This is a list of places, buildings, roads and other things named after Queen Elizabeth II. It is divided by category, and each item's location is noted in the entry.
New York: Queen Elizabeth II September 11th Garden, New York City The Queen Elizabeth II September 11 Garden in Lower Manhattan's Hanover Square commemorates the enduring friendship and unity between the British & the Commonwealth and the United States of America and its people
Manitoba: Statue, Government House, Winnipeg commemorating the Queen's address to the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba during its provincial centennial in 1970
Bronze statue that once stood in front of the Nigerian Parliament building depicting the Queen sitting on the throne by Ben Enwonwu, 1956. It was removed after Nigeria became a republic and now stands at the Deputy High Commissioner's Residence in Lagos
Papua New Guinea:
Portrait bust of a young crowned Queen Elizabeth II, Port Moresby
United Kingdom:
England: bronze bust by Frances Segelman erected at the Bexleyheath Clock Tower, Bexleyheath, Bexley, London, to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the queen's coronation
England: bronze cast in the Great Hall of Winchester Castle, Winchester, Hampshire
England: bronze statue amongst many others, including of Prince Philip's in a sculpture known as “Uniting Two Societies” on the grounds of Ascot Racecourse, Windsor
England: statue by Lydia Karpinska named "The Windsor Lady" - An informal representation of Elizabeth II wearing a head scarf and sitting down on a small bench atop a four-step brick built plinth. She is surrounded by her corgis, Bachelors Acre Park, Windsor
England: statue by Caroline Wallace, designed to celebrate the links between the Queen and the Army. It depicts the Queen at Trooping the Colour in 1984 wearing the Grenadier Guards uniform and riding her horse Burmese for the last time, at Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, Sandhurst, Berkshire
England: French limestone statue by Richard Bossons showing the Queen in robes of the Order of the Garter. It is installed above the West Front entrance of York Minster, the largest gothic cathedral in Britain, and pays tribute to the late monarch's life of service and dedication, York
United States:
Pennsylvania: high relief portrait with Dedication Speech on the Bicentennial Bell Memorial Wall, Philadelphia. The Bicentennial Bell was a gift from the people of Britain presented by the Queen to the people of the United States to celebrate the 1976 United States Bicentennial
Former:
Canada: British Columbia: bust in Beacon Hill Park, Victoria, commemorating the royal visit of 1959 had its head completely removed from the body by vandals in February 2021
Iran: Elizabeth II Boulevard (Persian: بلوار الیزابت دوم – Bolvār Elizābet Dovvom), Tehran, named to commemorate the Queen's visit in 1961, renamed Keshavarz Boulevard (Persian: بلوار کشاورز – Bolvār e Keshāvarz) in 1979.[7][8]
Zimbabwe: Queen Elizabeth Girls High School, Harare
Former:
United Kingdom (England): The Queen's Church of England Primary School, Kew, London, reverted to its previous name of The King's Church of England Primary School in 2023 after the Queen's death and her son's succession to the throne as King Charles III.
Canadian Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Scholarships: Also known as the Queen Elizabeth Scholars Program.[10] Canada-based global education program led by the Rideau Hall Foundation, Universities Canada and the Community Foundations of Canada. By 2022, 3,000 QE Scholars were awarded
British Columbia: The proposed Queen Elizabeth II Observatory on Mount Kobau in British Columbia. Later renamed the Mount Kobau National Observatory, and the 3.81 m main telescope was named in her honour
Queens' Bedroom, The White House, part of a guest suite of rooms that includes the Queens' Sitting Room, named after the many royal guests it has hosted, including the Queen. On the wall hangs an 18th-century painting with a mirror presented to President Harry S. Truman by then-Princess Elizabeth on behalf of her father, George VI, during her visit to Washington, D.C. in 1951
Queen Elizabeth 2 (QE2): A retired ocean liner originally built for the Cunard Line, which operated by Cunard as both a transatlantic liner and a cruise ship from 1969 to 2008 (except during the Falklands War, when she served as a troopship). Since 18 April 2018, she has been operating as a floating hotel in Dubai.[13]
The Queen's Commonwealth Canopy (QCC) – an initiative begun in 2015 as a network of forest conservation programs throughout the Commonwealth of Nations
Former:
United Kingdom: Class 91 91029 Queen Elizabeth II. The railway locomotive was named by the Queen in person in March 1991. It lost its nameplate in the late 1990s when GNER was founded, was renumbered in 2000, withdrawn in 2020 and finally scrapped the following year
The Queen Elizabeth II Fields Challenge: a programme run by Fields in Trust aiming to protect outdoor recreational spaces across the UK to create a "grassroots legacy" in celebration of the 2012 Diamond Jubilee