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Daily Record
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Jeremy Armstrong & Peter Diamond

Euromillions winner 'addicted' to helping strangers has given half of £115m winnings away

A woman who won the Euromillions has had a difficult conversation with her husband because he has limited her charity donations budget.

Frances Connolly, 55, has already given away £11million to good causes from January to April this year but that is roughly the figure she had agreed to donate over the course of 10 years.

The former school teacher, who has donated more than half the EuroMillions £115m jackpot the couple won in 2019 to charity, said: “I get to change people’s lives. I’m addicted to it.”

Frances, who is originally from Co Armagh, has revealed she is now in hot water with her hubby - for donating another £11m to total strangers.

Lotto winner Frances Connnolly can't get enough of helping people (Owen Humphreys/PA Wire)

Real life ‘Fairy Godmother’ Ms Connolly was given a "budget" by husband Patrick because she is "addicted" to helping others, according to Mirror Online.

After holding a charity gala night which raised £100,000, she told how giving to good causes ‘gives her a buzz’.

She said: “I get to change people’s lives every day if I want to. Helping other people and doing something to help other people will lift you.

“If you can give to others, whether it’s time or money, it’s really important, it gives you a buzz. It’s addictive. I’m addicted to it now.”

Frances, a former social worker and teacher, has splashed cash set aside for charities over the next 10 years in the space of six months.

Frances and Paddy Connolly have already given away half of their winnings (Liam McBurney/PA Wire)

On her latest giveaway, she says: “I’m at about 10 or 11 million paid directly to charity, but I don’t keep a tally in case Paddy finds it.

“He gave me an annual budget for good causes. We set one this year, I agreed to it. I’ve already spent all the money. It was to take us up to 2032.

“We might have to revise it.” She joked: “People do ask, ‘How did you cope with that amount of money?’

“I say: ‘I never did. It wasn’t in the bank for two days’. Frances has just given away £5,000 to buy clothes and toiletries for Ukrainian refugees.

And she agreed to fund school transport fees for a young asylum seeker after he was forced to move home.

She explained: “If you can do good things for deserving people, why wouldn’t you just do it?"

She saw a TV show where a Monaco high roller spent £25,000 on a bottle of champagne, and immediately thought that could have put a young person on the property ladder.

The Connollys recently bought a £50,000 caravan for young carers.

They have set up ‘Local Heroes’ awards, helped OAPS connect with loved ones by donating electronic tablets and provided pyjamas and laptops for hospitals during lockdown.

Frances was a St John Ambulance volunteer aged nine and set up an Aids helpline as a student in Belfast.

Once of Moira, Northern Ireland, but now living in Hartlepool, Co Durham, the kind hearted couple hit the jackpot on New Year’s Day 2019.

Frances drew up a list of people and causes she would give to.

Two charitable foundations, the PFC Trust in Hartlepool and the Irish-based Kathleen Graham Foundation, named after Frances’ mum, began with £1m donations.

Frances Connolly and her husband Patrick scooped a £115million on the lotto in 2019 (Liam McBurney/PA Wire)

The initial £60m giveaway included their three grandchildren, eight siblings, 15 nieces and nephews, four great nieces and nephews, as well as complete strangers.

In an earlier interview, Frances said: “We decided very early on that our daughters were not going to get tens of millions.

“They got more than anybody else, they got enough to buy a house, and live comfortably, but they will have to work for anything else they want.

“They will get more when we die. The rest we will be giving away to charity. We did not want to be dishing out loads and loads to them straight away.

Frances is proud of the way daughters Katrina, 34, a mum-of-two, Natalie, 26, a student, and her twin Fiona have helped others, just like their parents.

She jokes that Patrick’s first purchase would have been “an electric fence and machine gun turrets” at their impressive seven acre property to protect their winnings.

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