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Sarah Ferguson Says Queen Elizabeth Communicates with Her Through Her Corgis

Sarah Ferguson Says Queen Elizabeth Communicates with Her Through Her Corgis

Yahoo16-05-2025

Sarah Ferguson was close with her mother-in-law, Queen Elizabeth, throughout Her late Majesty's long life.
The Duchess of York married Prince Andrew in 1986; they divorced in 1996, 10 years later, but still live together at Royal Lodge in Windsor.
Also living there are the late Queen's surviving corgis, Sandy and Muick, and Ferguson said this week that Queen Elizabeth communicates with her through her dogs.Sarah Ferguson was close to her mother-in-law Queen Elizabeth during the late monarch's long life—so much so that the Duchess of York now has Her late Majesty's remaining corgis, Sandy and Muick, living with her and her ex-husband Prince Andrew at Royal Lodge in Windsor. (Yes, although they've been divorced for nearly 30 years, the former couple still live together—but, hey, there's 30 rooms, after all.)
It is through Sandy and Muick, Ferguson said, that Queen Elizabeth still communicates with her. While speaking at the Creative Women Platform Forum, the Duchess of York said, via The Times, 'I have her dogs. I have her corgis. Every morning they come in and go 'Woof, woof' and all that, and I'm sure it's her talking to me. I'm sure it's her, reminding me she's still around.'
Of the late Queen, Ferguson added, 'I had the greatest honor to be her daughter-in-law. That's pretty huge. And when I was driving here, I saw the Elizabeth line [a railway line named in the late Queen's honor] and I said, 'I want everyone to remember what an amazing lady she was.''
Ferguson previously shared, per The Mirror, that Sandy and Muick 'are national icons, so every time they run chasing a squirrel, I panic.'
'But they're total joys, and I always think that when they bark at nothing, and there's no squirrels in sight, I believe it's because the Queen is passing by,' she added.
Queen Elizabeth was a lifelong dog lover, owning more than 30 corgis and dorgis—a corgi-dachshund mix—throughout her lifetime. In addition to taking care of Sandy and Muick, Ferguson has stepped more publicly into the royal fold since Queen Elizabeth's death, attending royal family events like the traditional Easter service at Windsor and Christmas at Sandringham even though she hadn't done so since she and Prince Andrew divorced in 1996 after 10 years of marriage. Ferguson was recently invited by King Charles, her former brother-in-law, to a Buckingham Palace reception, where the King thanked those working for cancer charities. Charles—who was diagnosed with cancer in 2024—also met with others who had been diagnosed with cancer, including Ferguson, who received back-to-back diagnoses of skin and breast cancer in recent years.
Of the King, the Duchess of York said at the event, 'He puts his whole heart into everything he does.'
Read the original article on InStyle

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DDG makes serious allegations about Halle Bailey; restraining order against her denied for now
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DDG makes serious allegations about Halle Bailey; restraining order against her denied for now

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An Oklahoma native, Ferguson graduated in 1967 from Douglass High School in Oklahoma City. She then earned a bachelor's degree in journalism from Indiana University in 1971. 'Renee and I were the only two Black students in the journalism department at Indiana University (at that time),' Anderson recalled. After college, Ferguson worked as a writer for the Indianapolis Star before taking a job at a TV station, WLWI-TV, in Indianapolis in 1972. She spent five years at the station, which in 1976 took on the call letters WTHR-TV, and worked alongside a young, wisecracking weather forecaster named David Letterman, who would go on to national fame. In 1977, Ferguson joined WBBM-Channel 2 as a reporter. While at the station, she drew national headlines for an investigative piece she reported that debunked the highly acclaimed Westside Preparatory School founder and teacher Marva Collins. By the late 1970s, Collins had become nationally recognized for her work, and Ferguson's report threw cold water on that national praise, accusing the educator of lacking the background and temperament to teach and also alleging that Collins had not gotten the results she had said she was getting, and that she had used high-pressure techniques to collect tuition payments. While at CBS 2, Ferguson also began hosting the public affairs talk show 'Common Ground' in 1981. 'Renee always thought of herself as the voice of the voiceless,' said retired WMAQ-Channel 5 vice president of news and station manager Frank Whittaker, who first worked with Ferguson at Channel 2. 'She would take on stories that nobody else would take on because she believed in what people were telling her and what she believed was the truth and she was going to be their voice.' In 1983, Ferguson left Channel 2 to become an Atlanta-based network correspondent for CBS News. WMAQ-Channel 5 hired Ferguson as an investigative reporter in 1987, bringing her back to Chicago. 'She really was so authentic and people trusted her and she had this uncanny ability to create a space that made people really open up to her. She had that sort of Oprah-esque vibe where people would just share with her,' Brooks said. 'She also had great instincts — she knew when to follow the trail.' One of Ferguson's early reports was 'Project Africa,' which was the product of an idea Ferguson had with a Near West Side elementary school principal in which they would bring nine children from Chicago's toughest streets to Africa for two weeks. The project required students wanting to take the trip to commit themselves to extra attendance both before and after school to study French, photography and West African culture. 'We did play tourist some of the time when we were in the cities, but by far the most moving times were when we visited the villages,' Ferguson told the Tribune's Rick Kogan in 1989. 'The native kids greeted the Chicago kids as if they were visiting royalty. It was an extremely special time for all the children. And I could see the Chicago kids getting more and more relaxed. They started out kind of shy, but as the trip progressed they began to feel surer of themselves. This is the sort of experience that will change them forever.' In 1993, Ferguson visited strife-torn South Africa while on a prestigious William Benton Foundation Fellowship through the University of Chicago. She returned to NBC 5 afterward and covered the landmark 1994 elections in South Africa for the station. Later work included reports on strip searches of Black women at O'Hare International Airport, which in 1999 won Ferguson and her producer, Sarah Stolper, the Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award for investigative reporting. 'That was amazing work,' Brooks said. In 1996, a young Chicago man, Tyrone Hood, was convicted of murder and armed robbery in the 1993 slaying of an Illinois Institute of Technology basketball star. Hood insisted that he had nothing to do with it, and Ferguson concluded that Hood was innocent and that another man had been the murderer. Ferguson reported numerous stories about the case, all with Whittaker's support. She continued that advocacy even after retiring, and eventually then-Gov. Pat Quinn commuted Hood's lengthy prison sentence. 'Her work was able to get him out of prison,' Whittaker said. 'She just really believed in helping when people reached out, and she had a true soul for it. It was ingrained in her.' In the early 2000s, one of Ferguson's investigative interns at Channel 5 was a Harvard University undergraduate named Pete Buttigieg. During Buttigieg's internship, Ferguson and her husband housed the future U.S. Transportation Secretary and South Bend, Ind. mayor in their home. 'She was very proud that she was a mentor to Mayor Pete,' Anderson said. Ferguson later was awarded a Nieman Fellowship at Harvard University in 2007. Ferguson retired from NBC 5 in 2008 and soon began working as a spokeswoman for former U.S. Sen. Carol Moseley-Braun during Moseley-Braun's unsuccessful 2011 bid to become Chicago mayor. She later served as a press secretary for U.S. Rep. Bobby Rush. Ferguson's husband of 34 years, Ken Smikle, died in 2018. She is survived by a son, Jason Smikle. Services are pending.

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