Prince William breaks royal protocol to hug crying pensioner

Prince William breaks royal protocol to hug crying pensioner
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Jamie  Micklethwaite

By Jamie Micklethwaite


Published: 12/05/2022

- 13:24

Updated: 14/02/2023

- 11:28

The future King showed his softer side by embracing pensioner William Burns

Future King Prince William broke royal protocol to given an overwhelmed royal fan a big hug.

On a two-day visit to Scotland, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge were greeted by crowds outside Cambridge.


When seeing an overwhelmed pensioner crying due to meeting him, William the future king gave him a warm embrace.

The Duchess of Cambridge was left beaming when she came to the aid of a student stumped by a crossword puzzle question about the royal family.

Kate put her knowledge to the test during a visit to the University of Glasgow where she heard how students have been supporting each other during the pandemic and the city’s community struggling to get online.

Prince William hugs pensioner
Prince William hugs pensioner
PA

William joined his wife for the trip to Scotland and earlier joked about Kate becoming broody when they visited a school where she cuddled a baby, sang along with children and spoke to young pupils.

As the couple began their visit to the school, close to the banks of the River Clyde in Inverclyde, the duke joked: “Can you get my wife out of here before she gets broody?”

Jack Baird, 21, a statistics student, tested the future Queen’s knowledge of royal finances when the Cambridges went on a walkabout outside the James McCune Smith learning hub, the main campus building for undergraduates.

He said: “I was stuck with my crossword from The Times, I do it every week.

“It was seven down and the clue was sovereign’s annual allowance.

“I knew it was civil ‘something’ and I asked Kate and she said ‘civil list’.

The Duke of Cambridge during a visit to the University of Glasgow
The Duke of Cambridge during a visit to the University of Glasgow
Jane Barlow

“She looked very excited when she got it.”

The 21-year-old, from Lisburn, Northern Ireland who said the crossword was from last week, added: “She looked thrilled I think she thought ‘I wouldn’t live this down, if I get this wrong’.”

The student confessed to being a concise crossword fanatic, and after pulling a large selection of puzzles from a pocket was ribbed by friends who said he had been known to ask people for answers when queuing outside Glasgow clubs.

William had also joined his wife during the walkabout in Glasgow and earlier they had met students who described a project that provided the community with laptops, free internet and IT mentoring to get them online, when many activities moved onto the internet during the pandemic.

Earlier in the day William and Kate toured St John’s Primary School in Port Glasgow to learn about an innovative project where children interact with a mother and baby to learn about its development and aid their emotional empathy with others.

They watched as Laura Molloy brought her 10-month-old baby Saul for a regular session where the children quizzed her about the infant.

Action for Children, which runs the programme in 18 local authority areas in Scotland, says the sessions, where the pupils are also guided in discussions about their own emotions, improves the behaviour of youngsters, who are kinder with less instances of bullying.

The Cambridges sat cross-legged on the floor with around 35 other children as Saul crawled on a mat, sang nursery rhymes with the children, and they even did the hand actions to Incy Wincy Spider.

Kate asked the group of around 35 seven-year-olds: “Do you think lots of schools should have a project like this?”, and when some replied “Yes”, she added “We do too”.

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