British Royal Family

London Mourners Brave 9-Hour Wait, 5-Mile Line to Say Goodbye to Queen Elizabeth II

Buckingham Palace on Thursday released details about the service, the first state funeral held in Britain since the death of former Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1965

NBCUniversal Media, LLC Queen Elizabeth's II historic funeral on Sept. 19 is set to commence at 10:35 a.m. local time, when the late monarch's coffin is moved from Westminster Hall to Westminster Abbey.

Thousands of mourners waited for hours Thursday in a line that stretched for almost 5 miles (8 kilometers) across London for the chance to spend a few minutes filing past Queen Elizabeth II's coffin while she lies in state. King Charles III spent the day in private to reflect on his first week on the throne.

The queue to pay respects to the late queen at Westminster Hall in Parliament was at least a nine-hour wait, snaking across a bridge and along the south bank of the River Thames beyond Tower Bridge. But people said they didn't mind the wait, and authorities brought in portable toilets and other facilities to make the slog bearable.

“I’m glad there was a queue, because that gave us time to see what was ahead of us, prepared us and absorbed the whole atmosphere,” health care professional Nimisha Maroo said. “I wouldn’t have liked it if I’d had to just rush through."

A week after the queen died at Balmoral Castle in Scotland after 70 years on the throne, the focus of commemorations was in Westminster — the heart of political power in London. Her coffin will lie in state at Westminster Hall until Monday, when it will be taken across the street to Westminster Abbey for the queen's funeral.

Buckingham Palace on Thursday released details about the service, the first state funeral held in Britain since the death of former Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1965. Royalty and heads of state from around the world are expected to be among the 2,000 people attending, with a smaller, private burial service planned for later Monday at Windsor Castle.

The queen will be buried at Windsor alongside her late husband, Prince Philip, who died last year.

The guest list for the state funeral is a roll call of power and pomp, from Japan's Emperor Naruhito and King Felipe VI of Spain to U.S. President Joe Biden, French President Emmanuel Macron and the prime ministers of Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau — who first met the queen when he was a child and his father Pierre Trudeau was Canada's leader — said the queen was “one of my favorite people in the world.”

“Her conversations with me were always candid, we talked about anything and everything, she gave her best advice on a range of issues, she was always curious, engaged and thoughtful,” he said at a special session of the Canadian parliament in Ottawa.

After a day of high ceremony and high emotions on Wednesday as the queen's coffin was carried in somber procession from Buckingham Palace, the king was spending Thursday working and in “private reflection” at his Highgrove residence in western England. Charles has had calls with Biden and Macron and has been speaking to a host of world leaders.

Prince William, the heir to the throne, and his wife Catherine, the Princess of Wales, visited the royal family’s Sandringham estate in eastern England on Thursday to admire some of the tributes left by well-wishers. The couple walked slowly along metal barriers as they received bouquets from the public.

Queen Elizabeth II will lie in state at Westminster Hall until Monday’s funeral.

William told well-wishers that walking behind his grandmother's coffin on Wednesday had been “challenging” and “brought back memories” of the funeral of his mother, Princess Diana after her death in 1997, when William was 15.

“I said how proud his mother would have been of him, and he said how hard it was yesterday because it brought back memories of his mother’s funeral,” Jane Wells, 54, said after meeting the prince Thursday.

The queen left Buckingham Palace on Wednesday for the last time, borne on a horse-drawn carriage and saluted by cannons and the tolling of Big Ben, in a solemn procession through the flag-draped, crowd-lined streets of London to Westminster Hall.

Charles, his siblings and sons marched behind the coffin, which was topped by a wreath of white roses and the queen's diamond-studded crown on a purple velvet pillow. The military procession underscored Elizabeth’s seven decades as head of state.

Her lying-in-state, meanwhile, allowed many Britons to say a personal goodbye to the only monarch most have ever known.

It's also a huge logistical operation, with a designated 10-mile (16 kilometer) queuing route lined with first aid points and more than 500 portable toilets. There are 1,000 stewards and marshals working at any given time, and 30 religious leaders from a range of faiths to talk to those in line.

Monica Thorpe said she walked for two hours to get to the back of the line and join the queue.

“People were just walking and walking and the policemen were like ‘Keep going, keep going.’ It was like the yellow brick road," she said.

Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, the spiritual leader of the Church of England, wore a high-visibility vest emblazoned with the words “Faith Team” as he spoke to mourners. Welby, who will deliver a sermon at Elizabeth's funeral, paid tribute to the queen as “someone you could trust totally, completely and absolutely, whose wisdom was remarkable.”

People old and young, dressed in dark suits or jeans and sneakers, walked in a steady stream through the historic hall, where Guy Fawkes and Charles I were tried, where kings and queens hosted magnificent medieval banquets, and where previous monarchs have lain in state.

Getty Images
Queen Elizabeth II, the longest-reigning British monarch, has spent seven decades as head of state for the United Kingdom and its territories. She was crowned shortly after her father, King George VI, died when she was 25.
Universal Images Group via Getty Images
The Duke and Duchess of York, George and Elizabeth, with the newborn Princess Elizabeth in this 1926 portrait.
AP
Princess Elizabeth takes a ride on the grounds of Windsor Castle with her cousin, Gerald Lascelles, in 1927.
AP
Britain's Princess Elizabeth, sits, left, during the wedding of the Duke of Kent and his wife Princess Marina of Greece in Buckingham Palace, London, Nov. 29, 1934. From left to right standing: King George V, Princess Nicholas of Greece, Princess Marina, the Duke of Kent, Queen Mary and Prince Nicholas of Greece. Seated front right is Lady Mary Cambridge.
Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
Princess Elizabeth of England poses for a 1935 portrait at the age of 9.
Lisa Sheridan/Getty Images
Princess Elizabeth, 10, holds a pet corgi in this 1936 photo. Her lifelong love and attachment for her corgis is well known — they show up in numerous photos with the Queen and the extended British Royal family.
AP
Princess Elizabeth, right, makes her first public speech at the age of 14, from London on Oct. 13, 1940. The wartime broadcast addressed England’s children living away from home during the Second World War. She is shown with her younger sister, Princess Margaret Rose, left.
AP
Princess Elizabeth, left, and Princess Margaret Rose of England leave Westminster Abbey through an arch of crossed swords after attending the wedding of Lady Anne Spencer, a distant cousin of Prime Minister Winston Churchill and aunt of the future Diana, Princess of Wales, to Lt. C. Wake-Walker, son of the Third Lord of the Admiralty, Feb. 20, 1944, London, England.
AP
Princess Elizabeth, right, enjoys a joke with her father King George VI, on the grounds of the Royal Lodge, Windsor, England, Aug. 20, 1946.
Eddie Worth/AP
Britain’s Princess Elizabeth, later Queen Elizabeth II, on her 21st birthday, seated in Natal National Park, South Africa, April 21, 1947. In the background are the Drakenberg Mountains.
Princess Elizabeth, heir presumptive to the British throne, poses for a photo with her fiancé, Lt. Philip Mountbatten, in London, July 10, 1947. Prince Philip was born into the Greek royal family but spent almost all of his life as a pillar of the British one. The royal couple was married for more than 73 years until Philip’s death in 2021.
AP
Princess Elizabeth and her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, pose with royal guests after their wedding at Buckingham Palace in London, England, Nov. 20, 1947. The couple remained married for 74 years until Philip’s death at the age of 99.
Eddie Worth/AP
Princess Elizabeth, Prince Philip and their children Prince Charles and Princess Anne play on the lawn at Clarence House, London, Aug. 8, 1951.
AP
Elizabeth sits in the Chair of Estate in Westminster Abbey, London, June 2, 1953, before she was crowned during her coronation.
Queen Elizabeth II leads the procession through Westminster Abbey’s nave after her coronation in London, England, June 2, 1953. Elizabeth became the Queen of England at age 25 after King George VI died in 1952.
Print Collector/Getty Images
The newly crowned Queen Elizabeth II and the Duke of Edinburgh, seen on the day of her coronation at Buckingham Palace, June 2, 1953. The image is a colorized version of the original photo.
Fox Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip arrive at Parliament House in Hobart, Tasmania, during their Commonwealth Tour of Australia, 1954. She became the first reigning monarch to visit Australia, as well as the first reigning monarch to visit neighboring New Zealand.
Hulton Archive/Getty Images
The crowd in Waitangi greets Queen Elizabeth II during her Commonwealth visit to New Zealand, January 1954. She became the first reigning monarch to visit New Zealand, as well as the first reigning monarch to visit neighboring Australia.
