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Queen Elizabeth II becomes longest reigning British monarch - live updates

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Queen, who has served 63 years and 216 days on throne, will officially break record at 5.30pm. Follow the day’s events here

We’re closing the live blog now, but you can still let us know about your encounters with the Queen via Guardian Witness.

Remember, at exactly what time Elizabeth II will overtake her great-great grandmother’s reign of 23,226 days, 16 hours and 23 minutes, remains uncertain as her father, George VI, died in his sleep, but it is thought to be at around 1am. Using that as a basis, and factoring in leap days in both reigns, Buckingham Palace’s formula has chosen the record-breaking moment as around 5.30pm.

Caroline Davies has written about today’s events from Tweedbank, where, she says, the the message was “business as usual”. But for the crowds who turned out to see the Queen officially open the new £294m Scottish Borders Railway, this was a chance to see the longest reigning monarch in 1,000 years of British history.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are holidaying in Scotland and are expected to have dinner with the Queen at Balmoral this evening - though it is not expected to be a huge celebration.

You can watch a video of the crew aboard the Gloriana standing to attention below.

Crews aboard the Gloriana stand to attention as the National Anthem is played for the Queen's #longestreignpic.twitter.com/VYageMzGpf

Fashion and portrait photographer David Bailey has spoken about spending the morning photographing the Queen at Buckingham Palace last year. He told ITV News:

We laughed all morning with her.

She’s got a sense of humour I tried to wind her up.

There’s an interesting blog on the gov.uk website about the Queen and here 12 prime ministers, from Churchill to Cameron.

Here’s our video of the Queen thanking people around the world for their “touching messages of great kindness”.

Australian prime minister Tony Abbott also paid tribute to the Queen today.

After 63 years, seven months and four days of service, Her Majesty the Queen today becomes the longest-serving monarch in our history. For Australia, the UK, and the rest of the Commonwealth, the Queen has been a beacon of stability for more than six decades.

As we mark this extraordinary milestone, the Queen’s admiration for the Australian people is returned with respect and affection.”

The 1st class stamp is turning purple to mark the Queen’s record-breaking reign.

The classic everyday 63p stamp, which features the monarch’s profile by sculptor Arnold Machin, has switched from its regular red to regal purple for the next 12 months in celebration.

Here are some voices from the crowd as the celebratory flotilla passed along the Thames earlier.

We had a fantastic view of Queen Elizabeth II #longestreign flotilla from #shardview. Another great historic moment! pic.twitter.com/gdQACunlX9

The Queen isn’t as rich as you might think. The monarch’s estimated personal fortune, largely inherited from her family, is about £276m , according to an analysis by the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. That’s a mere 3 percent of the wealth of the richest Briton, Gerald Grosvenor, the Duke of Westminster. Europe’s richest woman, Liliane Bettencourt, has a £20bn fortune.

business: The longer she reigns, the less wealthy Queen Elizabeth II appears http://t.co/cIy6e3Z5b4#longestreignpic.twitter.com/YctYJuENBl

There are some things that don’t change in 63 years, as one Twitter user points out.

Just this. #longestreignpic.twitter.com/17U25n2Jvr

One to look forward to...

Oh can she host the golden globes please. #longestreignpic.twitter.com/x08WZQkMbs

The Queen has made a brief speech.

The Duke of Edinburgh and I are delighted to be back in the Borders today and especially to have arrived by train. It is wonderful to have witnessed the excitement which the return of the railway has brought here.

We are very grateful for the warmth of your welcome on this occasion. Many, including you, First Minister, have noted another significance attached to today, although it is not one to which In have ever aspired. Inevitably a long life can pass by many milestones. My own is no exception.

#HMTheQueen thanks people from all around the world for "touching messages of great kindness" #LongestReignpic.twitter.com/a3zBlcLBvE

Sturgeon says its a historic day.

