"Wherever you are in the world, you can celebrate the 2020 June solstice by watching the sun rise at Stonehenge." Source: EarthSky.
"Every year, thousands of visitors gather at the neolithic Stonehenge monument in Wiltshire, England, to celebrate the first sunrise of the Northern Hemisphere summer. However, this year’s event has been canceled; Stonehenge is currently closed due to Covid-19. While this news is disappointing, there’s good news: For the first time, English Heritage – which has provided access to the event since 2000 – will instead stream the solstice event online.
"The event starts at sunset on Saturday (20:26 UTC on June 20) and goes through sunrise on Sunday (03:53 UTC on June 21). Translate UTC to your time. Here is the official Facebook event page, where you’ll be able to watch the livestream. You can also access the event via Stonehenge on Twitter."
Comment: I posted this a little late but you can find the videos of this less-than-spectacular event (the weather was typically English) on the English Heritage YouTube channel. The skies were clearer back in 2019.
I have mixed feelings about the site being closed because of the dreaded Kung Flu. On the one hand, the crowds who show up at Stonehenge for the solstices always trash the place out, so it's good they're not there. On the other hand, it makes no sense whatsoever to close Stonehenge to visitors while at the same time allowing mass protests in the streets.
Video from June 20, 2020. This is OK but visiting Stonehenge isn't.