Portsmouth News

Gracie-Mae donates her golden locks to Little Princess Trust

In addition to providing her hair to make wigs for sick children to wear, the ‘chuffed’ five-year-old Rowner Infant School pupil also raised £1,100 for the charity which will help towards the costs of producing them.

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A GOSPORT five-year-old chose to give up her own long locks and donate to someone really in need, raising £1,100 during the process.

Five-year-old Gracie-Mae Payne had her hair cut at Glamz on Rowner Road, Gosport, and donated it to the Little Princess Trust, a charity which provides thousands of real hair wigs to sick children and young people, aged up to 24 years across the UK and Ireland.

Gracie-Mae, from Gosport, made the decision to cut off her golden locks and donate them to the Little Princess Trust because ‘even poorly little girls need to feel like a princess’.

Not only did the youngster, who attends Rowner Infant School, donate her own hair to be used towards a wig for a sick child, she also managed to raise £1,100 for the charity, helping towards the cost of making them.

Gracie-Mae’s grandmothe­r, Maureen Dunford, said she was ‘so chuffed’ to be able to help young little girls like her, but who weren’t lucky enough to have their own hair.

Gracie-Mae’s plight to donate her hair was supported by family, including mum Charlotte Carpenter, friends and local businesses who provided words of encouragem­ent to the junior, as well as donations made through her just giving page.

‘People that know us and people that don’t, they were all donating. People can see what a great thing it was for a five year old to understand and do,’ Maureen said.

The Trust has committed more than £15 million across almost 80 projects, covering a range of childhood cancers and is striving to improve patient outcomes, by improving their access to new and developing treatments.

Wendy Tarplee-Morris, founder of The Little Princess Trust, said:

‘We are so grateful to Gracie-Mae for her fantastic support of our charity.’ ‘Her wonderful hair donation and amazing fundraisin­g will be a huge help for our free wig provision service which, we know, makes such a big difference.’

The Little Princess Trust ask for financial donations as well as hair donations, in order to fund the manufactur­ing of the wigs and wig-fitting services needed, and with the cost of wigs standing at £550, Gracie-Mae has raised enough money to provide wigs to two children, along with her own hair donation.

‘I’m so proud, we all are,’ added Maureen.

To donate to Gracie-Mae’s fundraiser visit justgiving. com/fundraisin­g/ gracieshai­rcut22 and visit littleprin­cesses.org.uk.find to find out more about the charity.

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 ?? ?? ‘CHUFFED’ Fiveyear-old Gracie-Mae donates her hair to the Little Princess Trust, receiving a certificat­e for her fundraisin­g efforts, left, which will pay for the wigs of two sick children
‘CHUFFED’ Fiveyear-old Gracie-Mae donates her hair to the Little Princess Trust, receiving a certificat­e for her fundraisin­g efforts, left, which will pay for the wigs of two sick children

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