Kate and William’s support for Southport: Royals visit schools of tragic stabbing victims and wear friendship bracelets gifted by grieving mother in ’emotional’ private meeting
The Prince and Princess of Wales have sat down for an emotional conversation with the parents of two of the girls brutally murdered in the Southport attack, Alice da Silva Aguiar and Bebe King.
Following this morning’s meeting with the parents of tragic stabbing victim Elsie Dot Stancombe during a visit to her school in the town, they travelled to Churchtown Primary School, where Alice, nine, and six year-old Bebe had been pupils.
During their meeting, Bebe’s mother Lauren King gifted Kate and Prince William friendship bracelets she’d made, which featured her little girl’s name. Both the Prince and Princess were photographed wearing them.
The royal couple, both 43, spent around 20 minutes in an ’emotional’ private meeting this morning with the grieving parents of Elsie during a visit to her school, Farnborough Road Infant and Junior School.
Axel Rudakubana, 19, attacked a Taylor Swift-themed dance class on June 29, 2024, where he killed Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, Bebe King, six, and Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, and injured eight other children.
Today, the royal couple made an emotional return to Southport to offer their ongoing support for families affected by the tragic murders, after first visiting the area in October 2024.
Upon their arrival in the town, William and Kate, dressed in a smart pink blouse and stylish grey trousers, teamed with a matching coat, were greeted by 430 children at the infant school where Elsie had been due to start in Year 3 last Autumn.
Staff and parents, including Elsie’s mother and father Jenni and David, also joined the group, with local sources saying they were ‘deeply touched’ by the visit. There will be further engagements by the couple later this afternoon.
The royal couple were welcomed by Peter Oliver, deputy Lord Lieutenant of Merseyside, June Burns, Mayor of Sefton, Marion Atkinson, leader of Sefton council and its CEO Phillip Porter.
Jennie Sephton, head of the infant school, and Adrian Antell, head of the junior school, then introduced Kate and William to members of the school council – 16 from the junior school and 16 from the infant school.
The Princess of Wales wears a bracelet with Bebe’s name on it given to him by her Bebe’s mother Lauren during a visit to Churchtown Primary School
The Princess of Wales meets children from Farnborough Road Infant and Junior School, where Elsie Dot Stancombe was a pupil
The Prince and Princess of Wales (pictured) during a visit to Southport
Kate opted for a smart trouser and coat co-ord, teamed with a pink blouse for the outing today
The Princess of Wales appeared keen to talk to the children waiting at the Southport school
Beaming Kate was full of laughter as she chatted to excited children at the school in Southport
The Princess of Wales shares a smile with a pupil at Farnborough Road Infant and Junior School
Inside, William and Kate spoke to teachers about how the school was affected by the tragedy and the support it has provided to pupils, staff and the local community.
They also met privately with Elsie’s parents Jenni and David in the headteacher’s office. Along with Alice’s father Sergio Aguiar, David ran the London Marathon in April in memory of their daughters and the Prince and Princess donated to their fundraising efforts.
The Prince and Princess spent around 20 minutes in an ’emotional’ private meeting with Jenni and David Stancombe, who then introduced them to some of the teachers and teaching assistants who had known Elsie.
Kate was given a posy of pink and white flowers – made by the same florist who created the school’s wreath for the little girl and which contained a silver fabric butterfly, just as the wreath had.
Jennie Sephton said afterwards: ‘I was able to say to the Princess before she left that there’s a butterfly in there and that Elsie was part of the day as well.’
The royal couple had also spent time chatting to Jennie, who is head of the Infants School, and Junior School headteacher Adrian Antell and heard how both had taken part in a skydive to raise funds for Elsie’s story.
‘You went skydivng?!’ asked William, clearly impressed. ‘Oh no! First time for both of you, I take it?’ Asked if he had ever done one, he said: ‘I’ve parachuted, I’ve not skydived. I’ve parachuted into the sea.
‘Would you do it again?’ he asked, laughing when Jennie revealed she had already done so. ‘I could see your eyes there, you’re looking like, “oh I quite liked the adrenaline rush”,’ he told her.
The Princess of Wales during a visit to Farnborough Road Infant and Junior School
William and Kate (pictured), both 43, visited Farnborough Road Infant and Junior School where Elsie, seven, had been a pupil at the time of her murder
Pupils at Farnborough Road Infant and Junior School wave Union Jacks while waiting for the future King and Queen
The Prince and Princess of Wales with junior school headteacher Adrian Antell and infant school headteacher Jennifer Sephton
The Prince and Princess of Wales during a visit to Farnborough Road Infant and Junior School
The headteachers explained that pupils had paid £5 to Elsie’s Story to break 15 rules and they in turn had pledged to jump out of a plane at 15,000ft if they reached a £15,000 target.
