Email

Margaret Thatcher: Queen leads mourners at funeral

The Queen has led mourners in St Paul’s Cathedral at the funeral of Baroness Thatcher, Britain’s longest serving prime minister of modern times.

Margaret Thatcher: Queen leads mourners at funeral

More than 2,000 guests from around the world paid their last respects at the biggest such occasion since the Queen Mother’s funeral in 2002.

Thousands of members of the public and the armed forces lined the funeral procession route through London.

PM David Cameron said it was a “fitting tribute” to a major figure.

Four thousand police officers were on duty in central London but, despite concerns about demonstrations, only a small number of protesters voiced their opposition to Lady Thatcher’s policies and there were no arrests.

Elsewhere, around the country:

  • Residents of a South Yorkshire village scarred by pit closures”celebrated” her funeral
  • Miners in a former pit village in County Durham gathered during the funeral, exactly 20 years after their pit’s closure
  • A rose was unveiled in memory of Baroness Thatcher in Grantham, Lincolnshire, where she was born
  • Students at Somerville, Lady Thatcher’s former Oxford University college, gathered to watch the funeral
  • Self-styled “Essex Man” Bill Sharp witnessed Baroness Thatcher’s funeral procession

The congregation at St Paul’s included Lady Thatcher’s family and all surviving British prime ministers Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and Sir John Major, the current cabinet and surviving members of Lady Thatcher’s governments.

There were tears, and occasional laughter, as the Bishop of London, The Right Reverend Richard Chartres, paid tribute to Lady Thatcher’s forthright character in a simple service, which, at her personal request, did not include any eulogies.

Read full article on BBC

Related posts

Death toll in attack on Christmas market in Germany rises to 5 and more than 200 injured

What we know about the suspect behind the German Christmas market attack

US Senate passes government funding bill, averts shutdown