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News
Desmond Allen | Executive Editor  
June 9, 2012

A fortuitous J’can connection with The Queen’s Diamond Jubilee

IF it’s egg, Jamaica has to be in the red!

As Queen Elizabeth II celebrates her Diamond JubileJamaican Bar wants to review amendments to Legal Profession Acte, one British-born Jamaican can look back across the years when she was a witness of sorts to the events leading up to the coronation of Princess Elizabeth as Queen.

Penelope Jane Stewart, affectionately known as ‘PJ’, ex-wife of hotel mogul Gordon ‘Butch’ Stewart, was living in Kenya with her family when news came that King George VI, father of Princess Elizabeth, had died in England. That set in train a series of fortuitous events that would touch PJ’s family.

The story began when PJ’s father, Michael Foxley Norris, decided to leave England to establish a farm, along with his partner, Peter Marrian, in Nyeri, a small town at the foothills of the Aberdare Mountains in Kenya in 1948.

Foxley Norris took his wife, Daphne, who was a nurse, and their three daughters — Carola, six; Marcia, three; and PJ, then one year old. A fourth daughter, Sarah, was born in the east African country. While he farmed mainly livestock and coffee, his wife operated a clinic as medical treatment was hard to come by for the Kikuyu and Masai tribal people living in Nyeri.

One end of the farm which they called Mweiga Estate bordered on the Aberdare Forest that teemed with wildlife such as elephants, rhinoceros, antelopes, warthogs, lions and leopards.

PJ recalled that a Nyeri hotelier, owner of the Outspan Hotel, had built a two-room tree house, later to be called Treetops Hotel, a safe vantage point in the forest from which visitors on safari could view the wildlife as the animals gathered to drink at the watering hole.

“We would drive up to the edge of the forest and walk 10 minutes to Treetops lookout post,” PJ recounts. We had to be escorted by a hunter armed with a rifle. We were told not to talk so as not to startle the animals. I remember being so terrified as a small child. It was both chilling and thrilling.”

It helped that the hunter was her godfather, Jim Corbett, who was also an author, PJ tells the Jamaica Observer.

PJ was 10 years old when the Treetops owner invited Princess Elizabeth and her husband, Prince Phillip to vacation at the safari hotel, which by now had been expanded to four rooms.

“Her Landrover drove through our property on the way to Treetops. There was no pomp and pageantry. My mom, dad and the four of us children lined up by the roadside to see them. They stopped to speak to Jim Corbett who introduced us to the Royal couple.

“Princess Elizabeth remarked to my father: ‘It must have been your grandfather, William Foxley Norris (who was Dean of Westminster) who crowned my father, King George’,” PJ recalls.

Late that night, PJ’s dad got a call like no other. His was the only phone in the area and he lived a short distance from Treetops. The call came from the Outspan Hotel and the news was tragic.

“The caller said King George VI had died (of cancer, she was told) and Princess Elizabeth was to return to England immediately to be crowned Queen. My dad was told that they were trying to get the princess by radio and he was to be on standby to take the message to her, if they did not get through. In the end they did get through to her by radio.”

The royal couple left for Nairobi and flew out to England. The following year, at age 26, she was crowned Queen of England.

After 10 years in Kenya, PJ’s family returned to England. She migrated to Jamaica in 1972 and later married Butch Stewart. The union produced two children, Jaime and Adam, the deputy chairman and CEO of the ATL Group which includes the Jamaica Observer.

PJ is now a full-time painter, exhibiting both in Jamaica and overseas. She works with Missionaries Of the Poor, designing, painting and constructing the sets for Father Richard HoLung’s musical productions.

She also established a fund-raising entity called Back on the Rack, the proceeds of which go to the Missionaries of the Poor. It is a once-a-month sale of new and slightly used clothes and household items that have been donated by friends, both here and overseas. It now has a large team of volunteers who participate in the sales.

 

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