Ayo, Princess Anne deserves way more credit than she gets.
The official Royal Family Instagram account dropped a tribute this week. It marks the 50th anniversary of Princess Anne competing in the 1976 Montreal Olympic Games. The post was brief: “Celebrating 50 years since The Princess Royal competed in the 1976 Montreal Olympic Games.” Archival photographs came with it, credited to Anwar Hussein Photography and Getty Entertainment.
That’s a milestone worth stopping on.
Princess Anne holds a distinction no other member of the British Royal Family can claim. She’s the only British royal ever to have competed at the Olympics. Not as a dignitary in the stands. As an actual athlete in the field of play. Fifty years later, that record still belongs to her.
Back in the summer of 1976, Anne traveled to Montreal as part of the British equestrian team. She competed in equestrian eventing. The discipline spans multiple days and covers dressage, cross-country riding, and showjumping. It’s considered one of the most demanding combinations in Olympic sport.
She rode a horse named Goodwill. During the cross-country phase, she took a fall. She got back up, remounted, and finished the course. Most people sleeping on this part of royal history, honestly.
Anne was 26 at those Games. Already a decorated competitor long before Montreal. She’d won the European Eventing Championship in 1971, five years before the Games. She didn’t show up in Canada looking for a moment. She earned her spot.
And the context makes it even more impressive. Anne was a full working member of the Royal Family. Official duties, public engagements, all of it. At the same time, she was training at the elite level and competing against the best equestrian riders in the world. That combination takes serious commitment, and it doesn’t get talked about enough.
The 1976 Montreal Games were a landmark in Olympic history. Athletes from across the globe converged on Canada that summer. The equestrian events drew elite riders from throughout Europe and beyond. Anne was right there, representing Britain alongside them.
The archival images the Royal Family shared this week are worth seeing. Historical photographs from Anwar Hussein Photography and Getty Entertainment capture Princess Anne in competition – not ceremony.
Now 75, Princess Anne has kept one of the most active schedules in the Royal Family for decades. She consistently ranks among the top working royals by number of official engagements each year. That drive never left.
But the Olympic chapter is its own thing. It doesn’t come up in royal history conversations nearly enough. Anne competed at the Games, took a fall in the middle of it, and finished anyway. That story should lead every anniversary tribute.
Fifty years on, the record still stands. No other British royal has competed at the Games. It belongs to Princess Anne alone.
