Queen Elizabeth: minute's silence held at reflection events across Northern Ireland

The Deputy Mayor of Antrim and Newtownabbey Councillor Leah Smyth and Elected Members were joined by hundreds of people attending a National Moment of Reflection candle-light service at the Platinum Jubilee Garden at Antrim Castle Gardens (tonight or Sunday 19 September) giving residents an opportunity to come together and reflect on the life and legacy of the late Queen Elizabeth II and give thanks for her 70 years of service.
Author: Nigel GouldPublished 19th Sep 2022
Last updated 19th Sep 2022

A minute's silence was held at locations across Northern Ireland to mourn the death of the Queen.

Throughout Sunday, hundreds of people flocked to the village of Hillsborough to lay flowers at the gate of the castle, the royal residence in Northern Ireland.

Thousands are believed to have visited the front gates of Hillsborough Castle ahead of the moment of reflection on the life and legacy of the late monarch.

A gong was sounded as the minute's silence began, prompting the crowd to bow their heads as they stood in front of floral tributes left at the gates of the castle.

The Deputy Mayor of Antrim and Newtownabbey Councillor Leah Smyth and Elected Members were joined by hundreds of people attending a National Moment of Reflection candle-light service at the Platinum Jubilee Garden at Antrim Castle Gardens (tonight or Sunday 19 September) giving residents an opportunity to come together and reflect on the life and legacy of the late Queen Elizabeth II and give thanks for her 70 years of service.

Elsewhere, there were National Moment of Reflection candle-light services at the Platinum Jubilee Garden at Antrim Castle Gardens (main pic and immediately above) and at Mossley Mill in Newtownabbey (see below).

The Mayor of Antrim and Newtownabbey Alderman Stephen Ross and Elected Members were joined by hundreds of people attending a National Moment of Reflection candlelight service at Mossley Mill tonight, Sunday 19th September 2022, giving residents an opportunity to come together and reflect on the life and legacy of the late Queen Elizabeth II and give thanks for her 70 years of service.

In Belfast, people gathered at the mural of the Queen on the Shankill Road and West Belfast Orange Hall's memorial garden ahead of the minute's silence.

William Humphrey, chairman of the West Belfast Orange Hall Committee and a former member of the Northern Ireland Assembly, told those gathered at the Orange Hall that the Queen was respected "not just as our monarch, but as an international stateswoman".

"We will never see the like of her again. Tonight we are gathered here to join with the rest of the nation in that one-minute silence.

"We have lost someone who, for many of us, started off as the daughter of this nation, became the mother of our nation, the grandmother of our nation, and the great-grandmother of our nation.

"I think it's fair to say that for all of us, and that's right across the country, the Queen's passing was like someone in our own family passing, and I think that pays tribute to how she was loved across every household in the kingdom."

Members dressed in their orange collarettes then bowed their heads during the minute's silence.

Afterwards, a flautist played Abide With Me for those gathered in front of the illuminated building and a short service was held.

The silence was also observed in other venues across Northern Ireland, including at Belfast International Airport and the landmark tourist attraction Titanic Belfast.

A cross-community service of prayer and reflection was held from 6pm at St Macartin's Church of Ireland Cathedral and at St Michael's Catholic Church in Enniskillen, Co Fermanagh, where the congregation retraced the path the Queen took from one church to the other during her 2012 visit.