Guernsey Press

Kate hugs cancer patient after Christmas Day service at Sandringham

The Princess of Wales joined other members of the royal family as they walked from Sandringham House to the church.

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The Princess of Wales has hugged and spoken with a cancer patient after attending the royal family’s traditional Christmas Day church service following her own “brutal” year with the disease.

Kate, alongside her husband the Prince of Wales and their children – Prince George, 11, Princess Charlotte, nine, and Prince Louis, six – joined the King and Queen as they walked the short distance from Sandringham House to St Mary Magdalene Church, past a crowd of well-wishers.

Following the service, which lasted about 45 minutes, Kate hugged 73-year-old Karen Maclean from North Lincolnshire, who said she had had “20 years of cancer”, as she spoke with both the princess and Charles about the disease.

Kate with an arm-full of flowers talks to a child
Kate speaks to a young well-wisher at Sandringham (Aaron Chown/PA)

“I’ve met the King before. He said to me ‘I can remember you’, I’m thinking ‘what!’, like many years ago?”

She said that Charles and Kate seemed “very well actually, considering what they’re going through”.

She added after hugging Kate: “What a privilege.”

Karen Maclean
Karen Maclean said it was privilege to hug Kate (Sam Russell/PA)

Also in the walking party was the Princess Royal and the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh.

Princess Beatrice and her husband Edoardo Mapelli Mozzi attended the service after she changed her travel plans due to medical advice during her pregnancy.

Absent was Beatrice’s father, the Duke of York, who has been dogged by links to an alleged Chinese spy.

Andrew, 64, had joined the family at church for the last two years but was expected to be spending Christmas Day with his ex-wife Sarah, Duchess of York this year at Royal Lodge, the home they share in Windsor Great Park, Berkshire.

Charles speaks to the vicar following the service at St Mary Magdalene Church
Charles speaks to the vicar following the service at St Mary Magdalene Church (Aaron Chown/PA)

Retired chef John Loughrey, 69, from Wandsworth, south London, said he and Sky London travelled by train to King’s Lynn then took a bus, arriving at Sandringham at 7.30pm on Christmas Eve.

“We had sleeping bags with us and a heat pad,” Mr Loughrey said.

The Prince and Princess of Wales and their three children
The Princess of Wales, Prince Louis, Princess Charlotte, the Prince of Wales and Prince George (Aaron Chown/PA)

“We came here for Catherine. She’s been an inspiration the last year what she’s been through.”

Mr London, 64, from Paddington, central London, said: “If you’re a royalist and you love the royals you do anything.”

 Lady Louise Windsor, the Duchess of Edinburgh and Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence, followed by the Earl of Wessex and the Duke of Edinburgh
Lady Louise Windsor, the Duchess of Edinburgh and Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence, followed by the Earl of Wessex and the Duke of Edinburgh (Aaron Chown/PA)

They headed inside and the national anthem was sung before the first hymn, O Come, All Ye Faithful.

William has described the past year, in which his wife and father were treated for cancer, as “brutal”.

He said 2024 has “probably been the hardest year in my life” and a “dreadful” experience.

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