The Last Hurrah: The 1947 Royal Tour of Southern Africa and the End of Empire

The Last Hurrah: The 1947 Royal Tour of Southern Africa and the End of Empire

by Graham Viney
The Last Hurrah: The 1947 Royal Tour of Southern Africa and the End of Empire

The Last Hurrah: The 1947 Royal Tour of Southern Africa and the End of Empire

by Graham Viney

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Overview

Young Elizabeth captures in vivid detail perhaps the single-most important formative experience in Queen Elizabeth's life, the 1947 royal tour of southern Africa with her parents King George VI, Queen Elizabeth and Princess Margaret, during which she celebrated her twenty-first birthday.

The year of the royal tour of southern Africa, 1947, marked both the high-water mark of the British Empire and the very moment at which it began to unravel. Graham Viney has written an intimate, revealing portrait of the young princess on tour with her parents and sister, Princess Margaret, hard at work in the national interest, and succeeding triumphantly against all odds. In the words of Rian Malan, South African author of My Traitor's Heart, it is 'a story about a country teetering on the brink of convulsive change and yet almost united, at least for a moment, by love for a king and queen who weren't really ours.'

The year 1947 was a pivotal moment not just in the history of the Union of South Africa, but of the British Empire itself. Later that same year India gained independence and just one year later the Afrikaner Nationalist victory in South Africa would lead inexorably to the Republic of South Africa in 1961 and its departure from the Commonwealth.

The present Queen Elizabeth must have learned a great deal about statecraft from her father, and about duty, tact and hard work from both her parents in the course of this three-month tour, during which the then princess celebrated her twenty-first birthday. It was also the family's first real experience of multiculturalism. Graham Viney's book gives us an intimate and revealing portrait of the royal family, while also superbly capturing a moment in the life of a fractious, recently formed 'nation', before its descent into over four decades of darkness.

The royal family travelled ceaselessly, from February to April, on a specially commissioned, white-and-gold train, meeting thousands of people at every stop along the way. The tour was a show of imperial solidarity and a recognition of South Africa's contribution to the Allied cause during the Second World War, specifically that of South African prime minister Jan Smuts, who had served in both British war cabinets.

Young Elizabeth draws skilfully on many diverse sources, not least the Royal Archive at Windsor, and includes many photographs of the royal family not previously published, such as stills from film footage held by the South African National Film, Video and Sound Archives in Pretoria.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781472143174
Publisher: Little, Brown Book Group
Publication date: 04/18/2019
Sold by: Hachette Digital, Inc.
Format: eBook
Sales rank: 779,371
File size: 29 MB
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About the Author

GRAHAM VINEY was educated at the Diocesan College (Bishops), Cape Town, and Oxford University where he read International Relations. He runs an international design company, and, in addition to numerous papers and articles has written two books, Colonial Houses of South Africa and The Cape of Good Hope, 1806-1872.

Table of Contents

Dramatis Personae ix

Introduction 1

Chapter 1 Arrival 5

Chapter 2 The State Opening of Parliament and the Question of the Imperial Connection 34

Chapter 3 The Whistlestop Tour: A Mid-century Royal Progress Across the Veld 69

Chapter 4 Bloemfontein and the Braai at Bultfontein: Afrikaans vs English-Speaking in the Free State 103

Chapter 5 Race, Empire, Politics and Agendas: Eshowe, Durban and Currie's Fountain 129

Chapter 6 A State Banquet in Pretoria: The Transvaal Capital Receives the Royal Family 177

Chapter 7 Johannesburg: 'Becher's Brook, Second Time Round' 198

Chapter 8 Tea with Ouma 235

Chapter 9 Tea at Vergelegen 250

Chapter 10 The Coming of Age of the Heiress Presumptive: Gently Towards a New Multiracial Commonwealth 264

Chapter 11 Gone with the Southeaster 286

Acknowledgements 329

Glossary 334

Notes 337

Sources 364

Index 373

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