close
close

Millionaire midwife still gives birth a decade after winning the lottery

A lottery-winning midwife is still delivering babies 10 years after becoming a millionaire.

Ruth Breen, 45, was on her lunch break at work at the Royal Albert Edward Infirmary in Wigan in 2014 when she checked her emails and discovered she had won £1m on the EuroMillions.

A decade on, the mother-of-one still works for the NHS, although she has enjoyed holidaying in destinations including Dubai, St Lucia and Mauritius.

She said: “A lot has changed in the last 10 years, but again, not that much.

“The win came at the most perfect time ever. It has allowed me to reduce my working time, giving me a much better work-life balance.

Ruth Breen after winning £1m on EuroMillions in 2014 (National Lottery/PA)
Ruth Breen after winning £1m on EuroMillions in 2014 (National Lottery/PA)

“I’m very lucky that I only work part-time. This allowed me to spend much more time with my daughter, doing fun things for mom, instead of working tirelessly for a very busy job. We’ve had great holidays but we’ve been trying to keep our feet on the ground and I think work really helps me do that.”

Ms Breen wanted to continue working as an example for her daughter, who was 11 when she won.

She said: “The universe has given me something incredible, but you can’t take it for granted, not everyone is that lucky.”

The community midwife now comes to her visits in a BMW X3, saying the need for boot space prevented her from driving a sportier model, and her first purchase after winning was a pair of Jimmy Choos.

She said: “I almost cried when I was paying for them in Selfridges because I couldn’t believe I could buy this and have the money to do it. It was a bit overwhelming.

“That collection is a little bigger now, I don’t cry so much!”

Ms Breen still lives in the house she bought just before she won and says most of the new mums she works with don’t know they are being looked after by a millionaire.

“I don’t come up and say ‘oh by the way I won a million pounds 10 years ago’, the vast majority of people have no idea and that’s the way I like it,” she said.

“I am treated like any other midwife by patients and staff.”

Ruth Breen (second from right) with fellow lottery winners Emma Cartwright (left) and Annette Dawson (right) and The Baby Room charity founder Alison Wakefield (Anthony Devlin/PA)
Ruth Breen with other lottery winners (Anthony Devlin/PA)

To mark the 10-year anniversary of her win, Mrs Breen supported charity The Baby Room, which provides essentials for new families in Wigan.

She said: “We all know there is a cost of living crisis that has been going on for some time and babies don’t come cheap.

“Not everyone is lucky enough to be able to go out and spend as much on all the equipment they’re going to need to make sure the baby has a safe place to sleep at night or that they have sterilization equipment to make sure that the bottles and teats they use, if they choose to bottle feed, are safe and clean.”

Alison Wakefield, who set up the baby bank in 2022 after giving birth to her youngest child, said: “Without our support we would have children sleeping on the floor, not having a safe space to sleep, we would be had. sleeping in drawers, we would have children who use diapers more than once.

“It is an essential service that is definitely needed. Without us people would go without and babies would go without.”

Related Articles

Back to top button