
The founding father of the Kwik Fit storage chain, Sir Tom Farmer, has died on the age of 84.
The Edinburgh-born businessman died peacefully at his house within the town on Friday, his circle of relatives mentioned.
He constructed the corporate into the arena’s greatest unbiased tyre and automobile chain, promoting it to Ford for £1bn in 1999.
Sir Tom owned a majority stake in Hibernian FC for greater than 20 years, promoting his passion within the membership in 2019.
Sir Tom used to be born in Leith in 1940 and primary opened a tyre trade in 1964.
He began Kwik Fit in 1971, in the end running in additional than 2,000 places in 18 nations.
He used to be knighted in 1997 for his products and services to the automobile trade, and he used to be made a Commander of the Royal Victorian Order (CVO) in 2009.
A observation from his circle of relatives mentioned: “Sir Tom’s long and extensive career touched many aspects of Scottish and UK life.
“His trade occupation is easily documented, as used to be his dedication to philanthropy, his many public roles and his unwavering improve and appreciation for the communities and those who he lived his existence inside of.”

Sir Tom’s philanthropic work saw him awarded the Carnegie Medal and he became a Knight Commander with Star of the Order of St. Gregory the Great, an honour bestowed by the Pope, in 1997.
“Sir Tom’s Roman Catholic religion used to be provide during all spaces of his existence. He attended mass weekly in Edinburgh and loved the friendship and corporate of many of us with the Catholic neighborhood each right here in Scotland and extra afield,” his family said.
“Sir Tom will probably be remembered by means of many for his deep dedication to his circle of relatives, his paintings and his religion and for being all the time a proud Scotsman,” they added.