Baby loss couple recognised in New Year Honours

Alec BlackmanCoventry
News imageRyan Jackson The image shows a Amy Jackson, blonde woman with glasses standing next to her husband Ryan, who is wearing a blue and purple check shirt. Both are standing in front of a Christmas tree.Ryan Jackson
Amy and Ryan Jackson, co-founders of the Lily Mae Foundation, have each been awarded a British Empire Medal in the New Year Honours list

A couple who founded a charity to support parents who have lost babies through stillbirth, miscarriage or neonatal death have been recognised in the New Year Honours list.

Amy and Ryan Jackson started the Lily Mae Foundation in 2010, which was named in memory of their stillborn daughter Lily, after they felt families should be offered more support than they received during one of the hardest moments of their lives.

The couple, from Balsall Common in the West Midlands, have now each been awarded a British Empire Medal (BEM).

"It came from a way of us basically trying survive back then, and has kind of grown from just seeing what's absolutely missing for bereaved families," Ms Jackson said.

'She'd be really proud'

Mr Jackson said that the foundation aimed to support families in the West Midlands and show people that it "was okay" to talk about their babies.

Every year, the couple create around 600 memory boxes for parents who have lost a baby, while around 30 people a month turn to them for individual support.

They were awarded honorary doctorates by Coventry University in 2024 in recognition of their efforts.

"If [Lily] had the ability to know and understand just how many people she has helped in her name, I can't imagine her being anything other than proud," Mr Jackson said.

"We're doing what we're doing to help and support as many people as possible, because we know ourselves how devastating it is and how we were at the time when we lost Lily.

"We don't want any family to have to experience the journey that we went on, the sort of very limited support that was available at that time."

He said they are yet to find out when they will be presented with their BEMs and are also waiting for the date of the King's Garden party, for which they have also received an invitation.

Other recipients of New Year Honours from Coventry and Warwickshire include:

  • Sarah-Jane Catherine Perry, from Kenilworth, is appointed an OBE for services to squash
  • Anna Rose, from Rugby, is appointed an OBE for public service
  • Louise Richards, from Leamington Spa, is appointed an MBE for services to dance
  • Naomi Clare Rees Issit, from Rugby, is awarded a BEM, for services to defibrillator training and awareness in Rugby
  • Prof Jacquelyn Bridget Dunne, from Coventry, is appointed an MBE for services to Higher Education
  • Valerie Ann Birchall, from Stratford-upon-Avon, is appointed an MBE for services to public libraries and to culture
  • Rebecca Jane Bollands, from Kenilworth, is appointed an MBE for services to cultural education in the West Midlands
  • Beth Gibson, from Nuneaton, is appointed an MBE for services to education
  • Amanda King, from Coventry, is appointed an MBE for services to early years education
  • Clare Sawdon JP DL, from Warwick, is appointed an MBE for services to justice
  • Craig Beresford Wilson, from Stratford-upon-Avon, is appointed an MBE for services to enterprise and to the economy
  • Peter Crathorne, from Henley-in-Arden, is awarded a BEM for services to the community in Henley-in-Arden
  • David John Eadon, from Rugby, is awarded a BEM for services to the community in Rugby
  • Iolene Jennifer Scholes, from Shipston-on-Stour, is awarded a BEM for services to the community in Shipston-on-Stour
  • Colin Henry Wells, from Coventry, is awarded a BEM for voluntary service
  • Sandra Crowder, from Coventry, is awarded a BEM for services to adoption and foster care

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