Your majesty, throughout your reign, supported at all times by the Duke of Edinburgh, you have carried out your duties with dedication, wisdom, and an exemplary sense of public service. You are held in esteem around the UK, across the commonwealth and around the world. The reception you have received here today demonstrates how strongly that admiration and affection is felt in scotland.

As you may recall, the very first public opening you performed [as Princess] was the Aberdeen’s sailors home in 1944. You have undertaken thousands of engagements across this station, including last year’s opening of Glasgow commonwealth ghames. Your affection for scotland was shared by your great great grandmother queen Victoria. We are priveleged you have chosen to mark today’s milestone here.

The Queen, Duke of Edinburgh and Nicola Sturgeon have made their way onto a podium while a band plays God Save The Queen. Local school children cheer.

How does the Queen’s reign compare to other monarchs? Our new interactive takes a look.

Related: Queen Elizabeth II's reign: how do other monarchs compare?

Walter Bell, 88, a former railway fireman and driver who worked on the railway for 50 years, including on the old Borders line, sat with the Queen for part of her train journey and told her about his life as a driver. He said:

She said to me we’ve both got a special day. It was out of this world to meet her, it’s a great honour, it’s very special.

She was really interested in what I was telling her. I was discussing about where I worked and the mishaps on the railway and other stories.

The Queen is meeting dignitaries. Nicola Sturgeon will make a speech followed by expected remarks by the Queen.

Local well-wisher Imogen Potter, 47, from Earlston, was waiting with her children, Rupert, 11, and Annabelle, eight, at Tweedbank to see the Queen. She said they are “absolutely thrilled” the monarch is coming to the Borders.

My son and daughter were on the very first train on Sunday with their dad and they are very excited. We’re pleased that the Queen had come all the way to see us today.

Scotland has been important to the Queen for a long time and I’m delighted that she’s come here today.

Imogen Potter and children Rupert, 11, and Annabelle, 8: We're "absolutely thrilled" Queen is coming to Borders. pic.twitter.com/6o7TEkSCC2

The Queen’s train has arrived at Tweedbank.

The bells of Westminster Abbey where the Queen was married and crowned have sounded out in tribute to the monarch. Bell-ringers at the gothic church - the site of countless historic royal occasions from weddings and coronations to funerals - rang a quarter peal for 50 minutes. Princess Elizabeth wed the Duke of Edinburgh in 1947 at the Abbey and was crowned there less than six years later when she was 27 in 1953.

On the Thames, vessels set off east from Tower bridge at midday and sounded their horns for one minute in recognition of the Queen’s service. As the procession passed HMS Belfast, a four-gun salute sounded out and the Massey Shaw fireboat shot jets of water across the famous waterway. Smartly dressed Naval officers lined up up aboard HMS Portland, next to HMS Belfast, to salute the flotilla.

A nationwide “Clean for The Queen” campaign has been launched today in a bid to clear up Britain in time for the monarch’s 90th birthday. The initiative will encourage people to tackle the litter problem in the country’s cities, town, villages, roadsides and countryside by June 2016.

Country Life magazine is spearheading the drive, which is backed by the Government and organisations such as the environmental charity Keep Britain Tidy, The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, the Women’s Institute and the Garfield Weston Foundation. An army of litter pickers will be rallied to tidy up their local areas and a special clean up weekend will be staged from March 4 to March 6 next year.

Of course, not everyone is marking today’s milestone. There are many around the world questioning the Queen’s role in the 21st Century. Amongst them are anti-monarchist group Republic. Graham Smith, a spokesman for the organisation, said keeping a job for life was not an achievement and the event should not be celebrated.

The Queen has survived this long in her role as head of state for one reason: she has never had to face election or be held to account.

When anyone survives in public office for this long it is usually a sign of something wrong, either in the country’s constitution or in the political culture. There is either a lack of will to challenge that person or a lack of mechanism to remove them - or both.

A flotilla is currently making its way down the Thames. The Tower Bridge has lifted as a mark of respect.

