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Teenager in £7 million lottery win toasts luck with beans



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Teenage lottery winner Ianthe Fullagar talks about her win
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Published Date: 01 October 2008
AT JUST 18, Britain's newest multi-millionaire celebrated in the only way she knew how – a student feast of beans on toast and cider.
Ianthe Fullagar, who has just completed her A-levels, spoke yesterday about how a £7 million EuroMillions lottery windfall would change the course of her future.

Ms Fullagar, 18, from Cumbria, could not stop screaming when she discovered her new status as a multi-millionaire. The noise so startled her pet dog, Brock, that he jumped up and bit her on the buttocks. She then hid the winning ticket in her bra.

Ms Fullagar, and Brock, can be excused such hysteria. With her share of the record £102 million jackpot, she can afford some time off before deciding how her fortune might improve the rest of her life.

The youngest EuroMillions winner is already on a gap year, ahead of a law degree starting next year.

Her wealth will help her foray into the legal profession after her course – she intends to start her own law firm.

Ms Fullagar, from the fishing village of Ravenglass, recalled the ecstatic moments following her £7,055,142 win.

"At first I thought I had matched three numbers. I couldn't believe it when I realised I had the five main numbers plus a Lucky Star," she said.

"My mum called the National Lottery line and it was only then that I realised I had won a share of the jackpot.

"We were both screaming so loudly that my dog, Brock, didn't know what was happening and bit me on the bottom."

She added: "I didn't know what to do with my ticket, so after hiding it in my bra and jewellery box, I settled for my gym bag until it was confirmed I was a winner.

"It still hasn't sunk in, but we have already celebrated with a traditional family party – beans on toast, curly fries, cider and loads of ice-cream."

Britain's newest millionaire had only played the EuroMillions game once before, but on hearing how the jackpot had swelled last week to more than £100 million, she decided to buy another lucky dip ticket.

She shared her prize with 14 other players from around Europe. Four of the tickets were bought in Britain, including one that has yet to be claimed.

Ms Fullagar, who passed A- levels, in English, maths and biology, plans to pamper herself with a holiday in Egypt, and buy a black Ford Ka, as well as treat her younger siblings with a trip to Toys R Us.

Ms Fullagar received advice from another winner. Callie Rogers, also from Cumbria, who won £1.9 million five years ago, aged 16, said: "The thing about money is, you worry if you don't have it, and if you do have it, you wonder if it is going to last."

Her mother, Zoe, a nurse, is confident her daughter will remain level-headed. She said: "I'm not going to let her run away with all her fancy ideas. We're going to stay really grounded and stay as a family."



Jackpot brings pleasure and problems

IANTHE Fullagar is the latest teenager to strike it rich courtesy of six lucky numbers. Many have gone on to invest wisely towards content and secure lives, but others have found it difficult to deal with the change in lifestyle a lottery win can bring.

Callie Rogers, of Workington, Cumbria, gave Miss Fullagar advice yesterday on the importance of keeping a level head.

Miss Rogers was just 16 and living with foster parents when she won £1.9 million in 2002. She suffered a series of broken relationships and accusations that she was using her wealth to steal boyfriends from other women.

She has since bought a house and settled down, and has a sizeable sum invested in property. Perhaps the most notorious teenage lottery winner was Michael Carroll, who was 19 when he won £9.7 million six years ago. The Norfolk youth enraged his neighbours by turning a field adjacent to his newly purchased villa into a dirt racing track. Though she won a share of the largest EuroMillions jackpot to date – £102 million – Miss Fullagar's prize is not the biggest by a Briton playing the Europe-wide Lottery. Angela Kelly, from Glasgow, won £35.4 million last year.




The full article contains 727 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 01 October 2008 1:23 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Video Archive
 
1

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 01/10/2008 00:54:29



"student feast of beans on toast and cider."

For All the,..'Ignorant'!!!!

Let this be your Lesson, that what Charles Linskaill says is,,,,

,,,,'The Truth, and Nothing, But The Truth'

...Our "Teens" WILL!! Get and HAVE all the 'Booze' they want, no-matter what! idiotic Muppet Proposals our Authorities make on 'Banning the Booze'!!

