Entrepreneur Ian Watson looks back on 10 years and £1m of grants through family trust

The Watson Family Charitable Trust at a visit to Jessica Sarcoma Awareness. Left to right: Hugh Welch, Trevor Robson and Julie Robson, the charity's founders, Ian Watson, Craig Watson.

Luxury care home operator and property entrepreneur Ian Watson has appeared in our business pages many times over the years, often after striking multimillion-pound deals with his business ventures.

Yet some of his proudest moments have involved deals of a very different kind - grants made from his family’s charitable trust. Having been fortunate in many aspects of his life, Ian strongly believes that if you have the privilege of wealth and opportunity, you also have greater responsibility to help others.

To that end, the Newcastle owner of Hadrian Healthcare and MCM Investments officially registered the Watson Family Charitable Trust in 2015, with his wife and two sons, and friend and lawyer Hugh Welch, senior partner at Muckle LLP, also coming on board as trustees. Now, 10 years on, Muckle LLP has hosted an event to draw together many of the organisations – from across the North East and as far away as Africa – who have received help through the trust.

The event, held at the law firm’s Newcastle city centre offices last week, was also double cause for celebration as Ian announced new grants, while also committing more funds into the pot for future donations. Ian initially wasn’t keen on holding a 10-year celebration, worried it would appear too self-indulgent, but other trustees pointed out the benefits such an event could bring.

“I said it’s a bit ‘blowing our own trumpets’” he said, “but Hugh said it’s not, it will pull together all the people and all the organisations we’ve been able to help. I gave out further grants on the night too, which takes our giving over the last 10 years to over £1m - and I’ve also committed a further £1m into the Trust, to support more good causes.”

The trust’s key drivers have been to help young people to overcome social disadvantage and disability, both within the region and internationally, and to give support to local community projects, with a focus on health, education and deprivation. And over the years there have been many.

Since its inception organisations to have received donations include Success4All, St Cuthbert’s Care, World Vision, Parkinson’s UK, The Recruitment Junction, Hadrian School and his own school Whickham School and Sports College. The Watson Family Charitable Trust has had a close relationship with the Percy Hedley Foundation, supporting the school to take part in the annual Christmas carol service and Christmas tree lighting ceremony at St George’s Church in Jesmond, and also making substantial grants to fund a sensory room in 2018, the installation of a roundabout and play area in 2019, and paying for a holiday for children from the school in 2020.

At last week’s anniversary event, further grants were made to schools in Kenya and Uganda which were among the first trust recipients, as well as further grants to Success4All and Whickham School. Other recipients included Clean Slate, which helps ex-offenders into employment, and Jessica’s Sarcoma Awareness, which has built a respite holiday home in Northumberland for children undergoing cancer treatment.

Among the guests at Muckle LLP last week was Sister Angelina, the “incredible and amazing” nun who Ian and Hugh met almost 10 years ago, after taking on one of the trust’s first and biggest projects to date, which involved work on a school in Uganda. Ian had been introduced to a Northumberland woman whose daughter had carried out voluntary work at a school in Uganda, and the pair were continuing to help the school on her return, through fundraising events.

He was shown photos of the school, laying bare just how great it needed financial help, and within two weeks he and Hugh were on a flight to Uganda, to find out how they could help.

He recalled: “It’s an amazing place run by volunteers, mainly nuns, and the children have incredibly high needs, but the facilities were nothing short of appalling. There were no toilets except holes in the ground, so infections were rife. There was one tap with water but no washing facilities, no showers, no hot water.

"And the staff accommodation was just stables. So, we decided to commit to building a shower block and toilet block for the boys and the girls, separately. We put in running water and solar power so they could have hot running water, and we rebuilt the staff accommodation and installed a playground. That took 12 months and we went back the following year to see the result - the difference was incredible.

“We just made it possible by providing the money. The head of the school, Sister Angelina, was the one who really made it possible because she controlled everything and organised everything.

“Some years later she was moved by the church to Eldoret in Kenya and she was looking after children, and basically had no facilities yet again. We kept in touch and she told us she had a dream of building a school so children in the poorest communities in Kenya could go to school.

“So that’s what we’ve done. We helped her buy the land , the school was built and it opened about two months ago. It will be used by 600 children every week, youngsters who wouldn’t otherwise have any access to education.”

The school also allows the children to be properly fed because the trust also bought 10 acres of neighbouring land which is being farmed to produce crops for the school.

He said: “That’s so important. I’ll never forget the very first time I went to Africa, to do a project before I set up the Trust in Zimbabwe, to provide some funds to a school. The headteacher said to me, ‘you can’t teach children who are hungry’.”

The need for proper nutrition and a safe haven for education has also spurred the trust into helping an organisation closer to home, the West End of Newcastle’s branch of national charity Success4All, which aims to prepare children and young people for a brighter future.

“They create hubs where children can go to after school and do homework,” said Ian. “These are kids who can’t do homework at home, they don’t have computers, IT and they don’t have tablets, but they also don’t have the environment to work in. So Success4All is a great organisation.”

Ian admits that helping others gives him a lot of satisfaction - and many people won’t even be aware of some of the community projects he’s spearheaded closer to home (the Christmas trees put up outside of businesses in Jesmond, for example, was originally started by Ian in 2023 and now involves the whole community, with Gosforth following suit last year).

But he stresses that he “just writes the cheques”. While it’s his family’s name on the paperwork, it’s been the people behind the charities he’s helped who have done all the hard work..

He added: “We uses the evening to celebrate what we’ve been able to achieve with the beneficiaries – that’s a very important part because all we’ve done is given people the funding, they are the ones who’ve used it to go and do great things. It’s all about the people.

”I remember Hugh and I were walking around the school gardens in Uganda at five in the morning and the sun was coming up and we could see everything which had changed and I said to Hugh ‘the richest man in the world hasn’t got what we have right now’. It was amazing to see what we’d done. In relative terms we’d done quite little, aside from writing out cheques, but we’d changed the lives of so many people, staff and children. And that will go on down the generations. It’s there for longevity.