6 July 2025

Remembering

Okay, I am back from "The Hammer and Pincers" quiz with four pints of "Stones" in my belly. Though we did not win the overall prize this week, we were still first to a line of five correct answers. I have just stripped tonight's roasted chicken of any remaining meat and I have put the resultant carcass out on the lawn for a passing fox to sniff before guzzling down.

And so what are we left with when it comes to blogging?

I thought I might use this opportunity to capture a memory from long ago in written words. Arguably, memories are the means by which we mark our presence upon this spinning planet. Here we go.

I am sixteen years old and I have been chosen to represent East Yorkshire youth clubs  at a special reception in St James's Palace in London. It is to mark sixty years of youth clubs in England and Wales - under the auspices of The National Association of Youth Clubs.

Before the main event, I get to meet the pop singer Lulu, Lord John Hunt who led the successful Mount Everest expedition in 1953 and the famous DJ and TV presenter Jimmy Savile. He jokes that it is nice to have another Yorkshire lad down there in London and we shake hands. Retrospectively, it seems most distasteful that he was a patron of The National Association of Youth Clubs but back in 1971 nobody realised the true nature of that self-obsessed sex monster.

I visit a lavatory in St James's Palace and it is like no lavatory I have ever been in before. The Victorian toilet bowl is like a throne on a kind of platform and there are lotions and potions and soft white towels for hand cleaning.

On to the main event where there is a finger buffet with china teacups and strict instructions about where we should all stand before The Queen Mother drifts into the room with her little entourage.

She was Queen Elizabeth II's mother and formerly the wife of King George VI who came to the throne by default when King Edward VIII abdicated.

She reaches me and puts out a gloved hand, smiling with her little brown teeth on display. She would have been my current age (71) that afternoon but she seemed older. She asks me where I am from and then she asks me if I know Hotham Hall where she enjoyed some happy times when she was a child but I don't know the place. She is most charming and soon moves on to the next youth club member - representing a different county.

I find my way back to Kings Cross Station and catch an evening train back to Hull. Looking back, I think I must have had some balls back then to negotiate the London transport system at the age of sixteen when I was a country bumpkin. Stuff like that did not faze me at all.

31 comments:

  1. That is an amazing experience to have at age 16.

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    1. I guess it was but at the time I took nit in my stride.

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  2. Curious about the QM's "little brown teeth." Was that an observation you made at the time or is it a retrospective one?

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    1. It was an observation I made at the time. Unlike some people with bad teeth, she revealed hers naturally. The teeth were made more horrid by the contrast with her white-powdered face.

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  3. Great experience in youth club to met the Queen but on the other hand there was a vile character waiting to molest boys.

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    1. Actually, Savile mostly molested girls.

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  4. You shook hands with and spoke to the Queen Mother?? I am so very envious. What an experience.

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    1. She should have knighted me there and then... "Arise Sir Pudding!"

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  5. Thank you for sharing this particular memory. I guess at 16, most of us are either a bundle of insecurities (such as myself, wearing glasses and having no bosom to write home about) or we feel like nothing can happen to us, invincible and immortal. You clearly fell into the latter category.

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  6. Quite an experience, I hope you didn't make a mess of that posh loo?

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    1. Unfortunately, I didn't see a bog brush.

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  7. Chosen? All of Yorkshire! How? By who?

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    1. No. Not all of Yorkshire Tasker - just The East Riding. Chosen by the county committee following nomination. I do not know how many nominations they received but they chose well.

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  8. Can't dig up a memory to compete with that! At 16 I did spend a month in Yorkshire (and a couple of days in London on the way there), but alas the Royal family totally ignored my visit...

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    1. I am sorry that you were not invited to Buckingham Palace for afternoon tea with our late queen.

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  9. Well intrigued by the Queen Mother's teeth, I supposed she joined her illustrious ancestor Elizabeth 1st who had black teeth from eating too much sugar.

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    1. I prefer white teeth but not the fake Persil-bright of rich American teeth. Maybe The Queen Mother could have had some false teeth made from horses' gnashers. Would have been a good look... especially at Ascot.

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  10. Never saw the Queen Mum, but I did see Elizabeth II once in the late 1970s, driven by in a Bentley in Winnipeg while I was sitting at a bus stop like the peasant I am, LOL.

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    1. It is surprising that The Queen did not stop to offer you a lift.

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  11. A memory that has endured the long, long, passage of time.

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    1. Why two "longs" David? They make me seem Victorian.

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  12. I cannot top shaking hands with the Queen Mother, but I must have been a similar age when selected, with 5 others from our school cadet corps, to provide the guard of honour for the Queen Mother when she dedicated the Lady Chapel at our local parish church.

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  13. That is a very fine memory! Not one that any of us can top, I'm sure! As I recall, the Queen Mother was much beloved.

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  14. I wouldn't like to travel to London on my own. You were an incredibly brave sixteen year old YP.

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    1. I also hitch-hiked down to London to see Grand Funk Railroad in Hyde Park.

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  15. That's quite an honor and I'm sure your family must have been very proud of you, Neil!
    Don't drink so much at trivia night! Four pints sounds like a lot to me.

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    1. Even if I cut out beer the rest of the week I feel that I need those four pints on a Sunday (alcohol 3.8%).

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  16. What a great story! I love that you got to meet the Queen Mother AND Lulu! It's pretty impressive that she could whip up a somewhat personalized question, though maybe she asked that of anyone she met from Yorkshire.

    When I was 16 I could barely conceive of public transportation, much less try to use it. We just didn't have it where I lived -- it was a car or nothing, and I was just learning to drive at that age. A year or two later I was using the Washington Metro on my own when I visited my grandparents, but there's a big difference between 16 and 18!

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Mr Pudding welcomes all genuine comments - even those with which he disagrees. However, puerile or abusive comments from anonymous contributors will continue to be given the short shrift they deserve. Any spam comments that get through Google/Blogger defences will also be quickly deleted.

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