Prince Harry and Meghan Markle send a letter of thanks


Prince Harry and Meghan Markle send a letter to thank StreetGames charity staff for delivering Hubb Kitchen meals to vulnerable people (but some slam them for using headed paper with a crown in the monogram)

  • British street charity have shared the touching thank you letter sent to them 
  • Prince Harry and Meghan Markle wrote to sports charity Street Games
  • Thanked the London charity for delivering Hubb Community kitchen meals 
  • The letter was signed off simply ‘Harry and Meghan’, with no use of royal titles, however some followers still noted the use of a crown in their monogram 

A British street charity have shared the touching thank you letter sent to them by Prince Harry and Meghan Markle. 

Sports charity Street Games, an organisation supporting disadvantaged communities in London, took to Twitter over the weekend to share a picture of the note they received from the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, who are currently residing in LA. 

Sharing a picture of the letter on Sunday, the charity wrote: ‘Wow! Thank you so much Harry and Meghan for your kind words and your continued support for StreetGames and the brilliant local organisations working to support their communities in these challenging times’.

The letter was signed off simply ‘Harry and Meghan’, with no use of royal titles, however some followers still noted the use of a crown in their monogram. 

Sports charity Street Games, an organisation supporting disadvantaged communities in London, took to Twitter over the weekend to share a picture of the note they received from the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, who are currently residing in LA

The sweet note, dated 19 June 2020, reads: ‘We wanted to write and express our heartfelt thanks to the team at StreetGames following their support delivering Hubb Community kitchen meals throughout London.

‘To know that North Paddington Youth Club, Solidarity Sports and St Matthews Project distributed hundreds of freshly prepared meals across their networks of young people over the last few months is fantastic.

‘The impact of Covid-19 has been a scary and testing time for so many people from all walks of life, all over the world.

‘However, it is difficult times like these that goodwill to others and community spirit prevails.’

The letter was signed off simply 'Harry and Meghan', with no use of royal titles. Pictured: The Duke and Duchess of Sussex performing their final official duties in London in March

The letter was signed off simply ‘Harry and Meghan’, with no use of royal titles. Pictured: The Duke and Duchess of Sussex performing their final official duties in London in March

The tweet received a positive response from the majority of excited fans. 

One wrote: ‘Wow thank you so much for sharing. We are overjoyed and love the fact that Prince Harry and Duchess Meghan continue to inspire and show real leadership and humanitarian hearts! Thank you for all you do.’

Another said: ‘Wow. This is beautiful. I didn’t know you were helping with food delivery… Congrats’.

Elsewhere one tweeted: ‘Harry and Meghan are the best royals. All their projects are really sustainable and meant to really help people. They are #TrueRoyalty’.

Sharing a picture of the letter on Sunday, the charity wrote: 'Wow! Thank you so much Harry and Meghan for your kind words and your continued support for StreetGames and the brilliant local organisations working to support their communities in these challenging times'

Sharing a picture of the letter on Sunday, the charity wrote: ‘Wow! Thank you so much Harry and Meghan for your kind words and your continued support for StreetGames and the brilliant local organisations working to support their communities in these challenging times’

However others noted the use of crowns in their monogram, with one troll writing: 'Why there¿s still royal ¿logo ¿?? thought they¿re banned to use it?'

 However others noted the use of crowns in their monogram, with one troll writing: ‘Why there’s still royal “logo “?? thought they’re banned to use it?’

However others noted the use of crowns in their monogram, with one troll writing: ‘Why there’s still royal “logo “?? thought they’re banned to use it?’. 

At the beginning of the year Harry, 35, decided to step back from the limelight with Meghan, 38, and Archie, one, after being subjected to intense scrutiny which brought back painful memories of Princess Diana’s death.

The couple were forced to give up their royal titles and Sussex Royal branding, however have vowed to continue working on the charities close to their heart. 

The tweet received a positive response from the majority of excited fans. One wrote: 'Wow thank you so much for sharing. We are overjoyed and love the fact that Prince Harry and Duchess Meghan continue to inspire and show real leadership and humanitarian hearts! Thank you for all you do.'

 The tweet received a positive response from the majority of excited fans. One wrote: ‘Wow thank you so much for sharing. We are overjoyed and love the fact that Prince Harry and Duchess Meghan continue to inspire and show real leadership and humanitarian hearts! Thank you for all you do.’