WHEN her fundraising father Captain 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.

Her story has been “one of business, family and leadership”, the website stated.

READ MORE: Captain Tom Moore's family gained 'significant' financial benefit from charity links

When Moore soared to prominence as Covid-19 spread across the globe, 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, Ingram-Moore co-founded business recruitment agency Maytrix and both are co-directors of private limited company Club Nook.

Ingram-Moore accompanied her father to the regal surrounds of Windsor Castle in the summer of 2020 to see him knighted, and took a seat in the Royal Box at Wimbledon months after Sir Tom’s death in 2021 where she stood to applause and cheers.

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

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 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”.