Michael Montfort/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images
Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, wave to the crowds from a balcony behind a draped Union Jack flag on May 28, 1965, in West Berlin, West Germany.
Keystone/Getty Images
Livery-clad coachmen accompany the State Coach bearing Queen Elizabeth II on her Silver Jubilee, or her 25th year anniversary as monarch, in 1977. Queen Elizabeth would go on to celebrate her Ruby, Golden, Diamond and Sapphire Jubilees to mark her 40th, 50th, 60th and 65th anniversaries respectively.
NBCU Photo Bank
Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II of England seen with the Imperial State Crown in 1978.
Fox Photos/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Prince Charles and his then-fiancée Lady Diana Spencer are seen with Queen Elizabeth II at Buckingham Palace, March 7, 1981.
Anwar Hussein/Getty Images
Prince Charles, Prince of Wales and Diana, Princess of Wales, seen on the balcony at Buckingham Palace following their wedding on July 29, 1981. They are joined by, from left: Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, Pageboys Lord Nicholas Windsor and Edward Van Cutsum, Bridemaids Sarah Jane Gaselee, Clementine Hambro and Catherine Cameron, Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Edward and Prince Andrew.
PA Images via Getty Images
The Queen leans forward to reassure her horse Burmese as she enters Horseguards Parade after the incident in The Mall where a man fired several blanks at her from a replica pistol as she rode down The Mall to the Trooping the Colour Ceremony, 1981. The man was later named as Marcus Simon Sarjeant, of Folkestone, Kent.
Tim Graham Photo Library via Getty Images
Queen Elizabeth II takes a photo of her husband, Prince Philip, with her Leica M3 at the Windsor Horse Show, 1982. The two enjoyed 73 years of marriage before Philip’s death in 2021.
AP
Queen Elizabeth II stands with six of the prime ministers who served during her time as monarch in this 1985 photo. From left: James Callaghan, Alec Douglas-Home, then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, Harold Macmillan, Harold Wilson and Edward Heath.
AP
Queen Elizabeth II reads a statement during the State Opening of Parliament in London on Nov. 12, 1986. She pledged the government would denationalize more state-owned industries and cut taxes while pursuing its main foreign policy goals the next year. Her consort, Prince Philip, listens at right.
John Redman/AP
Queen Elizabeth II, accompanied by her private secretary, Sir William Heseltine, cheers at the Epsom horserace meeting on Wednesday, June 7, 1989. The Queen watched as American-bred favorite Hashwan, ridden by Willie Carson, crossed the line to win the 210th Derby.
Anwar Hussein/Getty Images
Queen Elizabeth II, at the invitation of then-President George H. W. Bush, addresses a joint session of Congress in the House Chamber in May 1991, Washington, D.C. This was the first time a British reigning monarch addressed Congress.
David Thomson/AP
Britain’s Queen Elizabeth, the queen-mother, center right, joins her daughter, Queen Elizabeth II, and other members of the British Royal Family on the balcony of Buckingham Palace in London, England, June 4, 1997, to celebrate the official birthday of Queen Elizabeth II, born April 21, 1926.
Ian Jones/AP
Queen Elizabeth II, right, opens the new Welcome Wing of London’s Science Museum with Associated Press photographer Nick Ut, left and Phan Thi Kim Phuc, center, June 27, 2000. Phuc, known as the “Napalm Girl,” was the main subject in Ut’s iconic image of the aftermath of a June 8, 1972, napalm attack in Vietnam.
Alessandro Bianchi/AP
Queen Elizabeth II and Pope John Paul II meet at the Vatican, Oct. 17, 2000.
Sion Touhig/Getty Images
Britain’s Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip ride in the Golden State Carriage at the head of a parade from Buckingham Palace to St Paul’s Cathedral celebrating the Queen’s Golden Jubilee, or the 50th anniversary of her monarchy, June 4, 2002, along The Mall in London.
Hugo Burnand/Getty Images
Prince Charles, the Prince of Wales and Camilla Parker-Bowles, Duchess of Cornwall, pose for a wedding photo with their children and parents in the White Drawing Room at Windsor Castle following their marriage, April 9, 2005, in Windsor, England. From left: Prince Harry, Prince William, Laura and Tom Parker-Bowles are seen at the back, with Queen Elizabeth II, Prince Philip and Bruce Shand at the front.
Tim Graham Photo Library via Getty Images
Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh arrive at St Paul’s Cathedral for a service of thanksgiving held in honor of the Queen’s 80th birthday, June 15, 2006, in London, England.
Daniel Berehulak/Getty Images
