admiral – USMAIL24.COM https://usmail24.com News Portal from USA Wed, 13 Mar 2024 23:48:30 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 https://usmail24.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/Untitled-design-1-100x100.png admiral – USMAIL24.COM https://usmail24.com 32 32 195427244 Philippe de Gaulle, admiral and son of Charles de Gaulle, dies at the age of 102 https://usmail24.com/philippe-de-gaulle-dead-html/ https://usmail24.com/philippe-de-gaulle-dead-html/#respond Wed, 13 Mar 2024 23:48:30 +0000 https://usmail24.com/philippe-de-gaulle-dead-html/

Admiral Philippe de Gaulle, the eldest child of French war leader and former President Charles de Gaulle, died in Paris on Wednesday. He was 102. His death was confirmed by the Élysée Palace, the seat of the French presidency. His son Yves told Le Figaro newspaper that he died “in the night of Tuesday to […]

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Admiral Philippe de Gaulle, the eldest child of French war leader and former President Charles de Gaulle, died in Paris on Wednesday. He was 102.

His death was confirmed by the Élysée Palace, the seat of the French presidency. His son Yves told Le Figaro newspaper that he died “in the night of Tuesday to Wednesday” at the Institution Nationale des Invalides, the historic French veterans hospital in central Paris. The French Navy’s official Twitter account said Admiral de Gaulle died on Wednesday.

Admiral de Gaulle spent his life in the shadow of his father, France’s wartime savior and founder of the Fifth Republic, despite his own illustrious record in the French Resistance and his distinguished military career thereafter.

As a young naval officer in World War II, he fought in the English Channel and the Atlantic Ocean; personally received the surrender of German troops in Paris occupying the Palais Bourbon, now the French Senate, in August 1944; “took part in all the battles of the Liberation,” said the Elysée; and was wounded six times.

He later became a naval pilot and fought in the French wars in Indochina and Algeria. He ended his military service in 1982 as Inspector General of the French Navy.

None of that career had been enough to merit any particular warmth from the stern General de Gaulle. Philippe was nevertheless the careful keeper of his father’s memory, in charge of the general’s papers and of the family home in northeastern France, at Colombey-les-Deux Églises. He unexpectedly revealed his father’s human side in a series of interviews that formed the book ‘De Gaulle, Mon Père’, which became a bestseller in France in 2003.

In those interviews, Philippe de Gaulle demonstrated the family’s characteristic stoicism, which in his case persisted throughout his life as the son of a man after whom a thousand streets in France are named.

“From time to time I have had to endure various annoyances,” he said coolly to the interviewer, Michel Tauriac.

He once recalled of the father who called him “dear old boy” and whose hooked nose and straight figure he inherited: “After hugging me, which he rarely did, he sent me away after fifteen minutes.”

On his father’s death in 1970 at the age of 79, Philippe said: “He often gave me the impression that he would have sacrificed his son as willingly as himself, to serve his historical destiny.”

Philippe de Gaulle was born in Paris on December 28, 1921. His father, then a young army captain, had already earned a reputation for courage during the First World War. His mother was Yvonne (Vendroux) de Gaulle, whose northern French family was prominent in shipbuilding and biscuit making.

Philippe insisted on a military career, against his father’s wishes to become a diplomat – a rare example of him thwarting the older man.

In June 1940, after the German invasion of France, he reached England with his mother and two sisters on the 19th, the day after his father’s historic call for resistance, broadcast on the BBC. After the war, his father decided not to award him the highest decoration of the resistance, the Compagnon de la Libération. He explained, “Everyone knows you were my first companion.”

After his military career was over, Admiral de Gaulle was elected Senator of Paris in 1986 on the strength of a right-wing party led by Maurice Couve de Murville, who had been his father’s prime minister after leading the collaborationist Vichy during the war. government had served.

In addition to his son Yves, Admiral de Gaulle is survived by three other sons: Jean, Charles and Pierre. His wife, Henriette (de Montalembert) de Gaulle, died in 2014. His sister Anne died in 1948 and his sister Elisabeth died in 2013.

Interviewed by Le Figaro after he reached 100, Mr. de Gaulle said: “I would have preferred to give part of my long life to my father.”

Aurelien Breeden reporting contributed.

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Like Mother like daughter! Princess Anne wears Queen Elizabeth II’s admiral mantle during a church service in London https://usmail24.com/like-mother-like-daughter-princess-anne-wears-queen-elizabeth-iis-admirals-cloak-church-service-london-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/ https://usmail24.com/like-mother-like-daughter-princess-anne-wears-queen-elizabeth-iis-admirals-cloak-church-service-london-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/#respond Fri, 03 Nov 2023 10:39:35 +0000 https://usmail24.com/like-mother-like-daughter-princess-anne-wears-queen-elizabeth-iis-admirals-cloak-church-service-london-htmlns_mchannelrssns_campaign1490ito1490/

Princess Anne paid a moving tribute to her mother earlier this week when she wore Queen Elizabeth’s Admiral’s Cloak for Choral Evensong at London’s Temple Church. The 73-year-old Princess Royal wore the stunningly elegant cape worn by the late monarch in several portraits – including a famous series of photographs by Cecil Beaton – and […]

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Princess Anne paid a moving tribute to her mother earlier this week when she wore Queen Elizabeth’s Admiral’s Cloak for Choral Evensong at London’s Temple Church.

The 73-year-old Princess Royal wore the stunningly elegant cape worn by the late monarch in several portraits – including a famous series of photographs by Cecil Beaton – and read a Bible passage from 1 Corinthians.

The queen, who died last September, can also be seen in an iconic portrait by Annie Leibovitz from 2007.

