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For those New Zealanders old enough to have experienced it, the visit of the young Queen and her dashing husband, Prince Philip, to New Zealand in the summer of 1953-54, is a never-to-be forgotten event.� For those who were children at the time, we recall the BIG Day, marked for months in the calendar, when we dressed in our posh clothes, pinned a royal tour medallion to our chests, collected a butter box to stand on, a Union Jack to wave, and perhaps a periscope to look through, and set out to �see� the Queen.
Perhaps three in every four New Zealanders did see her, as the Queen visited 46 towns or cities and attended 110 separate functions.� One woman saw her 30 times.� Crowds would turn up hours before and wait patiently for the split second when she drove past.� At Tirau, a community of 600 people, there was a crowd of 10,000.� At the Ellerslie and Trentham races crowds turned their backs on the horses to gawk at the royal box.�
People went to extraordinary lengths to show their devotion.� Sheep were dyed in the patriotic colours of red, white and blue; in New Plymouth both bowling club members and the local pony club formed into an E on the ground.� Screens were erected to hide unsightly buildings, and citizens were instructed when and how to plant blue lobelias, red salvias and white begonias. Hardly a car did not sport a Union Jack, hardly a building in the main cities was not covered in bunting and flowers during the day and electric lights at night.� This was truly a remarkable event.
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