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How will the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee be celebrated in 2022?

Princess Elizabeth became monarch on February 6 1952 on the death of her father George VI.

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The Queen

Plans are already being set in motion to mark the monarch’s Platinum Jubilee.

With the Queen about to reach the 69th anniversary of her accession, how exactly will the sovereign’s 70 years on the throne be celebrated in 2022?

– Extra bank holiday

The public will get an extra day off as part of a “blockbuster” four-day weekend of celebrations from June 2-5 2022.

Diamond Jubilee celebrations
A Jubilee street party in Murrayfield Drive, Edinburgh in 2012 (Andrew Milligan/PA)

The May spring bank holiday will be moved to June 2 and an additional bank holiday added on June 3.

– Traditional pageantry and state of the art displays

The celebrations will feature a busy programme of events which have yet to be announced and are dependent on how the coronavirus pandemic progresses.

Diamond Jubilee celebrations
Crowds attending the Diamond Jubilee Concert in front of Buckingham Palace in 2012 (David Berber/PA)

The commemorations will mix British ceremonial splendour and pageantry with cutting edge artistic and technological displays.

– But not on the River Thames 

For the Diamond Jubilee in 2012, the Queen, the Duke of Edinburgh and the rest of the royal family endured an extremely wet and windy trip down the Thames as part of a river pageant.

The River Pageant
The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh onboard the Spirit of Chartwell during the Diamond Jubilee Pageant on the River Thames (John Stillwell/PA)

Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden appeared to rule out any further river-related activities for the monarch after the previous experience.

“The one thing I might resist committing to given our experience of 2012 and the Diamond Jubilee is doing anything on the River Thames again,” he told MPs.

Diamond Jubilee celebrations – Thames Pageant
Well wishers watch the Diamond Jubilee River Pageant in the rain (Dan Kitwood/PA)

Philip was admitted to hospital with a bladder infection the day after the pageant and missed the majority of the Jubilee festivities.

– Street parties

Street parties are synonymous with royal jubilees.

A Silver Jubilee street party
A Silver Jubilee street party in Woodford Bridge, Essex in 1977 (PA)

The nation will be encouraged to join – coronavirus permitting – with their neighbours for street gatherings across the UK.

– Trees

People across the UK are to be invited to plant a tree for the Platinum Jubilee.

The campaign, known as The Queen’s Green Canopy, will launch in May.

The Queen
The Queen planting a tree in Edinburgh in 2015 (Andrew Milligan/PA)

The project, led by the Cool Earth charity in partnership with the Government and The Woodland Trust, will see communities, charities and schools plant trees across the four nations of the UK, with an encouragement to plant healthy native trees likely to thrive in their environments.

During her reign, the Queen has planted more than 1,500 trees all over the world.

– Funding 

How the celebrations will be paid for and how much they cost will be a key issue amid the Covid-19 crisis.

Crowds at the Golden Jubilee pop concert
Crowds at the Golden Jubilee pop concert (John Giles/PA)

SNP MP Steven Bonnar has warned against “spending excessively on ceremonies, pageantry and celebrations” to mark the occasion.

Mr Dowden said both he and the Royal Household will ensure that money is spent “very wisely”.

– Security

The Treasury will also have to decide on how to foot the security bill for any mass-scale events.

– Jubilee visits

Members of the royal family are expected to take part in the celebrations over the extended weekend and in the run-up to the four-day extravaganza.

The Queen on a Golden Jubilee visit
The Queen is greeted by large crowds in Catford, south-east London,during her Golden Jubilee visit (Fiona Hanson/PA)

Senior royals – particularly the Prince of Wales, the Duchess of Cornwall and the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge – are likely to be carrying out country-wide visits, in keeping with previous jubilees.

– A present for the Queen

Politicians are having a whip-round to pay for a gift for the Queen.

A cross-party board with members from both Houses of Parliament has reportedly picked a lamp-post as the gift and is said to be inviting sculptors and artists to submit their designs.

The money will come from MPs and peers’ personal donations, rather than public funds.

Diamond Jubilee stained glass window
Guests look at the Diamond Jubilee stained glass window (Dan Kitwood/PA)

Solicitor General Michael Ellis, who organised the Diamond Jubilee gift of a stained glass window in Westminster Hall, is leading the project.

Other past presents have included a fountain in the Palace of Westminster’s New Palace Yard for the Silver Jubilee, and a sundial in Old Palace Yard for the Golden Jubilee.

– Jubilee Medal

In keeping with tradition, a Platinum Jubilee medal will be awarded to people who work in public service including representatives of the Armed Forces, the emergency services and the prison services.

Trooping the Colour
The Duke of Cambridge wearing his Golden Jubilee and Diamond Jubilee medals (Victoria Jones/PA)

– Memorabilia

Mementoes, ranging from chinaware to stamps and coins, will be expected to be produced to commemorate the royal anniversary.

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