Anne seemed moved by the evening service in the Temple Church, which is a royal feature – meaning it falls under the direct jurisdiction of the monarch and not the province in which it lies.

Her voice sounded confident as she read the text, which began with the words, “Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, yet I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal.”

Princess Anne paid a moving tribute to her mother earlier this week when she wore Queen Elizabeth’s Admiral’s Cloak for Choral Evensong at London’s Temple Church

“And though I have the gift of prophecy and understand all mysteries and all knowledge; and though I have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not charity, yet I am nothing.”

A passage from 1 Corinthians was also read during the queen’s funeral.

It is believed that Anne’s sleek black cloak was prized by her mother, as she chose to wear it in more than one portrait.

It has gold buttons and intricate detailing on the collar closures, but is otherwise a simple yet regal design.

Anne wore a blue patterned dress under the coat and styled her hair in a classic, neat updo.

Photographer Cecil Beaton, who over the years became the favorite photographer of high society, depicted her in a selection of images from 1968.

Photos from the year show the monarch smiling to the side, in her element as she dons the black cape.

A description of one of the images on the Q&A website describes the intentions behind the fashion choice.

Wearing the stunningly elegant cape that the late monarch wore in several portraits, including a famous series of photographs by Cecil Beaton (pictured)

Wearing the stunningly elegant cape that the late monarch wore in several portraits, including a famous series of photographs by Cecil Beaton (pictured)

Anne wore a blue patterned dress under the coat and styled her hair in a classic, neat updo

Anne wore a blue patterned dress under the coat and styled her hair in a classic, neat updo

“Beaton has eliminated the beautiful regalia and sparkling gowns seen in other portraits to create a contemplative and timeless image of the monarch,” it reads.

A commemorative cover of Time Magazine depicted the Queen, in the cloak, as shot by Cecil as she died.

Annie Leibovitz’s infamous theatrical shot of the Queen, recorded in 2007, also shows her wearing the mantle.

The photographer has since recounted the experience in a memoir and admitted she was inspired by Cecil Beaton.

In Annie Leibovitz at Work, she recalled how the royal family seemed to be in a bad mood during the shoot and that the photo in the cloak was the last one taken.

That photo was later digitally superimposed on photos of the garden.

The Queen is also said to have donned the cape during her Diamond Jubilee in 2012, when she wrapped herself in warmth during the Buckingham Palace concert.

The Queen is also said to have donned the cape during her Diamond Jubilee in 2012, as she wrapped herself in warmth at the Buckingham Palace concert to mark the occasion

The Queen is also said to have donned the cape during her Diamond Jubilee in 2012, as she wrapped herself in warmth at the Buckingham Palace concert to mark the occasion

Anne’s moving fashion tribute to her mother follows an emotional interview from the Princess Royal earlier this year.

In May, she spoke of her heartbreak as she left Balmoral after the Queen’s death, recounting the “moving” moment she saw thousands of grieving Britons line the streets to say goodbye.

In a rare, candid interview, the stoic Anne spoke about her relationship with Elizabeth and paid tribute to “huge numbers of people” who lined the roads from Balmoral to Edinburgh, and later from London to Windsor in the aftermath of her death.

The princess, who was visibly moved as she accompanied her mother’s coffin in a funeral procession last September, said she “took in a lot of it” as she walked past mourners, adding that she “saw people along the way who knew’.

She told Canada CBC News: ‘It was such an impressive sight, and it was more than that because it was really moving (to see) how people reacted and how they did things.

Anne's moving fashion tribute to her mother follows an emotional interview from the Princess Royal earlier this year

Anne’s moving fashion tribute to her mother follows an emotional interview from the Princess Royal earlier this year

‘The large numbers of people came to very special places, you would never want to miss that and the atmosphere it created.’

The Princess spoke of the number of people from rural communities across Scotland who brought their ponies and horses outside after braiding their tails.

There were also tractors along the road in a guard of honor.

When asked how she felt about leaving the Queen’s beloved Balmoral with her mother for the last time, she spoke of her own pain.

She said: “Leaving Balmoral was never easy, but it never has been. I mean, I was just as bad when I left as a kid.”

The queen had chosen her only daughter to accompany the funeral procession and saw Princess Anne take on perhaps the most difficult role after the monarch’s death.

Pictured being driven behind the hearse in a Bentley, Anne, who was accompanied by her husband of 30 years, Sir Timothy Laurence, was visibly moved as she looked out at members of the public who came to pay their respects.

Pictured: Anne and Zara Tindall stand outside Balmoral Castle, following the death of the late Queen

Pictured: Anne and Zara Tindall stand outside Balmoral Castle, following the death of the late Queen

Pictured being driven behind the hearse in a Bentley, Anne, who was accompanied by her husband of 30 years, Sir Timothy Laurence, was visibly moved

Pictured being driven behind the hearse in a Bentley, Anne, who was accompanied by her husband of 30 years, Sir Timothy Laurence, was visibly moved

The mother and daughter had shared a close bond, which was evident every time they were seen together.

Poignantly reflecting on their exceptionally close mother-daughter bond, she said, “The relationship, if you’re lucky, remains pretty much the same throughout your life.”

In the interview, which took place just days before her brother’s coronation and ahead of her visit to New Brunswick in a few weeks, the Princess spoke with sadness about the tragic photo of the Queen sitting alone and sad at Prince’s funeral Philip.

When asked by the interviewer if she believed it was “theft” that her mother was forced to be alone at a time of immense grief, she agreed.

She said, “Yes, you’re absolutely right. In a way, I’m glad we didn’t see that at the time. When you see the picture, it’s somehow even worse.”

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