Children from the school council had earlier told the Prince and Princess how they wore ties around their heads, sprayed their hair in different colours and wore pyjamas to school.
‘Well I am very impressed with all of you, all the hard work you’ve done,’ Kate said. ‘What a fantastic thing to learn how to raise money to help other people. Fantastic, so keep up your hard work and thank you.’
William asked another group about their favourite subjects, football teams and food on the school menu.
Children had been told who their VIP visitors would be only 10 minutes before they arrived, having been told they needed to look smart for photographs.
Jennie said of the royal visit, ‘It’s made such a big difference. It was something that Jenni and David wanted them to do right from the beginning.
‘It was around the recognition of what staff have done, how they have supported the family, how they have supported the children going forward.
‘And it’s just real recognition that they value Jenni and David but they have also listened. It’s just so special.’
Bebe King, Elsie Dot Stancombe and Alice da Silva Aguiar died in the attack last summer. Pictured L to R: Bebe, Elsie and Alice
Following their first in October last year, the Prince and Princess issued a statement, saying: ‘We continue to stand with everyone in Southport’. Pictured, Kate today
The Prince and Princess of Wales with junior school headteacher Adrian Antell (left) and infant school headteacher Jennifer Sephton, during a visit to Farnborough Road Infant and Junior School
It is understood that it was important for the Stancombes for the Prince and Princess to visit and they both very much wanted to be there.
Adrian added: ‘I would like to thank the royal couple for coming today and for coming to our school and for coming to Farnborough Road and recognising what we did.
‘They spoke so wonderfully about what this community has done together, and they thanked this community for the work they have done, I think that’s really important we get that out.’
Asked how the school had coped with the tragedy, he said: ‘Every day is different and every child is different. Sadly Elsie didn’t arrive with her class in September, when she should have come.
‘So we’ve had to change support around the class that she’s sadly no longer part of, as well as other children in the school who’ve been impacted by the tragedy.’
Both schools have received extra funding from the local authority to pay for play therapy, counselling and training for staff in trauma approaches.
The school has also received donations, including a new garden created by the Southport Flower Show.
‘Out of a terrible tragedy, people have been kind to us as a school community and have looked after us,’ said Adrian.
The Princess of Wales (pictured) sported elegant earrings to match her stylish ensemble
Students from Farnborough Road Infant and Junior School in Birkdale, Southport, where Elsie Dot Stancombe was a pupil, ahead of a visit by the Prince and Princess of Wales
‘We knew it wasn’t going to be solved in a year,’ adds Jennie. ‘Children need support and adults will need support for a long time. This is something that’s deeply affected not only our staff, children and families, but the wider community.’
‘Children are missing their friends,’ said Adrian. ‘How do you explain that to an eight-year-old?’
During the visit, Prince William also recommended Child Bereavement UK, of which he is patron, and whose northern lead, Sophie Cartwright, is coincidentally a former pupil of Farnborough Primary School.
Jennie said afterwards: ‘We just couldn’t believe it. I thought, wow, this is just fate, when someone’s there to support you at a time when you’re struggling through.’
William said of CBUK, which was founded by his godmother Julia Samuel and which his mother Diana, Princess of Wales, supported: ‘If you ever need anyone… I think one of them was actually a pupil here.’
On arrival at Farnborough Road in bright sunshine, the royal couple were greeted by loud cheers from pupils waving Union flags.
‘We’ve brought the sunshine with us,’ said the Prince, who asked about the youngsters who had been waiting on the playground. ‘Have they had lunch? They need lunch!’
The couple then split to speak to young members of the school council, which is made up of one pupil from each class in each year.
Pupils at the Farnborough Road Infant and Junior School, where Elsie was a pupil
Kate made a beeline for the younger pupils, crouching down to speak to them, while William chatted to the older children.
‘He talked about what our favourite lessons were and our favourite lunch menus,’ said Jessica Hazelhurst, 10.
‘And he really wanted brownies on the menu. He loves Brownies, so we’re on the same team,’ added Ellis Paynter, also 10.
Speaking after the visit, Adrian said: ‘We talked really about support and how the class had been and so on.
‘But you can see they’re tremendously supportive, because at the end of the day, this is a mum and a dad of children who are very similar age, and every human being has huge empathy for what’s happened in Southport and they’ll be no different than that, but they’re in a position, perhaps, that they can influence and lead and thank people for what they’ve done.’
Jennie added that she had asked for all the pupils to be able to greet the royal visitors when they arrived and departed, saying: ‘We’re about building memories for them and positive memories.’
