Queen's Platinum Jubilee Gardens

[1] On September 30, Elizabeth Dowdeswell, Lieutenant Governor of Ontario, unveiled the Platinum Jubilee Garden on the grounds of the Legislative Building in Queen's Park.

[2] It was designed in partnership with Elder Carolyn King, of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation, and tobacco plants place a special focus on the relationship between the Crown and Indigenous Peoples.

[2] Prince Edward Island's Platinum Jubilee Garden was unveiled by Lieutenant Governor Antoinette Perry at Government House in Charlottetown, on June 2, 2022.

[4] The garden includes a special tulip created for the Queen's Diamond Jubilee in 2012, plants native to the island, flowers representing the first groups to settle in the province—lavender for the English and French and thistle for the Scottish and Irish.

[6] At the centre is the Queen Elizabeth rose and, recognizing the ties between the Crown and Indigenous peoples, also includes tobacco plants, as well as flora native to the province,[5][7] such as Labrador tea, prairie smoke, common yarrow, and western silvery aster.

The plaque for Prince Edward Island's Platinum Jubilee Garden on the grounds of Government House in Charlottetown