Queen Elizabeth II waves as she travels to the State Opening of Parliament on Nov. 6, 2007, in London, England. The Queen’s Speech, the first for new British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, was expected to introduce legislative bills on education, immigration, housing and counter-terrorism.
Matt Dunham/AP
Britain’s Prince William and his wife Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, wave with Queen Elizabeth II from the balcony of Buckingham Palace after their Royal Wedding in London, April, 29, 2011.
Stefan Rousseau/AP
Queen Elizabeth II poses with former Prime Ministers, including, from left, David Cameron, Sir John Major, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, ahead of a Diamond Jubilee lunch hosted by Cameron at 10 Downing Street in London, Tuesday July 24, 2012. The Diamond Jubilee marked the Queen’s 60th year as monarch.
Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images
Queen Elizabeth II laughs with Meghan, Duchess of Sussex during a ceremony to open the new Mersey Gateway Bridge on June 14, 2018, in the town of Widnes in Halton, Cheshire, England, during Markle’s first engagement with the Queen. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have since distanced themselves from the British Royal family due to allegations of racism and mental health struggles.
Andrew Milligan/AFP via Getty Images
Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II and Britain’s Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, pose alongside the tree they planted to mark the start of the official planting season for the Queen’s Green Canopy at the Balmoral Estate in Scotland, Oct. 1, 2021. The QGC is a UK-wide Platinum Jubilee initiative that will create a lasting legacy in tribute to the Queen’s 70 years of service to the nation, through a network of trees planted in her name.
Daniel Leal/AFP via Getty Images
Queen Elizabeth II, center, stands with (from left) Princess Anne, Princess Royal, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, Prince Louis, Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte, Prince George and Prince William, Duke of Cambridge following the Queen’s Birthday Parade, the Trooping the Color, as part of her platinum jubilee celebrations, London, June 2, 2022. Crowds converged in London for four days of public events to mark Queen Elizabeth II’s historic Platinum Jubilee, in what may be the last major public event of her long reign.
Adrian Dennis/AFP via Getty Images
Queen Elizabeth II touches the Commonwealth Nations Globe to start the lighting of the Principal Beacon outside of Buckingham Palace in London, June 2, 2022, as part of Platinum Jubilee celebrations.
Ben Stansall/AFP via Getty Images
A hologram of Queen Elizabeth II is projected on the Gold State Coach during the Platinum Pageant in London, June 5, 2022, for the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee. The curtain comes down on four days of momentous nationwide celebrations to honor Queen Elizabeth II’s historic tenure as Britain’s monarch.
Queen Elizabeth greets newly elected leader of the Conservative party Liz Truss as Truss arrives at Balmoral Castle for an audience where she will be invited to become Prime Minister and form a new government on Sept. 6, 2022 in Aberdeen, Scotland. The Queen broke with the tradition of meeting the new prime minister in Buckingham Palace, having remained at Balmoral Castle due to mobility issues.
Queen Elizabeth II smiles during an Armed Forces Act of Loyalty Parade at the Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh, Scotland, on June 28, 2022.
Jane Barlow/Getty Images
Queen Elizabeth greets newly elected leader of the Conservative party Liz Truss as Truss arrives at Balmoral Castle for an audience where she will be invited to become Prime Minister and form a new government on Sept. 6, 2022 in Aberdeen, Scotland. The Queen broke with the tradition of meeting the new prime minister in Buckingham Palace, having remained at Balmoral Castle due to mobility issues.

After passing the coffin, most mourners paused to look back before leaving through the hall’s great oak doors. Some were in tears; others bowed their heads or curtseyed. One sank onto a knee and blew a farewell kiss.

Keith Smart, an engineer and British Army veteran, wiped away tears as he left the hall. He had waited more than 10 hours for the chance to say goodbye.

“Everybody in the crowd was impeccably behaved. There was no malice, everybody was friends. It was fantastic,” he said. “And then, to come into that room and see that, I just broke down inside. I didn’t bow — I knelt to the floor, on my knees, bowed my head to the queen.”

Copyright AP - Associated Press
Exit mobile version