
752
00:45:07,187 --> 00:45:10,086
and they thought the worst
was going to happen.
753
00:45:10,121 --> 00:45:12,710
But, fortunately, the bomb
passed overhead
754
00:45:12,744 --> 00:45:17,162
and crashed at Windsor
Racecourse, a few miles away.
755
00:45:19,717 --> 00:45:21,615
Crawfie said the girls
were really starting
756
00:45:21,649 --> 00:45:25,792
to show signs of strain.
757
00:45:25,826 --> 00:45:29,692
-Nearly 10,000 V-1s were fired
on Southeast England
758
00:45:29,727 --> 00:45:32,315
during the summer of 1944,
759
00:45:32,350 --> 00:45:35,353
causing terror
and terrible damage.
760
00:45:40,013 --> 00:45:43,257
Now 18, Princess Elizabeth
was eager
761
00:45:43,292 --> 00:45:45,846
to take a more active role
in the war.
762
00:45:45,881 --> 00:45:49,022
She joined the women's branch
of the British army --
763
00:45:49,056 --> 00:45:53,543
the Auxiliary Territorial
Service, or ATS.
764
00:46:01,379 --> 00:46:05,901
Many of the women took on tasks
such as operating radar,
765
00:46:05,935 --> 00:46:08,144
assisting military police,
766
00:46:08,179 --> 00:46:11,803
and crewing anti-aircraft guns.
767
00:46:11,838 --> 00:46:15,565
The service wasn't without
its risks to the princess.
768
00:46:15,600 --> 00:46:20,398
It suffered 700 casualties
in wartime.
769
00:46:20,432 --> 00:46:24,712
-Her father was not at all keen,and he was nervous of really
770
00:46:24,747 --> 00:46:27,301
letting her go anywhere
other than Windsor Castle.
771
00:46:27,336 --> 00:46:32,928
So he said, eventually, "You canjoin up and do the course
772
00:46:32,962 --> 00:46:34,826
and learn whatever it is
you want to do,
773
00:46:34,861 --> 00:46:36,828
but you've got to
come home at night."
774
00:46:42,178 --> 00:46:44,905
-At an MT training center,
Princess Elizabeth,
775
00:46:44,940 --> 00:46:46,838
now a second subaltern
in the ATS,
776
00:46:46,873 --> 00:46:49,599
has been on a three-weeks
course of instruction.
777
00:46:49,634 --> 00:46:53,845
The princess is at the wheel of
a 1,500-weight truck in convoy.
778
00:46:53,880 --> 00:46:55,985
Although she drives it
with apparent composure,
779
00:46:56,020 --> 00:46:57,538
she had no experience of driving
780
00:46:57,573 --> 00:46:59,333
before she commenced
her training.
781
00:46:59,368 --> 00:47:01,888
-She joined
the Transport Division,
782
00:47:01,922 --> 00:47:04,649
taking a mechanics' course.
783
00:47:04,683 --> 00:47:06,720
And the queen
was known to have said,
784
00:47:06,754 --> 00:47:09,343
"We had spark plugs
all the way through dinner."
785
00:47:09,378 --> 00:47:11,276
So it really mattered to her.
786
00:47:14,452 --> 00:47:19,871
-She really enjoyed hertraining, you know, as a driver.
787
00:47:19,906 --> 00:47:23,495
That's just how I felt.
I absolutely loved driving.
788
00:47:23,530 --> 00:47:26,257
And she looked so happy
to be able to drive.
789
00:47:26,291 --> 00:47:29,639
She was able to be her own self.
790
00:47:29,674 --> 00:47:32,194
Suddenly, women were useful.
791
00:47:32,228 --> 00:47:34,437
You know, they weren't,
"Stay at home
792
00:47:34,472 --> 00:47:35,818
and look after the children."
793
00:47:35,853 --> 00:47:37,924
They could do all sorts
of things.
794
00:47:37,958 --> 00:47:39,718
They could go into
the factories.