The Tower Bridge lifts & Gloriana leads flotilla on the Thames to salute The Queen (via @NinaNannarITV) #LongestReignpic.twitter.com/rGTDVaWg1r

London and the River Thames say congratulations on your record reign to HM the Queen. And so say all of us. pic.twitter.com/qpU8nGo6OJ

Fun watching the #flotilla go by on the River Thames #longestreignpic.twitter.com/hAtEovzcp3

All on deck: crew on frigate HMS Portland ready to salute #royalflotilla@royalnavy#thames@totallythamespic.twitter.com/JlXlHcekoQ

Naval officers form up aboard HMS Portland, next to HMS Belfast, to salute the flotilla for #longestreign on Thames pic.twitter.com/uYyKmaO283

The Queen’s popularity is riding pretty high - she’s considered the greatest monarch in British history, according to a recent YouGov poll.

Polling also indicates that the royal family as a whole remain pretty popular with the British public. Support crosses all age groups and political affiliations, with 71% of British adults believing the monarchy should remain.

Related: Proud tradition or ludicrous anachronism? Share your views on the British royal family

The Queen’s self-abnegation is about self-interest, not just duty, writes Deborah Orr. I’ve included a couple of paragraph’s from Deborah’s article below, but you can read the whole thing here.

In putting duty and service first, the Queen has also put survival first. She carries on so that she and her family and their institution can carry on. Her self-abnegation is really self-interest. The attraction of a scrap of unwanted attention in among all that wanted attention simply creates unpredictability, when predictability is the essence of the entire business.

The Queen’s long reign has delivered more predictability than any monarch before her. Sure, all she had to do was stay alive. But we all know that plenty of monarchs have failed in this task, quite catastrophically. If a Queen can have a crowning achievement, then hers will come at about 5.30 this evening. If there is a God, he has certainly saved the Queen.

And below is our video of Cameron’s tribute.

I’ve got some fuller quotes from Harriet Harman, who paid tribute to the Queen before her final PMQs as Labour party leader. She said:

There can be no doubt of the commitment that she has made and the public service she has given, and continues to give. Her life has been a great sweep of British history - the Second World War, the Cold War, the fall of the Berlin Wall, and she’s presided over the transition from empire to Commonwealth.

She is now on her 12th Prime Minister. We on these benches had hoped she would now be on her 13th. She reigns over 140 million people - that is a huge number, nearly as many as the number of Labour Party’s registered supporters - and it’s entirely characteristic of her that she has let it be known that she doesn’t want there to be a fuss about today, but we are making a fuss and deservedly so.

Here’s our Guardian video of the Queen arriving at Edinburgh’s Waverley Station, where she met Nicola Sturgeon before boarding the Union of South Africa steam train.

For the fashionistas among you, the Queen is dressed in a Karl Ludwig turquoise and indigo blue wool coat with a turquoise silk and wool dress. Her matching hat was by her senior dresser Angela Kelly.

The Queen’s jewellery was especially chosen in recognition of her great-great grandmother Queen Victoria, whose reign she will overtake. Made of diamonds, her bow brooch is part of a set of three which was made for Victoria in 1858 from her own diamonds. They were later worn by Queen Alexandra and Queen Mary at their coronations. Queen Mary tended to wear all three in a vertical row, but Elizabeth II wears them singly. She inherited them from Queen Mary in 1952.

The cabinet will present the Queen with a gift of a bound copy of the cabinet papers from 22nd October 1952, which records the cabinet discussion of the speech that she would later make at the first state opening of parliament she presided over on the 4th November 1952.

The papers, which are now declassified, show that the cabinet also discussed the draft transport bill, the coalfields in the Saar and the engineering and ship building industries. The prime minister’s spokesperson said the gift highlighted “just how many cabinets there have been since her first”.

The tributes have now ended and Prime Minister’s Questions have begun. Here are some fuller quotes from Cameron. Referring to the Queen’s wish for today to be treated like any other day, he said:

While I rarely advocate disobeying Her Majesty, least of all in her own Parliament, I do think it’s right today we should stop and take a moment as a nation to mark this historic milestone and to thank Her Majesty for the extraordinary service she’s given to our country over more than six decades.

