King Charles III and Queen Camilla visiting 9/11 Memorial and other NYC landmarks as part of US trip
The royal couple will meet first responders and victims’ families as part of a state visit marking 250 years of U.S. independence.
- On Wednesday, King Charles III and Queen Camilla visited New York, attending a wreath-laying ceremony at the National 9/11 Memorial where they met first responders and victims' families ahead of the 25th anniversary of the attacks.
- The royals' four-day trip marks 250 years of American independence. Earlier this week, the couple joined President Donald Trump and Melania Trump for tea at the White House, followed by a closed-door Oval Office meeting on Tuesday.
- Queen Camilla will visit the New York Public Library to deliver a new Roo doll for the library's famed collection of Winnie-the-Pooh stuffed animals as the beloved character turns 100 this year.
- King Charles III is touring an urban farming effort in Manhattan for youth affected by food insecurity, then meeting with business and financial leaders before attending a reception for the King's Trust, the charity he founded in 1976.
- Following their New York stop, the monarchs will visit Virginia before returning to the White House on Thursday for a formal farewell from Trump. The King will then travel solo to Bermuda on his first visit as monarch.
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229 Articles
In four days among the various things the king spoke at the Congress, took tea with Trump and visited the 9/11 memorial
King Charles visits 9/11 memorial and other sites in New York
King Charles III and Queen Camilla laid a bouquet of flowers Wednesday at the edge of a memorial pool in lower Manhattan to commemorate the lives lost during the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, 67 of whom were British. The post King Charles visits 9/11 memorial and other sites in New York appeared first on West Hawaii Today.
British King Charles III and Queen Camilla have commemorated the victims of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attack in New York City.
Carlos III visited the memorial on Wednesday to the victims of the September 11 terrorist attacks in New York, where he will also celebrate the cultural and economic ties between the United Kingdom and the United States, at a time of tension between these two historic allies.
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