‘Grandmother for the world’: Calgary police officer goes to London for royal funeral
Tad Milmine felt a surge of emotion when he saw Queen Elizabeth’s coffin, aglow in a golden light, as it was carried into Buckingham Palace as part of the monarch’s final journey.
The Calgary resident, who went to London to pay his respects to the queen after learning of her death on Sept. 8, had just come back from dinner on Tuesday night when he saw people lining the streets around the palace area. He found out from one of the security officers that the queen’s cortège would be making its way down that street and managed to snag a front-row spot amid the milling crowd.
“When she was arriving back to Buckingham Palace there was this clap,” he said in a video interview from Green Park, which is across from the monarch’s official residence. “The cheers kind of followed the casket. You don’t hear voices. You just hear this clap. It was remarkable. It was absolutely remarkable.”
The queen died at her holiday home of Balmoral Castle in the Scottish Highlands at the age of 96, plunging the United Kingdom into 10 days of national mourning. She had celebrated her Platinum Jubilee on the throne in June.