Games baton is welcomed in Tilbury by dignitaries and schoolchildren
By Neil Speight
8th Jul 2022 | Local News
SCHOOLCHILDREN from Grays, Tilbury and Chadwell St Mary cheered on The Birmingham 2022 Queen's Baton Relay when it arrived at Tilbury this morning (Friday, 8 July).
Pupils at The Gateway Learning Community Trust, a multi-academy trust of five schools in Tilbury and Chadwell St Mary, waved flags as Woodside Academy's 'Woodside Steel' played steel pan drums to welcome the baton relay to the London International Cruise Terminal at the Port of Tilbury.
Guests including borough MP Jackie Doyle-Price MP, Thurrock mayor Cllr James Halden and council leader Cllr Rob Gledhill were joined by council cabinet members and local ward councillors.
Cllr Halden said: "I'm pleased that so many local schoolchildren could play a part in helping us welcome the 16th official Queen's Baton Relay to Thurrock and the Port of Tilbury's London International Cruise Terminal.
"Tilbury is a place of historical significance including the arrival of the Empire Windrush in 1948 and other ships which followed bringing people from Caribbean countries to the UK until 1971. The Tilbury Bridge Walkway of Memories played a prominent part during Windrush Day, and it is only fitting that The Queen's Baton should pass through ahead of the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games."
Stuart Wallace, Forth Ports chief operating officer and chair of Tilbury on the Thames Trust said: "Everyone at the Port of Tilbury was honoured that the London Cruise Terminal was chosen as a venue for The Queen's Baton Relay today. The historic cruise terminal is part of the local community where events including the Windrush Day celebrations are held each year.
"With a cruise liner on the berth today hundreds of passengers had the chance to experience the Queen's Baton Relay, with the fantastic children from Gateway Learning Community Schools making a celebratory guard of honour for the baton's journey. It was also great to have the talented steel pan band from Woodside Academy playing at the terminal. We wish everyone taking part in the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham the best of luck."
Kevin Sadler, CEO of Gateway Learning Community Trust, said: "We are delighted and honoured that young people from across the Gateway Learning Community Trust can welcome the Queen's Baton to Tilbury in advance of the Commonwealth Games. We hope that this opportunity will raise our students' awareness of the games and may inspire them to become the athletes of the future."
Woodside Academy principal Ed Caines said: "Woodside Steel' are the performing Steel Band of Woodside Academy, Grays, where every child in the school learns to play steel pan in Year 3.
"Before the pandemic, the band regularly performed at events throughout Thurrock, including the welcoming of the Olympic Torch in 2012. The current band are aged seven to nine years old, and their first public performance was for this year's Windrush celebration, also at the Cruise Terminal.
"Music and sports are both important at Woodside and, as a school with the Diversity Mark and the International Award, we are delighted and honoured to welcome the Queen's Baton as it passes through our borough on its way to the Commonwealth Games in her jubilee year."
Batonbearer Emily Defroand from Hornchurch carried The Baton through the Tilbury Terminal to the London International Cruise Terminal, home of the Tilbury Bridge Walkway of Memories.
Emily is an ambassador for England Hockey's East London Project; an England Hockey 'Flyerz Champion'; and a Spencer Lynx Hockey Ambassador. She was a member of Team England Women's Hockey Team which won a Bronze Medal at the 2018 Commonwealth Games.
The Baton is visiting the East of England today and tomorrow in its final journey in England for the final countdown to the Commonwealth Games.
More information on The Queen's Baton Relay at www.birmingham2022.com/qbr
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