EU Research Queen Elizabeth II Obituary

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1926 — 2022

A Queen of Innovation

With the passing of Queen Elizabeth II on 8 September 2022, we look back at her life and the way she embraced science whole-heartedly, during her 70-year reign. For a position and status that relied so heavily on tradition, the Queen was remarkably open to innovation, trying out new technologies, making them work for the monarchy and probing what was new and next. By Richard Forsyth

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s recently as March 2021, the Queen joined a panel in a virtual science showcase, to mark British Science Week. She talked about meeting the ‘fascinating’ Yuri Gagarin at Buckingham Palace – the first man in space, and was shown images of the Martian landscape and a meteorite that fell to Earth in the UK. Her curt wit and curiosity were evident during the virtual session. The Queen had a healthy attitude to technology and the benefits,

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strides and ambition that comes with it. A glance to her past and it becomes apparent quickly that she wanted to know how things worked. In World War II she served Britain by volunteering in the Women’s Auxiliary Territorial Service (ATS) to become a mechanic, arms deep in engines on many days, something that at the time may have been unusual, within a culture of gender stereotyping. She wasn’t afraid of the ‘technical’, nor hesitant to embrace and master the then typically male-dominated areas of machinery and technology.

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An Early Adopter More accurately, she was an active pioneer of the latest innovations. It was typical of her to adopt new platforms to deliver her messages to the people of Britain. In a speech broadcast on the radio on her 21st birthday in 1947, she said, “There is a motto which has been borne by many of my ancestors – a noble motto, ‘I serve’. Those words were an inspiration to many bygone heirs to the Throne when they made their knightly dedication as they came to manhood. I cannot do quite as they did. But through the inventions of science I can do what was not possible for any of them. I can make my solemn act of dedication with a whole Empire listening. I should like to make that dedication now. It is very simple.” Continuing this commitment, the Queen was the first British monarch to give a televised Christmas address to the nation in 1957, usurping radio broadcast.

On reflection it is hardly surprising she understood the power of this new medium, her televised coronation had been largely responsible for its leapfrogging of radio broadcast and our mass enjoyment of television today. Her coronation in 1953 was heralded as a live televised event and because of that, TV sales had an unprecedented boom. Television licenses increased from 763,000 in 1851 to 3.2 million in 1954. It was a tipping point and a transformational moment for television. In the UK around eight million people watched the coronation from homes and around 10 million packed into other people’s houses for a chance to watch this historic event, albeit in grainy black and white. It was the catalyst for television as the dominant home media. It was not just a scramble for TVs in Britain, as this was the first televised event to be broadcast internationally. The Queen saw its benefits for delivering her messages.

AT COP26 she urged the world leaders to create a “safer, stabler future” and she indicated people hoped the “time for words has now moved to the time of action.” www.euresearcher.com

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