It is traditionally the first question you are asked by the ushers when you arrive at a wedding ceremony: ‘Bride or Groom?’
But when William and Kate marry at Westminster Abbey in less than two weeks, the question will be mere formality as the contrast between the couple’s guests could not be starker. For Kate is the first ‘commoner’ to marry a future King for 350 years – since James II scandalised the court by marrying his mistress Anne Hyde – and her family and friends will stand out among the landed gentry and coronets.
While her family is descended from miners and mill owners, William can trace his family history back to Queen Victoria and centuries beyond. Now, in conjunction with a new television documentary, Meet The Middletons, The Mail on Sunday has charted the tale of two extraordinary families, whose union will produce our future Monarch.
MOTHER AND BABY
Prince William arrived in the world at St Mary’s Hospital in Paddington, West London, on June 21, 1982 – courtesy of the Queen’s own surgeon-gynaecologist, Sir George Pinker. Naturally, William’s first photoshoot was a high-profile affair – taken at Kensington Palace by Lord Snowdon.Born to marry: William and Diana " |
Born to marry: Kate with her mother Carole"
The first photograph of the future Princess shows the baby Kate – and her mop of dark hair – cradled in the arms of her mother Carole. It was taken on January 24, 1982, in the bedroom of her parents’ semi-detached home in Bradfield Southend, Berkshire. She was just 15 days old.
THE FAMILY CHRISTENING
The christening of William Arthur Philip Louis took place on August 4 – the Queen Mother’s Birthday – in 1982.He was baptised in the Music Room at Buckingham Palace by the then Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Robert Runcie, in a Honiton lace christening gown made for Queen Victoria’s eldest daughter, Princess Victoria, and passed down through the family.
The gown jewels: William in lace at Buckingham Palace and Kate's baptism at a local church
Her father Michael sported a traditional dark suit with striped tie for the occasion and is seen here posing proudly with Kate and her mother Carole, who wore a Laura Ashley dress for the down-to-earth family event.
COUPLE'S ANCESTORS WHO COULD HAVE BEEN TWINS
GREAT-GREAT-GREAT-GRANDPARENTSKate may not be blue-blooded like William, but her paternal great-great-great-grandfather Frank Lupton could be the twin of William’s ancestor Edward VII, pictured with his fiancee, the future Queen Alexandra, in 1862.
Blue blood: The Prince of Wales, who was to become Edward VII in 1901 after the long reign of his mother Queen Victoria, with Princess Alexandra
Miner details: Jane Liddle, a miner's wife, and Frank Lupton who amassed a fortune
PARASOL AND PLUS FOURS OR A POSE FROM THE PITS
GREAT-GREAT-GRANDPARENTS
William’s ancestors George V and Queen Mary, seen here posing at Balmoral, could not look more different from Kate Middleton’s great-great-grandparents, miner John Harrison and his wife Jane, pictured in the garden of their modest home in the pit village of Hetton-Le- Hole in Tyne and Wear in the 1950s.
John and Jane Harrison
Sadly, John’s career in the mines was cut tragically short when he was trampled by a runaway pony pulling a coal truck. After lying flat on his back for months, he was forced to give up work, spending the remainder of his life in considerable pain, supported by walking sticks.
A KING'S FORTUNE AND A HUMBLE SHILLING MAN
GREAT-GRANDPARENTSWhile the Duke of York served in the Royal Navy during the First World War and was mentioned in dispatches, Kate’s great-grandfather, Charlie Goldsmith, was one of Field Marshal Kitchener’s ‘Shilling Men’ – so-called owing to their wage of a shilling a day – and served in the Royal Fusiliers.
George, Duke of York and Kate's great-grandfather Charlie Goldsmith both served in the Great War
This photograph of William’s great-grandmother with a Sealyham Terrier was taken in Windsor in 1950, just two years before the death of King George VI.
Proud: the Queen Mother, pictured in 1950" |
Proud: Edith Goldsmith with her dog Bonnie, taken in about 1956
His death left his wife Edith to bring up their youngest children in a condemned flat in Southall, West London.
FORMAL OR FLARES, THE GRANDPARENTS ALL LOVE TO DANCE
GRANDPARENTSThe expression on all their faces looks identical – obviously the Queen and Prince Philip enjoy a dance as much as Ronald and Dorothy Goldsmith, mother and father of Carole Middleton.
But while William’s grandparents dressed in black tie for the 1947 Youth Service Ball in Edinburgh, Kate’s grandfather let his hair down in a trendy velvet smoking jacket and flares at a social event in Southall, West London, in the Seventies.
Cutting a dash: The Queen and prince Philip at a dance in Edinburgh in 1947. |
Cutting a dash: Dorothy and Ronald Goldsmith"
Dorothy died in 2006, three years after her husband.
*Meet The Middletons, Channel 4, 9pm, tomorrow "
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