The Queen is our Queen and we could not be more proud of her. She has served this country with an unerring grace, dignity and decency and long may she continue to do so.

The reign of Queen Elizabeth has been a golden thread running through three post-war generations, and she’s presided over more than two-thirds of our history as a full democracy with everyone being able to vote.

And yet whether it’s something we suspect she enjoys, like the Highland Games, or something we suspect she might be slightly less keen on, such as spending new year’s eve in the Millennium Dome, she never, ever falters. Her selfless sense of service and duty have earned her unparalleled respect and admiration not only in Britain but around the world.

Lib Dem leader Tim Farron is recalling the two times he met the Queen. He says she gave him his only experience of dancing of around a maypole. “All of us here are new Elizabethans. Queen Elizabeth II has reigned over us all. The values she embodies are about service and stability. It’s all the more important we recognise that Her Majesty occupies the most senior position in our democracy. It’s on this great day that we pay tribute to her service and humility.”

Farron says on the silver jubilee the Queen gave him his first and only chance to dance around a maypole.

Meanwhile, the Queen has stopped off at Newtongrange, where she is meeting well-wishers.

The Queen has arrived at Newtongrange pic.twitter.com/x1NanBNaEf

Lobby journalists have been tweeting about MPs’ tributes. These include a joke by Harriet Harman that the Queen reigns over nearly as many people as Labour’s registered supporters, which received a hearty laugh from the Prime Minister.

PM opens HoC tributes to Queen:"Truly humbling to comprehend the scale of service the Queen has given this country.. a golden thread"

Harman says number of people Queen reigns over is nearly as many as Labour’s registered supporters.

"People who meet the Queen often talk about it for the rest of their lives," Cameron tells Parliament. And that is indeed how it can feel.

PM praises Queen's fortitude in getting through New Year's Eve in Dome #Queen

Untrue Queen's above party politics. Inviting Con ex-PM's Thatcher & Major but not Blair & Brown to Kate-Will's wedding was partisan

The BT Tower in central London is currently scrolling the message “Long May She Reign”.

Sir Gerald Howarth is leading backbench tributes. He says the Queen is the “embodiment of duty”.

Sir Gerald Kaufman says she leads the country in a way no president could conceivably do because she is impartial and beyond politics. “She makes it possible for us to have a stable democratic government.”

Harman says people respect the fact that the Queen has stayed fastidiously neutral and above politics, yet at times she has played a key role in politics, like in the peace process in Northern Ireland.

She’s seen 12 PMs, though the opposition hoped she’d be on 13 by now, Harman jokes.

Harriet Harman has recited words the Queen said at the age 21. “I declare before you that my whole life shall be devoted to your service.” That pledge, remarkable from a young woman, has been kept, Harman says.

The House laughs as Cameron says Queen never falters, even when asked to do things she’s less fond of - such as spending New Year’s Eve in the Millennium Dome.

“She’s been a rock of stability in an era in which our country has changed so much,” he said. “She has recognised the need to embrace change.”

PM: as a diplomat and ambassador for Britain it is hard to overstate what she has done for our country.

PM: as a diplomat and ambassador for Britain it is hard to overstate what she has done for our country.

PM: Even ardent republicans fall under her spell.

.@David_Cameron says seeing the Queen every week is one of the most humbling and inspiring parts of his job

Cameron has said it’s “typical of the Queen’s senseless sense of service” that she has asked us to treat this day as any other.

There will now be brief speeches in the House of Commons to mark the Queen’s reign. Watch a live feed of the Commons below.

While we speculate about the kind of conversation the Queen and Nicola Sturgeon must now be having, Mary Francis, who was one of the Queen’s aides in the late 90s, reveals another side to the monarch. She told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “She can be great fun. I’ve seen her on one of the last holidays on the Royal Yacht Britannia - the only time I ever saw the Queen wear trousers. She let her hair down. She told stories. She had everybody in fits of laughter so she can be very relaxed - at times.”

