Queen Elizabeth II really an army mechanic during WW-II?
LONDON : During his speech at Buckingham Palace on Monday night, President Trump remembered D-Day and commended Queen Elizabeth II for her service during World War II.
The anniversary of the largest war invasion in history is coming up on June 6, and while many Americans have been taught about WWII, few were likely aware of the British monarch’s military service during it.
The queen is a trained a mechanic and worked for the Women’s Auxiliary Territorial Service during the war, according the BBC. She learned how to fix machinery and drive a military truck.
As Mr. Trump said during his state banquet speech, During 1940 and 1941, the Nazi war machine dropped thousands of bombs on Britain, many of them on London. Buckingham Palace was bombed 16 separate times during the war.
The queen – then Princess Elizabeth – became an honorary second subaltern of the Army in 1945. The London Gazette announced the princess’ service number in the Auxiliary Territorial Service; 23087.
A photo captured in April 1945 depicts the princess showing her mother, Queen Elizabeth I, a car engine that she worked on. Mr. Trump referenced that photo during his speech. “That young mechanic was the future Queen — that great, great woman,” he said.
Queen Elizabeth II is the only female member of the royal family to ever serve in the armed forces, according to the BBC, but her male descendants have followed – including Prince Harry, who served in the British Army for 10 years, officially leaving in 2015.
President Trump will travel to Portsmouth, England, and Normandy in France this week to commemorate the anniversary of the D-Day landing 75 years ago, when the queen was just 18 years old.
By February 1945, the war was still raging, and Elizabeth had turned 18. At her own insistence, according to the Royal Collection Trust, she joined the Auxiliary Territorial Service as a subaltern and trained as a truck mechanic and driver.
And yes, as Trump said, the Queen Mother visited her daughter in the field, along with Elizabeth’s father, King George VI. By the end of the war later that year, Elizabeth had reached the rank of junior commander. To this day, she is the only female member of the royal family to have served in the military. She is also the last remaining head of state to have served during World War II, according to the BBC.(With Agency Inputs ).