
Prince William and Princess Kate stepped out for a moving day in Southport on Tuesday as the community continues to remember the three young girls who were killed in a dance class in the town last year. On Tuesday, the Prince and Princess of Wales, both 43, carried out a number of engagements in the area, which included visiting the schools attended by the three victims, Bebe King, six, Alice da Silva Aguiar, nine, and Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven.
During their visits to the schools, William and Kate spent time talking to students and teachers about their work and how the school community has remembered the victims of the awful attack. The royal couple also spoke to students about other topics, including general school life.
While William and Kate keep their own children, Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis, as private as possible, the future King did speak about one subject his children talk about "a lot."
This was revealed by one of the young school students in Southport, who told BBC News: "He (Prince William) was asking us all about school and what lessons we liked the most.
"And about lunch menus as well. He was just saying to us about food because his children talk about food a lot."
The couple's visit to Southport on Tuesday is their second visit to the town since the attack over a year ago.
It is believed the Prince and Princess of Wales feel passionately about the community and want to do all they can to help.

The couple have privately met the families of the three young girls who died in the attack, and also spent time during their first visit last October speaking to emergency service workers in the town.
Taking to Instagram after today's visit, the future King and Queen wrote: "A deeply moving visit to Southport remembering Alice, Bebe and Elsie.
"To see firsthand how the community, their schools and families have come together in the face of such loss - creating spaces of love, connection and hope - was incredible.
"Projects like the new playground at Churchtown Primary School, shaped in the girls' memory, are places of healing that will support their classmates and bring people together for the future."
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