Truman to Trump: The Queen and the 12 presidents

Thursday 12 July 2018 04:05, UK
The Queen has met every serving US president but one during her remarkable 66-year reign, including JFK, Ronald Reagan and Barack Obama.
Later this week she will meet her 12th and arguably the most controversial - Donald Trump.
Harry Truman was first in 1951 when the Queen was still a princess, and seven years after she took the throne Dwight D Eisenhower visited the UK.
Princess Anne and Prince Charles were pictured alongside him, wearing kilts, during his 1959 trip to Balmoral.
John F Kennedy and his wife visited in June 1961, just six months into his presidency. The Queen was 35 at the time.
A state banquet was held at Buckingham Palace and the visit of the glamorous couple was dramatised in hit TV series The Crown.
Two years later, on 22 November 1963, Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas.
Lyndon B Johnson, who succeeded JFK and served from 1963 to 1969, was the only US president to never meet the Queen.
She would likely have met Johnson at Kennedy's funeral but was five months pregnant with Prince Edward at the time, so Prince Philip went instead.
Richard Nixon had lunch at Buckingham Palace in February 1969, during his visit to see prime minister Harold Wilson.
Nixon famously ended up resigning five years later after the Watergate scandal.
Gerald Ford didn't visit the UK during his two and a half years in office. However, the Queen met him on the other side of the pond during a visit in July 1976.
The pair danced together at a White House state dinner, but with unfortunate timing the band played The Lady Is A Tramp as the Queen took to the floor - a now infamous faux pas.
Jimmy Carter was next up at Buckingham Palace in May 1977.
However, in another presidential gaffe, Carter threw protocol out the window and greeted the Queen Mother with a kiss on the lips.
According to biographer William Shawcross, she later wrote: "I took a sharp step backwards - not quite far enough."
The president who did more for the transatlantic "special relationship" than any other was Ronald Reagan.
His affinity with Margaret Thatcher is well known, and while in power he also met the Queen three times in London during the 1980s.
Reagan's first royal welcome was at Windsor Castle in 1982, where the pair were famously pictured riding horses together in the grounds.
After he left the White House in 1989, the Queen gave him an honorary knighthood.
The eighth president to meet the Queen was George Bush. He jetted over in May 1989 - just five months after being sworn in.
The Queen visited the US two years later, but as she stood up to give a speech on the lawn outside the White House, there were a few red faces.
She was partially obscured behind a cluster of microphones that had been arranged for the much taller Mr Bush.
He later told reporters that the Queen laughed off the incident.
Bill Clinton met the monarch during three of his many presidential stops in the UK - in 1994, 1995 and December 2000.
Years later, his wife Hillary Clinton would of course come close to becoming the first woman US president - losing out in the shock election defeat to Donald Trump.
Like father like son - George W Bush wasted no time in meeting the prime minister and the Queen in the months after being sworn in as the 43rd president.
But there were protests, involving tens of thousands of people, during his official state visit in November 2003.
Deeply unpopular because of controversy over the Iraq War, an effigy of the president was toppled by protesters in Trafalgar Square.
However, the controversy did not appear to effect the US-UK relationship and the Queen visited the US in 2007, with the president returning to the UK a year later.
Barack Obama had a far smoother ride from the public when he visited the UK and met the Queen in 2009 - and the pomp of a full state visit followed in May 2011.
During his final visit as president in April 2016, his chopper landed in the grounds of Windsor Castle with the Queen all smiles as she walked to greet him alongside Prince Philip.
The Queen will meet her 12th president when she sees Donald Trump this week - with the US ambassador telling Sky News it was "job one" for Mr Trump and "very symbolic".
The Queen has seen it all before, but all eyes will be on her reaction and the subtle body language between the pair.