- Pillar Box War
The Pillar Box WarFact|date=May 2008 refers to a number ofFact|date=May 2008 politically motivated acts of vandalism against
post box es inScotland during the early 1950s in a dispute over the correct title of the new British monarch,Queen Elizabeth II .Background
Ascending to the throne in February 1952 following the death of her father, George VI, the former Princess Elizabeth adopted the Royal style of Elizabeth the Second of the United Kingdom. This was reflected in the Queen's
Royal Cypher , which took the Latin form 'EIIR'.Some objected to this usage as the new Queen was in fact only the first Elizabeth to reign over the
United Kingdom or indeedGreat Britain , Elizabeth I having been solely theQueen of England . In 1953,John MacCormick took legal action against theLord Advocate in the case ofMacCormick v. Lord Advocate challenging the right of the Queen to call herself Elizabeth the Second. The case failed on the grounds that the matter was within theRoyal Prerogative and thus the Queen was free to adopt any title she saw fit, however a submission by the Crown stated that the Royal title was decided to reflect the highest number from either theKingdom of England or theKingdom of Scotland and whilst Elizabeth II was not the second Elizabeth of the United Kingdom, she was the second Elizabeth in the territory which now made up the United Kingdom.Actions and legacy
SomeFact|date=September 2008 occasions of vandalism and even explosions of
post box es which carried the Queen's EIIR insignia were recorded. One particular pillar box in Edinburgh's Inch district was repeatedly vandelised with tar, paint and a hammer before being blown to pieces less than three months after its unveiling [The Scots Independent, March 1953, Page 2]The folksongs "Sky High Joe" [http://supersearch.mudcat.org/@displaysong.cfm?SongID=10192] and "The Ballad of the Inch" [http://www.scotsindependent.org/songbook/balladof_theinch.htm] commemorates these events.
After 1953, new post boxes were placed in Scotland carrying only the
Crown of Scotland image rather than the EIIR cypher, which continued to be used rest of the United Kingdom, and indeed in some of the Queen's other realms and territories.References
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