Guernsey Press

Who is Captain Sir Tom Moore’s daughter Hannah Ingram-Moore?

Mrs Ingram-Moore’s website describes her as a businesswoman, life coach and motivational speaker.

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When her fundraising father Captain Sir Tom Moore hit the headlines for his pandemic efforts, his daughter Hannah Ingram-Moore was never far from the spotlight.

But before that, she was “one of Britain’s leading business women”, according to her official website.

She is also described as a life coach and motivational speaker, with the site saying she has gained a “wealth of knowledge and expertise” from working over the years with well-known brands including clothing retailer Gap and high-end department store Fortnum & Mason.

Captain Sir Tom Moore’s daughter Hannah Ingram-Moore
Captain Sir Tom Moore’s daughter Hannah Ingram-Moore (Joe Giddens/PA)

When Sir Tom soared to prominence as Covid-19 spread across the globe, Mrs Ingram-Moore – one of the veteran’s two daughters – often gave interviews and appeared in photographs and video footage taken by the media as her father’s charitable efforts captured the imagination of a locked-down UK.

She spoke of the “richness of living in a multi-generational household”, having asked her elderly father to move in with her family in their property in Marston Moretaine, Bedfordshire – on the lawn of which he completed his 100 laps, raising £38.9 million for the NHS.

Alongside her chartered accountant husband, Colin, Mrs Ingram-Moore co-founded business recruitment agency Maytrix and both are co-directors of private limited company Club Nook.

Sir Thomas Moore receiving his knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II during a ceremony at Windsor Castle in 2020
Sir Tom receiving his knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II during a ceremony at Windsor Castle in 2020 (PA)

But just three years later she and her husband had been banned by the Charity Commission from being charity trustees.

Mrs Ingram-Moore described the commission’s inquiry as a “harrowing and debilitating ordeal” which had left the family feeling suspended in “constant fear and mental anguish”.

A quote on her website, attributed to Mrs Ingram-Moore, described how she feels a “weight of responsibility for doing the right thing, for not letting people down and responding to the love and compassion that has come our way”.

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