Earlier this month, the inquiry into the Southport attack heard a statement from Jenni in which she described Elsie as ‘our joy, our pride, our everything’, adding ‘we used to say we had won the lottery, the luckiest parents in the world.’
She described her daughter as a ‘dreamer’ who ‘always had big ideas and the most beautiful imagination’.
At her funeral in August 2024, Elsie’s headteacher Jennifer Sephton described her as ‘such a caring and charismatic young lady who loved to please’.
In their own statement following last year’s attack, William and Kate said: ‘As parents, we cannot begin to imagine what the families, friends and loved ones of those killed and injured in Southport today are going through.’
It is the future king and queen’s second visit to the community, which has showed such immense bravery and solitary following the horrific attack last year.
Following their first in October last year, the Prince and Princess issued a statement, saying: ‘We continue to stand with everyone in Southport.
‘Meeting the community today has been a powerful reminder of the importance of supporting one another in the wake of unimaginable tragedy. You will remain in our thoughts and prayers. ‘
Today they will continue that promise to stand by the community with an extremely poignant visit, their spokesman said.
In 2024, they met with the families of all three girls murdered by knifeman Rudakubana, then aged 17, who was jailed for a minimum of 52 years in January.
William and Kate spent time with the bereaved families, along with brave dance teacher Leanne Lucas, who risked her life to protect the girls and was critically injured in the attack.
The couple also met with emergency responders and mental health practitioners who have been working to deliver support to the blue light community, many of whom remain deeply scarred by what they saw on the day.
A source said they ‘care deeply for the families and the Southport community, and that’s why they wanted to go back to show their ongoing support’.
In April, it was revealed that the Prince and Princess had quietly made a donation to Churchtown Primary School, attended by Alice and Bebe, to help them fund a new playground in memory of the children killed in the knife attack.
The new space is set to be honour the girls’ memories and provide an expanded space for children to play in.
The donation from the royals was revealed by Jinnie Payne, headteacher of Churchtown Primary School.
She wrote in a message shared on social media: ‘On behalf of Churchtown Primary School, I want to say a heartfelt thank you to their Royal Highnesses, the Prince and Princess of Wales, for their incredibly generous donation to our Churchtown Playground fund.
‘Their kindness and thoughtfulness mean so much to our whole community as we come together to honour the memories of Alice and Bebe, two much-loved members of our school family.
‘As Alice’s dad Sergio, and I prepare to run the London Marathon today in their memory, we are deeply touched and encouraged by William’s and Kate’s support.’
Prince William had promised the families and local community he would visit as soon as possible and his first visit had long been scheduled in.
But the decision by his wife to join him was more recent. It is understood that she wanted to ‘show her support, empathy and compassion to the local community’.
Kate and William’s visit to Southport marked the first public engagement for the princess since she announced that she had completed treatment for cancer and would undertake a carefully calibrated return to public duties.
Apart from a small media contingency, the visit was kept deliberately low key as both the prince and princess wanted it to remain as discreet as possible out of respect to those involved.
Their meeting with the victims’ families was held completely in private and not announced publicly until they had left. The prince and princess spent half an hour in private with each of the girls’ families.
On Wednesday, the Southport Inquiry heard that Rudakubana could and should have been stopped before launching his murderous attack on children.
Families of the children he stabbed and killed criticised the role of safeguarding services and questioned the part played by Rudakubana’s own parents, the hearing was told.
Warning signs were missed and the killer’s history of disturbing behaviour and violent behaviour not addressed, the inquiry at Liverpool Town Hall heard.
Nicholas Bowen KC, representing all the bereaved families, read a statement from the Stancombe family.
It said: ‘When a parent knows their child is dangerous, allows them to possess weapons and authorities have already visited the home, how is that not neglect?
‘If a child were malnourished or unwashed, social services would act immediately. But when a child is surrounded by weapons, involved in violent behaviour and known to be a threat, the system does nothing.
‘That is a failure. No action was taken. Why? Our daughter paid the price for that failure. When does a parent become complicit in a crime committed by their child?’
The parents of Bebe King, likewise in a statement cited a ‘chain of failures, across systems, across services, across safeguarding.’ It added: ‘There were warnings missed. Red flags ignored. Risks underestimated.’
In January, Axel Rudakubana, 18, was jailed for life with a minimum term of 52 years for carrying out the Southport attacks with a judge admitting he will likely remain in prison until he dies.
Rudakubana was handed 13 sentences including the murders of Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, Bebe King, six, and Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and the attempted murder of eight other children in Southport.
Mr Justice Goose passed his sentence on a day of high drama and emotion as the teenager was twice removed from the dock for interrupting proceedings.