Elizabeth II had visited Edward in Paris on 18 May 1972, ten days before his death. Edward's body was flown to Britain, landing at RAF Benson, and lay in the Albert Memorial Chapel in Windsor Castle on 2 June before being carried by soldiers of the Welsh Guards into St George's Chapel the following day where he lay in state for three days.[1][2][3] The coffin was displayed on a catafalque with blue carpeting in the centre of the nave.[3] A large candleholder stood at each corner, with each end marked by a cross.[3] Edward's coffin was draped with his royal standard and surmounted with a cross formed of white Easter lilies given by Wallis.[2]
His widow, Wallis, stayed at Buckingham Palace during her visit.[2] Wallis was suffering from mental confusion due to arteriosclerosis and was nervous about meeting Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother who had a long held antipathy toward her due to the strain that Edward's abdication had had on her husband, George VI.[1] Wallis was reassured by Lord Mountbatten that "Your sister-in-law will receive you with open arms. She is deeply sorry for you in your present grief and remembers what it was like when her husband died".[1] Elizabeth met Wallis only once during her stay, on the day of the funeral.[1] Queue barriers in anticipation of mourners to the laying in state stretched for half a mile down the length of Castle Hill.[3] A car park for 2,000 cars was established in the Home Park.[3] Thousands of mourners filed past his coffin.[2]
Edward's funeral was filmed by television stations but not broadcast, but was broadcast live on BBC Radio 3.[3] The BBC hid their broadcasting apparatus behind a cardboard and plywood replica of the walls of Windsor Castle, complete with imitation parapets and buttresses.[3]