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H.R.H. Princess
Alexandra of Kent
December 1961
Princess Alexandra visited
Aden for the Tercentenary celebrations of the 1st
Batallion Queen's Royal Surrey Regiment. She inspected
the Parade and took the salute at the Tercentenary
Parade on 7th December 1961, visited Al-Ittihad the same
day and also visited the Reilly Centre for the Blind.

H.R.H. Princess Alexandra of Kent
7th December 1961
A year later in 1962 the Princess
would return to visit some of Aden's ancient ruins.
Princess Alexandra's tour of the Far East was to provide
headaches for the Foreign Office, Commonwealth Relations
Office and Colonial Office.
The trip was made as part of a Far
East tour taking in Hong Kong, Burma, Thailand and
Japan. At the last minute the itinerary had been changed
to allow the Princess to spend three days in Vancouver
visiting friends on the outward leg of her journey.
The return leg had also been altered to allow the
princess to tour ancient ruins in Aden. The extra cost
of that detour (£125,000 at today's prices) fell on the
Colonial Office.
In addition, the Princess demanded a clothing allowance
equivalent to £60,000.
Miss G E Miles of the Treasury noted: "We are
considerably perturbed at the way in which Sir Philip
Hay [comptroller to the princess] has extended the
itinerary originally agreed, and arranged for extra
stops at the last moment.
"Sir Philip said that the estimate for clothing was
larger than anticipated because the princess would need
two complete outfits - one for the Far Eastern countries
and another for the Canadian winter. It is difficult to
see how the FO could be expected to bear the cost of a
winter outfit for the princess to wear in Canada
visiting private friends".
Sir Philip countered by arguing that the winter outfits
were needed because of the difference in climate between
Japan and Hong Kong. He refused to provide itemised
accounts, arguing that the taxpayer was only "making a
contribution" to the princess's expenses. |