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There’s been many a cause for celebration for Queen Elizabeth II and the royal family over the past few years; she’s seen two grandsons wed and welcomed great-grandchildren into the world.
But 66 years on the throne has not been without its dark times.
Dotted with terror attacks, wars and devastating deaths within the family, the Queen’s decades-spanning reign has been riddled with tragedy.
But there’s one harrowing memory which stands out amongst the rest as “the most ghastly” of all.
Flashback to July 20, 1982 – What started as a peaceful, sunny day in London took two explosions merely a couple of hours apart to become what the Queen now remembers as “the worst day of her life”.
The day of the Irish Republican Army’s attack on London, two bombs detonated in Hyde Park and Regent’s Park, killing 11 military personnel and seven horses, and injuring 50 civilians,
Andrew Parker Bowles, who oversaw the royal household cavalry at the time, remembers the terror of how it all unfolded.
In an interview with The Express, he said of the fateful day: “It was a nice, sunny day and suddenly one heard this explosion one heard all the time in Northern Ireland.