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Free of crowds but full of life, there s never been a better time to visit Windsor

Free of crowds but full of life, there s never been a better time to visit Windsor
telegraph.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from telegraph.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Windsor pub manager reflects on Prince Philip visits

  TORONTO A U.K. pub manager is reflecting on Prince Philip’s frequent visits to the establishment in the wake of his recent death. Stuart O’Brien, the manager of the Two Brewers pub in Windsor, said the Duke of Edinburgh was often seen riding in his horse drawn carriage several times a week, greeting the owner and commenting on the flowers that grew outside the building. “He would always acknowledge the flowers, and always say how nice they were, but said to Robert once, the owner, ‘Your sign on the top is very flaky, it needs to be replaced’,” O’Brien told CTV National News.

Prince Philip tributes: I wanted my grandchildren to remember this day

BBC News By Becky Morton image captionCordelia and Sherlock have been learning about the duke s achievements since his death As well-wishers continue to pay tribute to the Duke of Edinburgh following his death, people from all generations have come to Windsor to honour his memory. Six-year-old Sherlock Hudson-Yearsley is wearing military uniform for the occasion - passed down from his father, who used to wear it as a child watching the annual Trooping the Colour parade. His grandmother Anne Yearsley, from Waltham St Lawrence in Berkshire, remembers leaving flowers outside Windsor Castle when Diana, Princess of Wales, died in 1997 and wanted her grandchildren - Sherlock and his 10-year-old sister Cordelia - to have a similar memory.

A nation mourns as military pays tribute with 41 gun salute tribute to Prince Philip

They were told to stay away, but crowds paying tribute to Duke of Edinburgh had other ideas At Buckingham Palace, Windsor Castle and Sandringham, well-wishers ignored police warnings in order to pay respects to Prince Philip 10 April 2021 • 8:37pm Members of the Honourable Artillery Company fire a 41-round gun salute from the wharf at the Tower of London, to mark the death of the Duke of Edinburgh. Credit:  Dominic Lipinski/PA They came to mourn his death and celebrate his life. At Buckingham Palace, at Windsor Castle and at Sandringham, wellwishers ignored the “stay away” warnings to pay their respects. The day after the Duke of Edinburgh’s death, Britain woke up to realise that the man who had been an ever-present fixture, a steadying hand across the decades, was no longer with us. 

He was a character : In Windsor, mourners pay respect to Prince Philip as royal and neighbor

He was a character : In Windsor, mourners pay respect to Prince Philip as royal and neighbor Adela Suliman © Matt Dunham Image: Prince Philip (Matt Dunham / WPA Pool via Getty Images) WINDSOR, England As dawn broke above Windsor Castle on Saturday, Queen Elizabeth II and her British subjects woke up without Prince Philip, the man who had been a fixture by her side for the past 73 years. Outside the gates of the 11th century palace, where he died at 99 on Friday, dog walkers, joggers and locals paused to reflect on the life of the irascible and tough-minded royal, who spent more than seven decades supporting his wife in a role that came to define his life.

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