Monday, July 22, 2013

Duchess in Labor


Royal Arrival Expected Soon: Kate's In Labor

Waiting for word: Police officers stood guard early Monday outside St Mary's Hospital in London, where the Duchess of Cambridge is said to be in labor.
Waiting for word: Police officers stood guard early Monday outside St Mary's Hospital in London, where the Duchess of Cambridge is said to be in labor.
Suzanne Plunkett /Reuters /Landov
(For those who want to read only one sentence: As of 1 p.m. ET, there was no news to report.)
The Duchess of Cambridge, better known to most of of the world as the former Kate Middleton, is "in the early stages of labour" at St. Mary's Hospital in London, the royal website says.
So we should hear soon whether the baby who will be third in line to the throne is a boy or a girl, and perhaps what Prince William and Kate have chosen as the tyke's name.
If all goes according to plan, the news will be released to the world in the form of a statement — on paper — posted on an easel set up outside Buckingham Palace. The BBC says that "the way the birth will be announced is steeped in tradition. It is custom for news of royal births and deaths to be attached to the railings of Buckingham Palace." And in this case, the easel will serve as something of a substitute for the railings.
"After the note is displayed, an announcement will be posted on Twitter and Facebook, and the media will be informed," the BBC adds.
— The Twitter account for Clarence House, the royal couple's home, is here. The news that Kate had been admitted to the hospital was posted at 2:37 a.m. ET (7:37 a.m. in London).
— The monarchy's Facebook page is here.
We'll be watching and will post as soon as there's more news.
Meanwhile, NPR's Philip Reeves writes that "for many here in London, the much-trumpeted royal baby fever is more of a summer silly season snuffle — spreading faster around the world than it is in the U.K."
Update at 11 a.m. ET. A Sort-Of Related Post:
Update at 8:50 a.m. ET. Another New Mom Hopes To Share Kate's Day:
On The Guardian's live blog, Janette Ratcliffe and Paul McCarthy say they hope the little girl that Ratcliffe delivered Monday ends up sharing the royal baby's birthday. "It just makes it a bit more special," says the new father. Ratcliffe says, "I did feel under pressure to hold on to her until Kate went into labour."
(Yes, we know we wrote "labour" instead of "labor." It just didn't seem right to Americanize the statement put out by Buckingham Palace.)

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