Royals

The Moving Story Behind the Queen’s Special Connection to Balmoral

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Photo: Getty Images

After her ascension to the throne in 1952, Balmoral became even more important. Between July and October every year, it was a haven for her young family, and a place that offered respite from her rigorous schedule of engagements in London. There were, of course, government papers still to be read from her famous red box, and prime ministers to be entertained, from Margaret Thatcher to Tony Blair. But there was also time for leisurely strolls, barbecues, rounds of charades, and chasing the tiny Prince Charles and Princess Anne down cobblestone paths as they sped away in their toy cars. Photographs from the early decades of her reign show the Queen remarkably at ease and quick to laugh—a world away from the sometimes somber, and always dutiful, sovereign seen in so many of her state portraits.

Since then, her love for her summer home has never wavered. Following the death of Prince Philip in April of 2021, she shared a rare private image of her husband of 73 years, which showed the pair sitting in the sun on the grassy pastures at the top of the Coyles of Muick in Balmoral. She returned to the estate as usual that July, and this July, too, following her Platinum Jubilee celebrations in June. Just two days before her death on September 8, 2022, she performed the last of her major royal duties in the drawing room of the castle, accepting the resignation of Boris Johnson and shaking hands with Liz Truss, who was—staggeringly—her 15th prime minister. For the occasion, the Queen chose a pale blue shirt, a grey cardigan and a pleated skirt made from Balmoral tartan.

In the end, it was fitting that her long and illustrious life came to a close in one of the places in the world in which she was happiest—one that holds more than nine decades’ worth of memories.

Below, browse the best vintage photographs of the Queen at Balmoral.