All aboard! HM The Queen waves to the crowd before boarding the royal carriage #MyBordersRailwaypic.twitter.com/ksckVMc4Rg

And they're off! The steam locomotive pulls out of Waverley with Duke of Edinburgh also waving to the cheering crowd. pic.twitter.com/CPRBaDyeud

The Help for Heroes charity has issued a message of support to the Queen, stating: “Today marks the 23,226th day of The Queen’s reign, making her our longest serving Monarch. Respect”. The Royal British Legion also sent its congratulations to its patron.

Today marks the 23,226th day of The Queen’s reign, making her our longest serving Monarch. #Respect@BritishMonarchypic.twitter.com/SJiN2cdU7s

Congratulations to our Patron, HM The Queen, on becoming the longest-reigning monarch. #longestreignpic.twitter.com/kHyKS0rpsM

Congratulations #QueenElizabethII on the #LongestReign

You can watch a video of the Queen’s arrival below, recorded by PA reporter Paul Ward.

Flowers and a salute as the queen arrives at Waverley pic.twitter.com/04KyAhMABJ

After waving to well-wishers, the Queen, dressed in a blue suit and matching hat, and the Duke of Edinburgh, boarded the steam train to Tweedbank. The train has just departed.

Queen boards train en route to Tweedbank pic.twitter.com/AMwJL4x6CK

The royal motorcade is now arriving at Waverley Station, where Nicola Sturgeon awaits. The national youth pipe band of Scotland have started up. They previously performed for the Queen at her Diamond Jubilee celebrations.

Esther Taylor, from Dalgety Bay, Fife, is planning to travel on the Borders railway today with her husband John to mark her 73rd birthday. She said:

We weren’t lucky enough to be invited on the Queen’s train but we’ll get one of the later ones. We didn’t actually know the Queen was coming today until my brother told me so we thought we’d come to the station a bit earlier to see her off.

Esther Taylor is sharing a special day with the Queen, celebrating her 73rd birthday with a trip on Borders railway pic.twitter.com/Az4GyGXBEb

When the Queen came to the throne in 1952, the average house price was £1,888, a pint of beer cost 9p and a pint of milk 3p. Today, the average house price is £277,000, a pint of draught bitter sells for £2.97 and a pint of milk costs 43p.

Martin Willis, professor of English literature at the University of Westminster, decided to calculate when the Queen would overtake Queen Victoria as longest-reigning British monarch two years ago at the request of some students. My colleague Kate Lyons spoke to him.

“I had been saying in my Victorian literature classes that Victoria’s reign was the longest, but that she would soon be overtaken by Queen Elizabeth. They wanted a specific time for that - quite rightly,” he said.

At the time, no specific date for the milestone had been announced, so Willis did some calculations factoring in the leap days in the reigns of both queens and arrived initially at the date of September 10. “When I noted September 10th as the date in my original calculation I had not taken account of the precise times of day [of the deaths of Victoria and King George VI],” he said.

We’ve been receiving your images and stories of your encounters with the record-breaking monarch over the years. Some of them are rather lovely: others are deeply underwhelming.

In 1977, as part of the Silver Jubilee celebrations the Queen visited Derbyshire. My Mum dressed me in a red, white and blue spotty dress, wrapped some Queen Elizabeth II roses from our garden in tin foil and stood me in the crowd on the route that the Queens car was to take through Butterley, to the police HQ. As the car approached Prince Philip spotted me and pointed. The car stopped, the Queen lowered the window and took the flowers. This is the photo my mum took at the time. I was 7 years old.

My mum wrote to the queen and got a lovely letter back from her Lady in waiting thanking us for the roses.

Sent via GuardianWitness

Liverpool, 1997, accompanied by Sir Paul McCartney.

Sent via GuardianWitness

It was the 70s I was about 10. Mum had heard the Queen would be driving to West Cumbria past our house that afternoon. We stood for hours waiting. The only people there. She drove past after 3 hours. We waved. She didn't look up.

