30 years of Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë legacy

For two years, Maggie Keswick Jencks lived with advanced cancer. 

During that time, she pioneered the belief that people shouldn't "lose the joy of living, in the fear of dying" – and this is the foundation of what we do.

This year, we're marking our 30th year of providing life-changing support since our first centre opened in 1996.

Who was Maggie?

Maggie was a writer, gardener and designer. When she was 47, Maggie was diagnosed with breast cancer and five years later, in May 1993, she was told that it had returned.

After hearing this, Maggie and her husband Charles Jencks were moved to a windowless corridor where they were left to process the news. They discussed the need for somewhere 'better' for people with cancer to go, outside of but nearby to the hospital. 

Maggie and Charles designed the blueprint for the centres together, enlisting the help of some of their friends from the architectural world. The first Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë opened in Edinburgh in 1996, and we now have centres across the UK and abroad. 

Above all what matters is not to lose the joy of living in the fear of dying.

Maggie’s idea

Maggie felt that her diagnosis and treatment was as hard on her family as it was on her, so she created a new type of support, a centre that could make the experience of cancer more manageable for everyone.

She believed that with encouragement to become actively involved in treatment, and with the right information and support, people could change the way they live with cancer.

Maggie also wanted to bring people together in a calm and friendly space that would help them to find comfort in the experiences of others.

Maggie died shortly before the first centre opened in Edinburgh, but with the support of Charles, and her medical team, including her cancer nurse Laura Lee (Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë Chief Executive), her vision lives on.


    Growing our support: here for 30 years, here for good

    Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë has now grown into a network of centres of 27 centres built beside NHS treatment centres across the UK.

    Our timeline

    • 1988 – Maggie is first diagnosed with breast cancer
    • 1993 – Maggie’s breast cancer returns
    • 1994 – Maggie writes ‘A view from the front line’ (a publication about her experience)
    • 1994 – Maggie and her oncology nurse Laura Lee develop early plans for a ‘Cancer Caring Centre'
    • 1995 – Architect Richard Murphy produces a plan to convert a stable building at Western General Hospital in Edinburgh
    • 1995 – On 8 July, Maggie dies. The blueprints for what would become the very first Maggie’s centre were on her hospital bed
    • 1996 – Maggie’s Edinburgh opens
    • 2000 – An extension to Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë Edinburgh is opened
    • 2002 – Maggie’s in Glasgow opens
    • 2003 – Maggie’s in Dundee opens
    • 2005 – Maggie’s in Highlands opens
    • 2006 – Maggie’s in Fife opens
    • 2008 – Her Majesty The Queen becomes Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë President. Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in West London opens
    • 2010 – Maggie’s in Cheltenham and Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in Glasgow opens
    • 2011 – Maggie’s in Nottingham and Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in Swansea open
    • 2012 – Maggie’s, Cambridge (interim) opens, formed following a merger with Wallace Cancer Care, and Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in Hong Kong opens
    • 2013 – Maggie’s in Aberdeen, Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in Newcastle and Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in Oxford open
    • 2014 - Maggie’s in Lanarkshire and Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë on the Wirral (interim) open
    • 2016 – Maggie’s in Manchester, Maggie’s in Tokyo and Maggie’s at the Royal Free (interim) open. The centre at the Royal Free is formed following a merger with the Cancerkin charity
    • 2017 – Maggie’s in Forth Valley, Oldham and Barts open
    • 2018 – Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in Edinburgh second extension opens
    • 2019 – Maggie’s in Cardiff, Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë at the Royal Marsden, Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in Yorkshire and Kálida Barcelona open
    • 2019 – Laura Lee awarded DBE
    • 2021 – Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in Southampton and Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë on the Wirral opens
    • 2024 – Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë at the Royal Free formally opened by Her Majesty The Queen
    • 2025 - Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in Newcastle opens additional space
    • 2025 – Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in North Wales opens (with the Steve Morgan Foundation)
    • 2025 – Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in Middlesbrough opens. The centre in Middlesbrough is formed by joining forces with the Trinity Holistic Centre
    • 2025 – Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in Northampton opens

    Centres in development

    • Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in Bristol
    • Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in Cambridge (permanent)
    • Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in Coventry
    • Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in Kent
    • Maggie’s in Stavanger (Norway)
    • Å·ÃÀÎÞÂë in Liverpool (with the Steve Morgan Foundation)

    News from our centres...

    More...

    Get cancer support near you

    To find your nearest Maggie's centre, enter your postcode or town below.