

Anne, Princess Royal represented Great Britain in equestrian eventing at the 1976 Montreal Olympic Games, the first British royal to compete in the Olympics. She has carried out over 20,000 public engagements and has served as patron or president of more than 300 organizations, with a consistent focus on sport, science, and the relentless work of the merchant navy. Her public demeanor is frequently misread as stern, overshadowing a documented dry wit and a lifelong aversion to fuss. The Princess Royal's lasting influence is her systematic redefinition of royal duty as intensive, expert service, notably through her decades-long presidency of Save the Children and her role as Chancellor of the University of Edinburgh. She remains a working royal of formidable stamina and specificity.
1946–1964
The largest generation in history at the time. Shaped by postwar prosperity, the Vietnam War, the sexual revolution, and Watergate. They questioned every institution their parents built — then ran them.
Anne, was born in 1950, placing them squarely in the Baby Boomers. The events that shaped this generation — postwar prosperity, civil rights, Vietnam, and the counterculture — shaped the world they entered and the choices available to them.
The biggest hits of 1950
#1 Movie
Cinderella
Best Picture
All About Eve
#1 TV Show
Texaco Star Theatre
The world at every milestone
Korean War begins
Rosa Parks refuses to give up her bus seat
JFK assassinated in Dallas; Martin Luther King's 'I Have a Dream' speech
Star Trek premieres on television
Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert Kennedy assassinated
Voting age lowered to 18 in the US
John Lennon shot and killed in New York
Hubble Space Telescope launched; Germany reunifies
Y2K passes without incident; contested Bush-Gore election
Deepwater Horizon oil spill; iPad launched
COVID-19 pandemic shuts down the world
“If you don't like the heat, get out of the kitchen.”