Jump to content

Tony Banks (businessman)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by GH - AC (talk | contribs) at 17:03, 9 July 2012 (→‎References). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Tony Banks is a Falklands veteran and entrepreneur. He is chairman and founder of Balhousie Care Group, Scotland’s largest private residential care home provider.

Life

Born 23 October 1961, Tony Banks grew up in Dundee. Banks’ father was an RAF logistics sergeant and his mother was a housewife.[1] His first job was working as a newspaper delivery boy. He also worked as a refuse collector, a shelf stacker, an electrician’s assistant and a raspberry picker before leaving school at 17 to study accountancy at the University of Abertay.[2]

Military Career

At University in Abertay Banks joined the Territorial Army Parachute Regiment, subsequently he abandoned his studies in order to pursue a full time career in the Army. In 1982, he was sent to serve in the Falklands War as part of 2nd Battalion, Parachute Regiment (2 Para). His regiment was the first battalion to land and the first to win a major battle. Banks fought at the Battle of Goose Green and during the conflict witnessed the death of one of his closest friends.[3] After the end of the Falklands War, Banks served with the Parachute Field Ambulance service before becoming an insurance salesman. He later moved back to Scotland where he founded the Balhousie Care Group.[4] Banks bought his first care home in 1991, Balhousie Lisden in Kirriemuir, Angus. The Balhousie Care Group is Scotland’s largest private care home provider, made up of 25 care homes, employing over 1000 people.[5][6]

Media Career

In 2009 Banks appeared on the sixth series of Channel 4’s Secret Millionaire in which he spent some time living on a poor estate in Anfield getting to know some of the local residents. During the programme he donated money to people he had met. He has subsequently donated to organisations that he got to know while filming, including Daisy UK, a Liverpool based organisation headed up by Dave Kelly.[7][8]


In 2010, the BBC filmed a documentary entitled ‘From War to Peace’, in which a film crew followed Banks on a journey to Argentina, where he had fought. Banks had left the Falklands with a war trophy which he had kept for 28 years – a trumpet taken from an Argentinean prisoner of war named Omar Tabarez.[9] With the help of a journalist who tracked down Tabarez, Banks visited him at his home in Argentina to hand back the trumpet.[10] In March 2012, Banks released Storming the Falklands: My War and After, which charts his experiences in war, how he struggled for years with combat-related stress, and how he has just recently managed to come to terms with his experiences.[11]

Philanthropy

Banks currently serves on the board of the Scottish Entrepreneurial Exchange.[12] He is one of James Caan’s Millionaire Mentors for the Entrepreneurs’ Business Academy.[13] Banks has won the Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year.[14] He was also a finalist for Fundraiser of the year 2011 at the Daily Record Hero Annual Awards.[15] Banks is a significant donor to Combat Stress[16] and CHAS (Children’s Hospice Association Scotland)[17].

Trivia

Tony Banks is a qualified helicopter pilot[18]. Banks has also signed up as a space tourist on the Virgin Galactic space programme; he is one of the first Scottish space tourists.[19]

References