795
00:47:39,753 --> 00:47:41,789
They could do war work
of different things.
796
00:47:41,824 --> 00:47:44,689
They could join up like I did.
797
00:47:44,723 --> 00:47:46,484
If you were there,
and the bombs were falling,
798
00:47:46,518 --> 00:47:48,348
well, there were very few people
799
00:47:48,382 --> 00:47:49,901
that were sort of
running around, shrieking.
800
00:47:49,936 --> 00:47:52,835
If they did, they were out
of the army pretty quick.
801
00:47:52,870 --> 00:47:55,217
Also, if you happened
to get pregnant,
802
00:47:55,251 --> 00:47:57,253
you were out.
803
00:47:59,704 --> 00:48:03,604
-By joining the ATS
in March 1945,
804
00:48:03,639 --> 00:48:06,676
Princess Elizabeth
became the only female member
805
00:48:06,711 --> 00:48:12,579
of the Royal Family
to serve in the armed forces.
806
00:48:12,613 --> 00:48:14,719
-This, of course, was also
807
00:48:14,753 --> 00:48:17,377
something of a morale booster
to the nation,
808
00:48:17,411 --> 00:48:20,483
because they could see
the king's elder daughter,
809
00:48:20,518 --> 00:48:23,831
Princess Elizabeth,
their future sovereign,
810
00:48:23,866 --> 00:48:29,078
doing what others were doing,
what everybody else was doing,
811
00:48:29,113 --> 00:48:30,597
playing their part.
812
00:48:30,631 --> 00:48:35,257
No matter how small,
playing their part.
813
00:48:35,291 --> 00:48:37,259
-By the time she finished
her training,
814
00:48:37,293 --> 00:48:40,124
the war was drawing to a close.
815
00:48:40,158 --> 00:48:42,954
But she'd learnt
some valuable lessons.
816
00:48:45,198 --> 00:48:46,854
-Princess Elizabeth, a humanity
817
00:48:46,889 --> 00:48:50,134
that she might have
taken longer to discover,
818
00:48:50,168 --> 00:48:54,034
she shared a lot in common
with ordinary people
819
00:48:54,069 --> 00:48:58,625
in that she saw their suffering.She knew about it.
820
00:48:58,659 --> 00:49:02,974
She knew that people looked to
her as that new generation --
821
00:49:03,009 --> 00:49:05,011
that new generation of hope.
822
00:49:08,186 --> 00:49:14,089
-Today we give thanks to God.
823
00:49:14,123 --> 00:49:21,751
Germany, the enemy who drove
all Europe into war,
824
00:49:21,786 --> 00:49:26,791
has been finally overcome.
825
00:49:36,732 --> 00:49:42,393
-On May 8, 1945,
Germany finally surrendered.
826
00:49:44,567 --> 00:49:47,398
Over a million people
gathered in Central London
827
00:49:47,432 --> 00:49:51,574
to celebrate
Victory in Europe Day.
828
00:49:51,609 --> 00:49:56,545
One small boy was struggling
to see the Royal Family.
829
00:49:56,579 --> 00:49:58,961
-I remember some man
picked me up and lifted me up
830
00:49:58,996 --> 00:50:01,584
and put me on his shoulders,
and I looked.
831
00:50:01,619 --> 00:50:04,311
That was how it was. Everybody
was so friendly with everybody.
832
00:50:04,346 --> 00:50:07,073
You can't live in
that atmosphere all the time.
833
00:50:07,107 --> 00:50:10,697
But they came onto the balcony,
834
00:50:10,731 --> 00:50:14,977
and the king
with his uniform on.
835
00:50:15,012 --> 00:50:18,532
And it went on for hour
after hour after hour.
836
00:50:25,436 --> 00:50:27,403
-Elizabeth said to her father,
"You know,
837
00:50:27,438 --> 00:50:30,993
could we go out in it,
see what's going on?"
838
00:50:31,028 --> 00:50:34,134
It was so exciting.