....'Well-Done' BTW, to Ms Fullagar!
2

Charles Linskaill,

Edinburgh 01/10/2008 00:56:51

She is not bad looking also, and that's a 'cheeky-smile',

:)
3

Scullion,

Canada 01/10/2008 02:25:34
Can she loan it to George W so he can give it to some poor sod of a CEO for his retirement?
4

Boy Wonder,

01/10/2008 06:28:40
If the ticket that is unclaimed, is still unclaimed by Friday ... can I have the proceeds from it???

I promise I'll have old Chuckles Linskaill silenced!!!
5

Vote UKIP,

01/10/2008 07:23:15
Only the first £35,000 is 'guaranteed' by the Government if her bank fails.

She should buy up real assets asap.
6

drunken proffet,

Tassy 01/10/2008 07:37:58
Well that is one way to take all the fun out of your life. Win seven plus million and get your picture and address printed in the papers. My advice, keep one hundred thousand of mad money and give the rest for one year to Oxfam, Red Cross, Salvation Army etc and do the same thing the following year, and the years after. If they cannot return the capital, they lose out on the next years investment. Alternatively give it the bankers to invest or stick it in a large tin box in the back garden.
7

Bluevoice,

Dubai, U.A.E. 01/10/2008 08:04:09
Congratulations!
8

Jay Kay,

01/10/2008 08:41:49
Excellent although upsetting yer dug, im sure you can make it up to the poor pooch, congratulations my dear.

Now just be very very careful how you spend it oh and where to bank it, Zurich I think is safest.

Good to see an uplifting story after all this gloom and doom.
9

Haggis MacBagpipes,

Central Canada - ex Perth & Glesca' 01/10/2008 08:56:13
#2-Chuckles Linskaill, Edinburgh.

What's wrong, Chuckles, got something stirring in your loins? Does DYW know that you are ogling at the young lady who won part of the Lottery?
Or is it wishful thinking that she might give you a few thousand pounds because you are what you are?
Which I think is that you are a pain in the rear-end!
Cheers,
Haggis MacBagpipes™©
10

The Strategist,

01/10/2008 08:57:10
Could not screaming and intends buying a black Ford Ka!!
11

Sile,

Somewhere 01/10/2008 09:29:24
Terrific Live and Enjoy.

open an account in Ireland no loss there then, while brown TALKS about no action on 50 grand,
12

AJ Fife,

01/10/2008 09:39:26
Don't bank the dosh, get a big biscuit tin and bury it in your garden! It'll be safer there......
13

R.A.D. Stainforth,

Manchester 01/10/2008 10:08:38
She's a wee beauty! I am strangely drawn. The first thing she should buy is a chamber pot. Then when she's blown all the money, no one can say she doesn't even have a pot to ...

Just what the world needs ... another millionaire lawyer.

http://radstainforth.blogspot.com
14

commonsense,

At Table Writing Begging Letter 01/10/2008 11:40:42
Having never been in her position,I don't know how she will react,however I wonder if her dream of becoming a lawyer through hard work,will become a bit pointless now.I feel it may take away as many dreams and accomplishments as it brings.
Still like most people ,I would give it a try!
15

EnglishHighlander,

01/10/2008 12:11:10
Well done. Be strong, because you are going to be besieged with begging letters, suitors and all kind of low-lifes knocking on your door.

I won't be one - although I did feel a touch light-headed when watching her let loose with the champagne! ;-)
16

danielrober,

01/10/2008 14:13:27
Good luck, have fun and remember that luck is one of the allies. Why not take a look at some courses around the world. You could afford to study in Harvard, Yale etc, could be good. Have fun and get a decent accountant.
17

British Military Vet Veritas,

Mt St Catherine, Sinai 01/10/2008 16:25:51
Most of us can only dream of having such wealth as this young lady has.

In fact, most of us world travellers can only dream about having Heinz Baked beans on toast, as this young lady has.

I'd settle for a tin of the best beans in the world.

Good luck lassie.

18

Miss P.,

Stow, Massachusetts, US 01/10/2008 17:14:20
What a great story! I wish her the best.

My advice: Hire a lawyer and an accountant and disappear for a good long while. People she didn't even know she was related to, as well as complete strangers, will come out of the woodwork looking for a bit of her winnings (just think of Steve Martin's movie "The Jerk").
19

Richard Lionheart,

01/10/2008 21:33:28
lodge the cash in an Irish Bank!
20

weeshooie1,

Wollongong 01/10/2008 21:37:00
Ianthe, come to Australia, we need you.

 

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