Never again I thought.

Sent via GuardianWitness

We saw the Queen, slightly the worse for wear, coming out of a Mexican restaurant in Liverpool. I should clarify that we were coming out of the restaurant and slightly the worse for wear, not the Queen. She was just arriving (presumably sober) at some kind of event at the Royal Philharmonic Hall in her Rolls Royce, as we stumbled out of El Macho's whilst celebrating my mate Tony's birthday.

Sent via GuardianWitness

I was about 5 or 6 and at infant school when the teachers dragged the whole school off to 'see the queen'. We were given flags to wave and made to stand on the side of the road for what seemed like hours. Suddenly, and without warning, a limo with blacked out windows sped past, and that was that. I´ve been a convinced republican since that day

Sent via GuardianWitness

The Queen’s arrival at Waverley Station was delayed for 40 minutes due to weather conditions. She is due to travel from Balmoral by helicopter and make the final part of the journey by limousine.

The Press Association have taken a look at the Queen’s reign in numbers:

“Elizabeth Windsor”, a popular pseudo-Queen Twitter account which has more than 1.29m followers, has also been tweeting about today’s events.

To do this week: 1) open a train line 2) bollock the PM 3) order more gin 4) become the longest serving monarch in British history #Busy

Commonwealth Secretary-General Kamalesh Sharma has sent his congratulations to the Queen and praised her personal commitment as Head of the Commonwealth.

As a symbol of continuity during decades of unprecedented change, and by drawing our people together in their rich diversity, Her Majesty has embodied all that is best in the Commonwealth. With vision and dedication her example has encouraged successive generations of leaders and citizens to embrace the promise of the future.

In congratulating Her Majesty on this historic occasion the Commonwealth joins with a fresh sense of common purpose, committed to advancing in practical ways the shared values and principles now set out in the Commonwealth Charter.”

#Commonwealth SG congratulates #Queen: “The Queen’s personal commitment as Head of the #Commonwealth is exemplary": http://t.co/5p6l6PrgD9

Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon is present at Waverley station and is talking to well-wishers.

Preparations for the Queen’s departure from Edinburgh Waverley station are well under way. The train that will take her on the newly opened Scottish Borders railway has arrived, and a crowd of wellwishers awaits.

As we await the Queen’s arrival at Waverley Station, our fashion editor, Jess Cartner-Morley, has written about her majesty’s previous choices in wardrobe.

It’s the ultimate hardworking, personal-brand-building wardrobe for the working woman, and one which masterfully retains visibility for a mature woman. And no, I’m not talking about the new season at Whistles. I’m talking about the Queen, an icon for timeless power-dressing.

Colour is the Queen’s trademark. While lesser celebrities attempt to imprint their image on the public retina by sticking to one colour – Barbie in pink, Angelina Jolie in black – the Queen owns the concept of a rainbow wardrobe. She wears pink, purple, lime, kingfisher blue, lemon yellow, crimson and emerald – and when she wears a colour, she really wears it, matching her hat, dress and skirt for maximum impact. It enables her to play the crucial element of surprise every time she makes a public appearance - “oh, look! She’s in pink!” - but to do so in a much more elegant and less painful way than by showcasing a new tattoo, or finding a new body part to bare, which is how the Miley Cyrus generation achieve pretty much the same effect.

Richard Nelsson has taken a look at how the Manchester Guardian reported Queen Victoria becoming the longest reigning monarch in September 1896.

On 23 September 1896, Queen Victoria became Britain’s longest reigning monarch. The next day, the Manchester Guardian published Congratulations To Her Majesty - reports of the demonstrations of loyalty from various dignitaries and members of the clergy.

Related: How the Manchester Guardian reported Queen Victoria's record reign in 1896

Reuters have a live feed of the Queen arriving at Edinburgh Waverley station, which you can watch below. The video will be live until 1.30pm.

