- John Johnston (Royal Household)
Lieutenant-Colonel Sir John (Johnny) Frederick Dame Johnston
GCVO MC (24 August 1922 -10 September 2006 ) was an officer in theBritish Army and then joined theRoyal Household , serving as Assistant Comptroller and then Comptroller of theLord Chamberlain's Office . Sometimes known as "Stopwatch Johnny", he was one of the Queen's most popularcourtier s. [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?view=DETAILS&grid=&xml=/news/2006/09/13/db1301.xml Obituary] , "The Daily Telegraph ",13 September 2006 ] His duties included co-ordinating the weddings ofCharles, Prince of Wales and Lady Diana Spencer atSt Paul's Cathedral in 1981 and ofPrince Andrew andSarah Ferguson atWestminster Abbey in 1986, and the funeral of theDuchess of Windsor atSt George's Chapel, Windsor , also in 1986. [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,60-2356571,00.html Obituary] , "The Times ",14 September 2006 ]Johnston was born in
Burma , where his father was a banker inMandalay . Brought up as aRoman Catholic , he was educated atAmpleforth College , where he became friends withBasil Hume .In 1941, he joined the 4th Battalion,
Grenadier Guards , then being converted frominfantry into anarmour ed formation withChurchill tank s. He commanded asquadron and then atroop . His troop was part of a diversion force posted to mislead the Germans into expecting an invasion of thePas de Calais , so he landed inNormandy six weeks afterD-Day . His battalion advanced thoughBelgium andHolland , entering German territory nearMinden . He sustained head injuries from a "Panzerfaust " attack on21 April 1945 , and he was hospitalised inBrussels . After convalescing and some leave, he rejoined his unit afterVE Day inSchleswig-Holstein . He was awarded theMilitary Cross for his actions on the advance to theElbe , and remained in the Army afterdemobilisation . He wrote of his war-time experiences in his "Memoirs of a Tank Troop Leader".In 1949, he married the Honourable Elizabeth Hardinge, the younger daughter of
Alexander Hardinge, 2nd Baron Hardinge of Penshurst , who wasPrivate Secretary to the Sovereign from 1936 to 1943. Johnston first met his future wife atWelbeck College , where she was visiting her older sister who was married to another officer. She was later amagistrate in Windsor. Together, they had a son and a daughter. She died in 1995.Johnston was
brigade major of theHousehold Division from October 1959 to August 1962,, and he led the royal procession atTrooping the Colour in 1962, although he quickly had to be taught to ride a horse first. He commanded the 1st Battalion, Grenadier Guards in Germany, and retired from the Army as aLieutenant-Colonel in July 1964.On leaving the Army, he joined the Lord Chamberlain's Office as Assistant Comptroller. He was appointed an Extra
Equerry to the Queen in 1965. Until 1968, theLord Chamberlain 's duties included the licensing (andcensor ing) of plays and theatres under theTheatres Act 1843 . He described the historic role of the Lord Chamberlain's Office in this area in his 1990 book, "The Lord Chamberlain's Blue Pencil". [cite book | author=John Johnston | title=The Lord Chamberlain's Blue Pencil | publisher =Hodder & Stoughton | year= 1990| id=ISBN 0-340-52529-0 ] Amongst his other duties, he helped to organise the celebrations of the Queen'sSilver Jubilee in 1977.He was promoted to Comptroller in 1981, replacing Lieutenant-Colonel Sir
Eric Penn shortly before the 1981 royal wedding. As such, he took charge of protocol,state visit s,investiture s, garden parties, theState Opening of Parliament , royal weddings and royal funerals, administration of the royal palaces and theRoyal Collection , theCentral Chancery of Knighthood , the Lords-in-Waiting, theGentlemen at Arms , theYeomen of the Guard , theRoyal Company of Archers , theQueen's Bargemaster , theRoyal Watermen , and supervisedswan upping . He also controlled royal styles and titles, matters ofprecedence , granting ofRoyal Warrant s, and licensing the use of the royal arms. On one occasion, when dressed in the uniform of theGrenadier Guards , he stood prominently beside the Queen onHorse Guards Parade , holding her handbag.Amongst his other interests, he was president of Hearing Dogs for the Deaf.
For many years, he occupied a
grace and favour cottage inHome Park, Windsor . He bought a cottage in west Wales in the 1970s which he used as a holiday home. He was appointed MVO in 1971, advanced to CVO in 1977, and then KCVO in 1981. He was appointed GCVO in 1987, the year in which he retired in 1987 and was succeeded as Comptroller by Lieutenant-ColonelGeorge Alston-Roberts-West . He moved to a house inWindsor Great Park .References
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