Queen salutes fallen veterans at memorial

Queen Elizabeth II tours the World War II National Memorial on Tuesday in Washington.

? Queen Elizabeth II paid tribute to American soldiers Tuesday with a trip to the National World War II Memorial, winding up her six-day American visit. Later in the day, she concluded her visit by sharing a toast with President Bush celebrating the close alliance of Britain and the United States.

During her trip to the World War II memorial, the queen was accompanied by the president’s father, former President George H.W. Bush, a veteran of the war, and his wife, Barbara. The queen placed a wreath in honor of the 400,000 U.S. soldiers who died. It said: “In memory of the glorious dead.”

Afterward there was a drum roll and a bugler played taps.

Dressed in a sharp blue suit and hat, the queen then joined Mary Bomar, the British-born director of the National Park Service, for a walk around a fountain at the center of the memorial. They stopped to look at the Lincoln Memorial and the Washington Monument before greeting veterans of World War II, some in wheelchairs.

One of the veterans, Marjorie Gallun, 85, who said she served in the Marine Corps, told the queen: “We are happy to have you here.”

The queen politely replied: “We are happy to be here.”

Outside the memorial, there was a crowd of several hundred behind a picket fence, on which two Union Jacks were draped. The crowd applauded as the queen’s limousine went by.

It was the British monarch’s first visit to the war memorial, which was dedicated in 2004. The queen, a teenage princess during World War II, served her country in the war as a driver in the Women’s Auxiliary Territorial Service, the women’s branch of the British army.

It was a full day of sightseeing in the U.S. capital. The queen started off with a trip to NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in suburban Maryland, where she heard three astronauts describe their work aboard the international space station.

The crew members – American Suni Williams and two Russian cosmonauts, Fyodor Yurchikhin and Oleg Kotov – answered questions from British-born NASA astronaut C. Michael Foale, who stood next to the queen at the center.

The video link was one-way, so the crew members could not see the queen standing by silently wearing a large yellow hat.

The flight center is home to the largest organization of scientists and engineers in the United States, according to NASA.

The queen concluded her Washington visit by hosting a dinner for the Bushes at the British Embassy Tuesday night, a return favor for the white-tie state dinner Bush put on for the royal couple Monday night at the White House.

Her toast to the first couple included a gentle dig at the president for his slip of the tongue on Monday.

“I wondered whether I should start this toast by saying, ‘When I was here in 1776,” she said to laughter. Bush suggested Monday that she had celebrated the United States’ founding in 1776. He meant to say she had attended 1976 bicentennial festivities.

The royal couple flew back to Britain Tuesday night.