Given the exhaustive nature of her duties over the decades, we suspect the Queen may have met some of you along the way. Have you met the Queen? If so, we want to hear your stories and see your photographs. You can share these with us using GuardianWitness and the “contribute” button at the top of this live blog.

Perhaps you are one of the hundreds of thousands who have attended one of her regular garden or luncheon parties at Buckingham Palace. Maybe she came to your area, to open a bit of infrastructure or visit a local site of historic interest. Or perhaps you met the Queen quite by accident, unaware that she was due to be in your town or village that day.

Buckingham Palace also released another photo by McCartney on its Twitter account. The image shows the Queen sat slightly away from her desk, smiling and holding some official papers. Clear handled letter openers are among the items on her tidy desk.

This Mary McCartney photograph has been released to mark The Queen becoming the longest reigning British Monarch pic.twitter.com/ZrsUlIsB7n

The image was taken at Buckingham Palace in July. Her Majesty is seated at her desk, with one of her official red boxes

The red box contains papers from government ministers in the UK and Commonwealth. HM has received a box on almost every day of her reign

Today The Queen is attending the opening celebrations for @BordersRailway, accompanied by The Duke of Edinburgh https://t.co/jLliZoz9im

Queen Victoria was the first British Monarch to travel by train pic.twitter.com/yTsD5GeiwC

In 1842 Queen Victoria described the journey from Slough to Paddington as 'delightful, & so quick' in her journal pic.twitter.com/ngw16FVAcB

Here are some archive images from past issues of the Manchester Guardian of the life and coronation of Queen Elizabeth II.

David Cameron has already paid tribute to the Queen, telling Cabinet colleagues at their weekly meeting in Downing Street yesterday that she had a “remarkable record’’ and was “a symbol of Britain’s enduring spirit admired around the world”.

Meanwhile, celebrity photographer Mary McCartney, who has captured the Queen at work to mark today’s milestone, described her as a “beacon for womankind’’.

You can explore the Queen’s 63 year reign through our Guardian interactive. It features images from every year of the 89-year-old’s time on the throne.

Related: Year-by-year: the reign of Queen Elizabeth II – interactive

Staff at Waverley Station are making last-minute preparations for today’s celebrations, with workers sweeping up and broadcasters’ cables being taped down. White, gold and purple bunting has been put up ahead of Queen’s arrival.

Bunting brightens up Waverley station pic.twitter.com/Glro9T4VBf

Today we’re thanking Her Majesty The Queen for her duty and service. #longestreignhttps://t.co/Ijs3FVWMPm

The only living monarch to out-reign the Queen is Thailand’s King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who is two years younger but has reigned for six years longer.

But Her Majesty beats him, and all other monarchs, on one matter. According to Guinness World Records, she holds the world record for most currencies featuring the same individual.

Guardian writer Caroline Davies is with the Queen in Scotland. Ahead of today’s events, she reports that at exactly what time Her Majesty out-reigns her great-great grandmother is not precise, due to the uncertainty of the timing of the death of her father, George VI, who died in his sleep.

But Buckingham Palace has estimated, to be absolutely safe, she will pass Victoria’s 23,226 days, 16 hours and 23 minutes at around 5.30pm. That calculation assumes George VI’s death was around 1am, and factors in extra leap days in the reigns of “Elizabeth the Steadfast”, as she has been described, and the Queen Empress.

Victoria recorded the day she broke George III’s record, on 23 September 1896, in her diary, writing: “Today is the day on which I have reigned longer, by a day, than any English sovereign”. Church bells rang and bonfires blazed from hilltops in celebration.

Good morning, and welcome to our special live coverage of the day Queen Elizabeth II becomes the longest reigning monarch in 1,000 years of British history, with 63 years and 216 days on the throne. Her Majesty will break the record at around 5.30pm – but we’ll be bringing you rolling news coverage of all of the celebratory activities throughout the day.

Not that there are all that many activities – the Queen is said to have wanted to mark the day in a low-key way. She was nevertheless persuaded to take a train ride to officially open the £294m Scottish Borders Railway, which actually opened last weekend.

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