Location: Sandringham
Produced by: BBC
Theme:
The new Queen Elizabeth II gives her first Christmas Broadcast exactly twenty years after her grandfather, King George V, delivered the very first Royal Christmas Message in 1932.
Her Majesty pays tribute to her late father King George VI, who had died the previous February, as well as to her grandfather who began the tradition of the annual Broadcast. While citing their examples, the Queen looks ahead to her Coronation and dedicates herself to a life of service to Britain and the Commonwealth and thanks her Subjects for their support:
'My father, and my grandfather before him, worked all their lives to unite our peoples ever more closely, and to maintain its ideals which were so near to their hearts. I shall strive to carry on their work.
Already you have given me strength to do so. For, since my accession ten months ago, your loyalty and affection have been an immense support and encouragement. I want to take this Christmas Day, my first opportunity, to thank you with all my heart.'
Commentary:
At the age of only twenty-six, Elizabeth II was making her first Broadcast as Queen of the United Kingdom and a diminishing Empire, and as Head of a growing Commonwealth. As a princess, the young Elizabeth already had experience of broadcasting (one report claimed that she had already made as many as thirty broadcasts) and, unlike her father, was comfortable at the microphone; but this was not only her first Christmas Message, it was her first broadcast as Monarch.
How Princess Elizabeth had ascended to the throne - in Kenya while representing her father on an overseas tour - is well known. The poor health of King George VI had been no secret and his medical prognosis was not good, but the young Elizabeth and her husband Prince Philip had hoped that the heavy burden they knew one day must come was still some years away. The King's death, when it came, had been sudden and unexpected.
When Christmas 1952 arrived, Elizabeth II had been Queen for more than ten months. Exactly twenty years after King George V had delivered the very first Royal Christmas Message, Her Majesty was the first British monarch to inherit the Christmas Broadcast as an established annual tradition. Despite the disruption that the presence of a BBC crew would have caused to the Christmas Day of a young wife with two small children, there had been no question that the Message would go ahead as usual. Details had been confirmed by mid December and Elizabeth II's first broadcast as Queen was eagerly anticipated by the press.
The message from Queen Elizabeth II's speech is one of continuity, both in terms of the tradition of the Christmas Broadcast and as a 'blueprint' for her reign. As though to emphasise the point, the BBC reported that the Queen, speaking from the study at Sandringham as King George V and King George VI had done, was using the same desk and chair as her father and grandfather before her. Her Majesty pays tribute to both men, in whom she clearly believes she has been given the perfect example of constitutional monarchy. The new Queen sees herself as a bridge between the old and the new, defending enduring values while encouraging scientific development and exploration; she considers that she has a duty to promote the Commonwealth, encourage peace between peoples and to remind listeners of the Christian message of the birth of Jesus. These themes would echo down the decades in her Christmas Broadcasts.
Elizabeth II delivers her speech in a clear, high-pitched voice: youthful yet self-assured; apparently awed by her new responsibility, but far from overwhelmed. By the time of her Coronation broadcast six months later the Queen would seem to have grown in the role and her voice had matured noticeably. The Broadcast was well-received with one report stating:
'The messages have always had two things in common. One has been the frank faith of the Monarch in the power of a Divine Being. The other has been the way in which the Monarch has spoken with parental affection, as to a family, rather than as a ruling sovereign. Both these notes were struck with new inspiration and with, seemingly, even greater conviction by Her Majesty the Queen in her first Christmas broadcast.'
At the time of writing, almost seventy years have passed since the 1952 Broadcast. Over the years the tone and the language - and maybe to some extent the Queen's accent - have changed. Elizabeth II can no longer speak of an Empire, and phrases such as 'my peoples' and 'I give you my affectionate greetings' may seem dated and even condescending in the 2020s. However, the themes, the essential values and above all Elizabeth II's commitment and sense of duty have remained steadfast and are still evident in the Queen's Christmas Broadcasts today.
Notes:
It was announced on this day by the prime minister of New Zealand that the Queen's Christmas Day speech the following year would be delivered from Auckland.
It has been suggested that the BBC had approached Buckingham Palace regarding the possibility of a televised Broadcast as early as the first year of the Queen's reign (Lacey, Royal: Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, 2002). However, in 1952 only a small minority of people in the United Kingdom - let alone the Commonwealth - possessed a television so such overtures were easily rebuffed. Many Britons would acquire their first sets in 1953 so that they could watch the Coronation live. By the mid-1950s it was becoming much more difficult for the Palace to resist the television cameras.
Five years earlier, during a tour of South Africa, the then Princess Elizabeth had made her famous twenty-first birthday broadcast with the often-quoted lines: 'I declare before you all that my whole life, whether it be long or short, shall be devoted to your service and the service of our great Imperial Commonwealth to which we all belong.' In the 1952 Christmas Message, the sentiment is even more emphatic, as the Queen states: 'I want to ask you all, whatever your religion may be, to pray for me on [Coronation] day - to pray that God may give me wisdom and strength to carry out the solemn promises I shall be making, and that I may faithfully serve Him and you, all the days of my life.' It is, perhaps, surprising that this is not quoted more often by those wishing to downplay periodic rumours that Elizabeth II intends to abdicate.
The speech was broadcast live at 1507 GMT which was then the traditional time.
It was reported that the speech was heard by the Duke of Edinburgh, Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother, Queen Mary, Princess Margaret, Prince Charles, Princess Anne, the Duke and Duchess of Kent, Princess Alexandra and Prince Michael. Prince Philip stayed near the Queen to give her confidence (Seward, The Queen's Speech, 2015), while presumably the other senior royals listened together in another room at Sandringham.
While King George VI had spoken frankly about his health issues in his annual messages in the preceding years, Elizabeth II did not speak much of her personal life and would not make a practice of doing so in subsequent years.
Trivia:
On a personal note, as Elizabeth II's reign begins, this ten-year project of reviewing retrospectively every Christmas Broadcast of the Queen's reign (with each new Broadcast reviewed as it occurred) is now complete and reviews of all the Broadcasts to date are now available (as of January 2021). This does not mean that the Blog ends here: there will hopefully be many new Christmas Broadcasts to review in the years to come and I am now free to post 'on a whim' about matters relating to the Christmas Message!
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