839
00:50:34,169 --> 00:50:37,206
-She was delighted
when the king agreed
840
00:50:37,241 --> 00:50:39,243
that she could go out
in the crowd
841
00:50:39,277 --> 00:50:41,728
with Princess Margaret
and some friends
842
00:50:41,762 --> 00:50:44,903
and with some officers
to keep an eye on them.
843
00:50:44,938 --> 00:50:48,390
She was in her ATS uniform,
so she was still dressed up.
844
00:50:48,424 --> 00:50:49,908
And she didn't want to be
recognized.
845
00:50:49,943 --> 00:50:53,533
And she tried to pull her cap
over her forehead
846
00:50:53,567 --> 00:50:54,879
so that she wouldn't
be recognized.
847
00:50:54,913 --> 00:50:57,019
And one of the officers said,
848
00:50:57,054 --> 00:50:58,676
"You know,
you can't go like that.
849
00:50:58,710 --> 00:51:00,436
Put your cap back properly."
850
00:51:05,614 --> 00:51:10,895
-This was the one time in
her life when she could just be
851
00:51:10,929 --> 00:51:14,761
second subaltern, ordinary,
junior commander, ordinary,
852
00:51:14,795 --> 00:51:16,659
Miss Windsor, ordinary.
853
00:51:16,694 --> 00:51:18,454
Dancing down the mound,
854
00:51:18,489 --> 00:51:21,492
dancing their way up Piccadilly,St. James's,
855
00:51:21,526 --> 00:51:22,907
and at one point,
856
00:51:22,941 --> 00:51:26,083
grabbing the cap
off the head of a sailor,
857
00:51:26,117 --> 00:51:29,707
who then he was chasing
after them to get his cap back.
858
00:51:34,470 --> 00:51:39,510
-The future queen mingled
unnoticed among her people.
859
00:51:39,544 --> 00:51:44,584
For once in her life, she was
just another face in the crowd.
860
00:51:44,618 --> 00:51:46,482
-She actually described it
861
00:51:46,517 --> 00:51:49,140
as the most exciting
night of her life.
862
00:51:53,765 --> 00:51:57,597
-I think that the war
made Princess Elizabeth
863
00:51:57,631 --> 00:52:00,531
grow up like it made me grow up.
864
00:52:00,565 --> 00:52:02,429
It really made her.
865
00:52:02,464 --> 00:52:06,192
It made her closer
to the people,
866
00:52:06,226 --> 00:52:08,090
who she reigned as subjects.
867
00:52:08,125 --> 00:52:10,023
And it made us closer to her,
868
00:52:10,057 --> 00:52:12,336
because they had been
in the war,
869
00:52:12,370 --> 00:52:15,477
and right through the war,
they were one of us.
870
00:52:15,511 --> 00:52:17,548
The Royal Family were one of us.
871
00:52:33,011 --> 00:52:36,118
-Two years after the revelers
had gone home,
872
00:52:36,153 --> 00:52:40,502
Princess Elizabeth chose the
occasion of her 21st birthday
873
00:52:40,536 --> 00:52:45,438
to make a vowto the people of her generation.
874
00:52:45,472 --> 00:52:50,443
-I am thinking especially today
of all the young men and women
875
00:52:50,477 --> 00:52:53,653
who were born
about the same time as myself
876
00:52:53,687 --> 00:52:55,724
and have grown up, like me,
877
00:52:55,758 --> 00:53:00,970
in terrible and glorious years
of the Second World War.
878
00:53:01,005 --> 00:53:05,009
I declare before you all
that my whole life,
879
00:53:05,043 --> 00:53:10,221
whether it be long or short,shall be devoted to your service
880
00:53:10,256 --> 00:53:13,742
and to the service
of our great imperial family
881
00:53:13,776 --> 00:53:16,296
to which we all belong.
882
00:53:16,331 --> 00:53:19,472
God help me to make good my vow,
883
00:53:19,506 --> 00:53:23,855
and God bless all of you
who are willing to share in it.
67519