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Homecoming, 7 June 1945

Today marks 75 years since the day King Haakon returned home after World War II. Hundreds of thousands of Norwegians welcomed the King and the family of the Crown Prince as they came ashore.

June 7, 2020

The oldest known colour portrait of King Haakon, photographed 16 September 1944. Photo: John Cyril Redhead, the Royal Collections

After five years in exile, the entire Royal Family was finally back in Norway. King Haakon and Crown Prince Olav had been in England with the Norwegian government-in-exile, while Crown Princess Märtha and the children had been in the United States.


Crown Prince Olav, as Norway’s Chief of Defence, had been back in Norway since 13 May.

Princess Astrid recalls

The HMS Norfolk set out from Edinburgh on 5 June carrying King Haakon, Crown Princess Märtha and the children of Märtha and Olav.

On 5 June 1945, King Haakon boarded HSE Norfolk in Edinburgh to the strains of the Norwegian anthem Ja, vi elsker dette landet. Thus began the trip home to Norway. Photo: Royal Navy official photograph (UK).

On the morning of 7 June the ship reached the Norwegian coast, and as it sailed into the Oslo fjord, Crown Prince Olav joined his family on board.

“That meeting with my father is the strongest memory I have of 7 June 1945,’ said Princess Astrid, Mrs Ferner.

“The weather was bad, so we could not see land, but I remember all the small boats that met us far out in the Oslo fjord. It was our first contact with ‘Norway’. All the boats were decorated with foliage and Norwegian flags. As we sailed closer to Oslo, more and more boats appeared. By the end there were so many boats we could practically walk to shore without getting our feet wet.”

HSE Norfolk in the Oslo fjord, returning home to a free Norway. It was a cold, cloudy day, and the children borrowed warm clothes from the crew. Photo: Royal Navy/The Royal Collections.

“Grandfather was anxious and wondered what the homecoming would be like. How would the people receive him? His refusal to accept German demands in 1940 had led to a great many Norwegians deaths during the war. He was deeply moved by the warm welcome of all the people.”

Princess Astrid has a clear memory of the exuberant jubilation that greeted the Royal Family upon arrival at the quay of honour on Oslo’s waterfront. “It was overwhelming,” she said.

Motorcade led by the Royal Family’s 1939 Buick Roadmaster on Torggata in Oslo en route to the Royal Palace. Photo: NTB scanpix.

“When we drove up to the Palace, it was heart-warming to see the Royal Court staff members, who had been there when we left, standing in the open windows of the Palace to welcome us home. All of our friends, whom we hadn't seen in five long years, were also standing there. They had been brought to the Palace to greet us, and that was very emotional,” said the Princess.

7 June

The date of the homecoming, 7 June, was not chosen at random. It marked five years to the day since the King and the Crown Prince had been forced to leave Norway for England on the British cruiser Devonshire.

“The day we decided we had to leave the country was a grim and sombre day,” King Haakon told the crowd in Oslo’s City Hall Square. “We understood that if we remained here, we would be captured and, as prisoners, would no longer represent a free Norway. It was on that basis that we deemed it necessary to continue the struggle for Norway’s freedom abroad.”

King Haakon speaking at City Hall Square. Photo: NTB scanpix.

On the same date, but in 1905, the Storting had passed a resolution dissolving Norway’s union with Sweden ­– the resolution that made Norway a fully independent nation and led to King Haakon’s ascension to the throne.

“That we should return on the anniversary of the day when Norwegians regained their freedom and independence is for me a sign that we shall succeed in carrying out our future tasks to the benefit of our country,” King Haakon said.

“But in this time of rejoicing, we must not forget that we have a great and difficult task ahead of us to achieve what we wish to build here in our land: a free and benevolent society for the good people of Norway.”

With that, the King led the people in a sequence of cheers for Norway.

Crown Prince Olav welcomes King Haakon home to Norway. Photo: NTB scanpix
King Haakon returns 1945. Thousands heading for the Royal Palace. Photo: NTB / Scanpix
King Haakon returns to Norway 7 June 1945. Photo: NTB scanpix
King Haakon speaking at City Hall Square. Photo: NTB scanpix.
Motorcade led by the Royal Family’s 1939 Buick Roadmaster on Torggata in Oslo en route to the Royal Palace. Photo: NTB scanpix.
The oldest known colour portrait of King Haakon Vii, photographed 16 September 1944. Photo: John Cyril Redhead, the Royal Collections

The Royal Family and World War II

German forces attacked Norway early in the morning 9 April 1940. The cruiser Blücher carried troops towards Oslo, ahead of several other German vessels. Blücher was stopped by the Norwegian fortress at Drøbak, giving the Royal family and the members of Goverment sufficient time to get out of Oslo, ensuring a free Norwegian Government (Photo: Scanpix).
German forces march into Oslo. (Photo: Scanpix)
10 April King Haakon met with the German representative, Curt Bräuer. The King refused to accept the German demands - as did the Norwegian Government. The Germans responded with massive air raids. Here, the King and Crown Prince seek cover as German planes attack Nybergsund 11 April 1940. Photo: Johan Wilhelm Clüver, the Royal Collections.
What's left of the Government's bus after German bombing of Nybergsund 11 April 1940. Foto: Johan Wilhelm Clüver, The Royal Collections
They keep traveling north. Here: King Haakon and Crown Prince at "the King's Birch" outside Molde. The picture was to become an important symbol of Norwegian resistance. Photo: Per Bratland, Nina Bratland's archive.
King Haakon and Crown Prince Olav with General Otto Ruge, Commander-in-chief of the Norwegian Army (Photo: Scanpix)
The cabin "Trangen" in Balsfjord. King Haakon and Crown Prince Olav stayed here 2 May - 7 June 1940. Photo: The Royal Collections
King Haakon and Crown Prince Olav outside the cabin that was the centre of Norwegian Government 2 May - 7 June 1940. Photo: Nikolai Ramm Østgaard. The Royal Collections

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