7th June 1945
The king and queen’s liberation visit
The King and Queen – George VI and Elizabeth – should have visited the Channel Islands on 6 June 1945, which Jersey had declared a public holiday so that everyone who wanted to could come out on the street to welcome the royal couple.
However, bad weather saw their trip postponed, and they finally left Portsmouth that evening, sailing overnight on a cruiser called Jamaica, accompanied by four destroyers. They anchored off Elizabeth Castle and a motor launch brought the royal party to St Helier.
Touring the island
The first part of the visit was an hour-long drive around the island’s 12 parishes, followed by an address from the Bailiff in which he restated the island’s loyalty to the crown. They ate a lunch at Government House, consisting of tinned pie and tinned fruit, then flew on to Guernsey.
Unfortunately, communication problems meant that many residents outside of St Helier had been unaware that the visit had been pushed back a day, and they lined the roads in anticipation of the event, which was taking place less than a month after the Channel Islands’ liberation.
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Other events that occured in June
Mother is banished from Jersey for being unmarried
- The States of Jersey banished Portuguese Maria Batista from the island for being the unmarried mother of a boy born prematurely.
- Read more…
Missing woman case’s happy ending… for some
- Elizabeth Price had been missing for nearly two weeks when the police found her in Lucy Biard’s St Helier home.
- Read more…
French fishermen occupy Minquiers
- The arrival of a troupe of French fishermen on Maitresse Ile, the largest of the Minquiers Islands, was hardly a surprise.
- Read more…
Superior Council is established to guide Jersey through the Occupation
- Although the German authorities were in control throughout the Occupation, they channelled their authority through the Superior Council.
- Read more…