A Quiet Arrival: Nottinghamâs Empty Welcome
Harry, Duke of Sussex, touched down in Nottingham for his first UK public appearance in five months, supporting CRS and announcing a ÂŁ1.1M ($1.4M) personal donation to tackle youth violence, per BBC News (September 9). But the scene outside was a far cry from his 2017 visit with Meghan, when hundreds chanted their names. Only about 100 locals, including children, gathered across the road, per GB News and Daily Mail (September 9), leaving metal barriersâset up for crowd controlâeerily empty, as noted in X posts: âNo crowd for Harry? Barriers for ghosts! đ± #HarryNoCrowdâ (3,000+ likes).
The YouTube video claimed Harry was âvisibly embarrassed,â arriving in a black Range Rover, smiling and waving despite the lackluster turnout. Delayed by traffic from a Tube strike, he gave a thumbs-up to supporters shouting, âHarry, you brought the sunshine!â per Daily Mail. Yet, the sparse crowd fueled headlines, with RadarOnline (September 9) calling it a âmajor embarrassmentâ for the âexiled royal.â
2017 vs. 2025: A Royal Fall From Grace?
In December 2017, Harry and Meghanâs first joint Nottingham visit drew massive crowds, with well-wishers chanting and reaching for handshakes, per Daily Mail (2017). Fast-forward to 2025, the modest 100-person turnoutâcompared to thousandsâstung. Local Graham, 82, told Nottinghamshire Live: âI thought thereâd be more people here.â His wife Patricia, 81, added, âWe like him, but itâs not often you get a royal up close.â Fan Diana De Faria, 33, said, âIâm a big fan… very excited to see him,â but the small scale puzzled others, per GB News: âThought thereâd be more people.â
X posts amplified the contrast: â2017: Harry & Meghan mobbed! 2025: Crickets! đŹ #RoyalFlopâ (2,500 retweets). The video claimed Harryâs âCalifornia styleâ and Archewell Foundation staff managing media couldnât mask the âempty fences,â suggesting public interest has waned since he stepped back as a working royal in 2020.
Family Rift Overshadows Charity Work
Harryâs visit, part of a four-day UK trip starting with the WellChild Awards in London (September 8), was clouded by speculation about meeting King Charles III or Prince William, per The New York Times (September 8). No reunion happenedâCharles was at Balmoral, William in Lambeth, per BBC. Harryâs emotional May 2025 BBC interview, saying âI would love reconciliation with my family,â fueled hope, but the âempty fencesâ narrative shifted focus. X speculated: âNo crowd, no family meetingâHarryâs done! đą #RoyalRiftâ (4,000 likes).
His $1.4M donation, praised by Newsweek (September 9) as a ârare move for a royal,â aimed to support Nottingham charities like CRS, which Harry has backed since 2013. âNottingham has my respect, my commitment, a permanent place in my heart,â he said, per Newsweek. But the YouTube video and RadarOnline framed the turnout as a âsnub,â with X users split: âHarryâs doing good, mediaâs twisting it! đ #SupportHarryâ (2,000 likes) vs. âNo one showed upâpublicâs over him! đ€â (1,500 retweets).
Media Hype or Public Rejection?
The âempty fencesâ claim may be exaggerated. GB News and Daily Mail reported a âwarm but smallâ reception of 100 people, including loyal fans like Margaret Wilson, 66, in a âTeam Harryâ T-shirt, and cousins Demi-Leigh and Daniella Crofts, honoring their grandmotherâs 2017 meeting with Harry. âHeâs a sound guy,â said Jalle, 24, a CRS musician, per Newsweek. Yet, the YouTube video and posts like @storiesbyjemayâs (September 9) pushed the âno crowdâ angle, claiming âthe public failed to turn out.â
Fact-checks suggest media spin. The crowd, though smaller than 2017, wasnât absentâ100 locals clapped and cheered, per BBC. The Tube strike delay and private security (no police escort, per Daily Mail) may have impacted logistics. X countered: âMediaâs lyingâHarry had fans there! đĄ #FakeNewsâ (2,200 retweets). Still, the narrative of a âflopâ visit fits tabloid agendas, with The Sun (September 9) hinting at Harryâs âfading star.â
Why It Matters: A Royal in Transition
Harryâs solo trip, without Meghan or their children Archie, 6, and Lilibet, 4, reflects his ongoing security battle with the Home Office, per The New York Times. His commitment to UK charities persists, but the âempty fencesâ story underscores his complex public image post-Spare (2022) and Netflix docuseries. As King Charles battles cancer and William rises, Harryâs Nottingham momentâsmall but meaningfulâshows a prince caught between duty and exile.