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Published 11:28 10 Feb 2022 GMT
Updated 11:44 10 Feb 2022 GMT

Hannah Ingram-Moore, daughter of Captain Sir Tom Moore and husband Colin pay their respects as they place a wreath on The Burma Star Memorial (Getty)[/caption]
The year end accounts show the foundation received over £1m worth of donations and used it to make four grants of £40,000 to each charity, totalling £160,000.
Of the total £400,000 spent, £230,000 was spent on various administration and marketing costs.
The accounts show more than £125,000 was spent on fundraising consultancy fees between May 2020 and May 2021, which is around one tenth of all money raised.
A total £162,336 was used on management costs, meaning more money was spent on running the foundation than was donated to the charities.
Sir Tom's daughter Hannah Ingram-Moore, who co-founded the foundation, also runs PR firm, Maytrix Group Limited and Club Nook Limited alongside her husband Colin.
According to the 2020-2021 audit, a total £54,039 was paid into Maytrix and Club Nook for assorted costs, including transport, website and third-party consultancy.
Out of these contributions, his daughter's firm Maytrix received £27,205 in consultancy fees.
Captain Tom Moore walked 100 laps of his garden for the NHS in the first lockdown, raising more than £32m (Getty)[/caption]
Sir Captain Tom Moore walked 100 laps of his garden in the hope of raising £1,000 by his 100th birthday on April 30.
By the time the campaign closed at the end of his birthday, he had raised an astonishing £32.79 million (worth almost £39 million with expected tax rebates) in aid of the health service's charitable wing, NHS Charities Together.
On July 17 2020, he was personally knighted by the Queen at Windsor Castle. He died on February 2 2021 after testing positive for coronavirus.
The foundation was set up in the aftermath of Sir Tom's own fundraising but is not affiliated with NHS Charities Together.
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