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Queen’s inquisitive dog steals show interrupting jubilee card viewing

Queen Elizabeth II looks at a fan as she views a display of memorabilia from her Golden and Platinum Jubilees in the Oak Room at Windsor Castle.
The Queen marks 70 years on the throne on February 6 (Picture: PA)

One of the Queen’s four-legged friends stole the show when the monarch was treated to a sneak preview of cards from jubilee well-wishers.

Sunday marks 70 years since the Queen’s accession to the throne, a feat no other British monarch has achieved.

Ahead of the big day, the 95-year-old spent time looking at cards from well-wishers, but one inquisitive member of her household wanted a look too.

Candy trotted into the oak room at Windsor Castle where a display of memorabilia from the golden and platinum jubilees was on display.

Candy is a dorgi – a cross between a corgi and a dachshund – and she made a lap of the room, inspecting a small group of journalists and photographers present at the viewing.

The Queen said: ‘And where did you come from? I know what you want,’ likely to be a reference to a treat, and called Candy over to give her a stroke.

The monarch, who has owned more than 30 corgis during her reign, currently has three dogs – Candy now quite elderly, a young corgi called Muick, and another corgi puppy which replaced Fergus the dorgi puppy, who died unexpectedly in May last year.

The viewing is not the first time Candy has attempted to upstage the monarch.

Queen Elizabeth II is joined by one of her dogs, a Dorgi called Candy, as she views a display of memorabilia from her Golden and Platinum Jubilees in the Oak Room at Windsor Castle.
Candy has a history of wandering into royal engagments (Picture: PA)

She was present when the Queen held a face-to-face audience with the outgoing armed forces chief General Sir Nick Carter in November, walking forward to greet the senior figure.

One card celebrating the 2002 Golden Jubilee caught the Queen’s eye when she returned to looking at the memorabilia.

It was made from eight bottle tops including milk, Coca-Cola and Schweppes bottles, and had the handwritten words ‘Ma’am You’re The Tops’.

‘That’s good, simple but ingenious,’ said the Queen to Dr Stella Panayotova, librarian and assistant keeper of the royal archives, who joined her for the viewing two weeks ago.

The display included a Golden Jubilee letter from a nine-year-old boy called Chris, titled ‘A Recipe For A Perfect Queen’.

Memorabilia from the Queen's Golden and Platinum Jubilees.
Memorabilia from the Queen’s Golden and Platinum Jubilees (Picture: PA)
Queen Victoria's Autograph fan which was seen by Queen Elizabeth II when she viewed a display of memorabilia from her Golden and Platinum Jubilees.
Queen Victoria’s autographed fan which was seen by the Queen during a viewing of memorabilia from her Golden and Platinum Jubilees (Picture: PA)

Its list of ingredients – which included ‘500ml of royal blood’, a ‘dab of jewels and posh gowns’ and ‘a dash of loyalty’ – made the Queen laugh and she said: ‘That’s quite fun, isn’t it.’

Platinum Jubilee cards were also on display and the Queen praised the design of one featuring a picture of her as a young woman surrounded by flowers with the words ’70 Glorious Years’.

The Queen also inspected recipes and pictures of entries to the Platinum Pudding competition.

The competition has challenged cooks to create a memorable dessert fit for the Queen and the nation.

A display of memorabilia from the Queen's Golden and Platinum Jubilees
‘Ma’am – you’re the tops’ (Picture: PA)

The monarch browsed through the images of the entries and later said: ‘Looks like they’re all going to end with crowns on them.’

She also studied a fan presented to Queen Victoria to mark her Golden Jubilee in 1887 by the then Prince and Princess of Wales, later Edward VII and Queen Alexandra.

In the years after Victoria’s jubilee, it was signed by members of her family.

The Queen opened the fan and remarked how easily it could have been damaged when being signed, adding: ‘Extraordinary isn’t it, and it still shuts.’

Since the viewing the Queen has travelled to her Sandringham estate where she traditionally spends the anniversary of her accession to the throne, a poignant day as it is the date her father King George VI died in 1952.

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