
King Charles to follow in mother’s footsteps in delivering throne speech
OTTAWA — King Charles is set to open a new session of Parliament on Tuesday, seated in a throne that incorporates a piece of English walnut from Windsor Great Park, a preserve of his mother, the late Queen Elizabeth.
The Royal Family connection is especially appropriate given that the Queen was the first sovereign to deliver a speech from the throne in Canada, a role usually fulfilled by the Governor General.
When the Queen came to Ottawa in 1957, she not only opened the initial session of the 23rd Parliament but made her first televised address, a personal speech to Canadians from a study at Rideau Hall.
Hundreds of journalists from The Canadian Press and other media outlets followed the every move of the Queen and her husband, Prince Philip, during their visit that Thanksgiving weekend.