National Trust

Connections

Connections Author name Sort ascending Excerpt
Leisure and Society Charlotte Yonge
CY must have presented the Gibbses with her portrait: a previously unknown picture of her was discovered at Tyntesfield after the house was acquired by the National Trust .
Mitchell, Charlotte. “Any literary letters?”. The National Trust Magazine, Vol.
100
, pp. 85-7.
85
Textual Features Dorothy Wellesley
Poems are included here from several groups. Verses for the Middle-aged (collected later for separate publication as Rhymes for Middle Years) is a collection of absurdities: England (about the image of the country as...
Cultural formation Josephine Tey
JT came from a Scottish family that was rising socially. Her father was a greengrocer and her mother was the daughter of a joiner; each had known poverty as a child. Her two pseudonyms, one...
Wealth and Poverty Josephine Tey
JT left an astonishing estate of close to £25,000. She willed the bulk of this to the National Trust , with particular bequests to her sister Moire and to the Inverness Museum.
Henderson, Jennifer Morag. Josephine Tey, a life. Sandstone Press.
322-6
Publishing Josephine Tey
The author took great care to arrange for the publication of work that her unexpected and premature death had left in manuscript.
Henderson, Jennifer Morag. Josephine Tey, a life. Sandstone Press.
322-3, 325-6
Proceeds from this book and others published after her death went...
Reception Lady Arbella Stuart
In 2015 the National Trust marked the four hundredth anniversary of her death by special features at Hardwick Hall to tell the story of her life.
Wealth and Poverty Christopher St John
After Craig's death, Sackville-West provided financial assistance to the very poor CSJ and Tony Atwood (who was then over eighty). The money was enough to cover their living expenses until negotiations with the National Trust
Residence Elizabeth Smith
Having considered but not chosen Ireland, the Smith family were still unsettled. Elizabeth wrote in September 1797 from Bath that they planned to settle somewhere in a cheap and romantic country. My Father says Ireland...
Textual Production Constance Smedley
Maxwell Armfield 's frontispiece to Commoners' Rights, 1912, shows Chippingdun, the book's fictional version of Minchinhampton. His later illustrations also show the town or its beautiful surroundings. The work is dedicated to...
Residence Vita Sackville-West
When in 1954 Nigel proposed passing Sissinghurst to the National Trust , VSWsaid Never never never. Au grand jamais, jamais. . . . Over my corpse or my ashes; not otherwise.
Glendinning, Victoria. Vita. Penguin.
380
The buildings...
Occupation Vita Sackville-West
VSW became something of a recluse around the years of the Second World War. Nevertheless she played her part in local activities: the National Trust and the Women's Institute .
Nicolson, Nigel, and Vita Sackville-West. Portrait of a Marriage. Futura.
225
Glendinning, Victoria. Vita. Penguin.
350
Publishing Vita Sackville-West
VSW published her first book of advice to gardeners: Some Flowers. Long out of print by 1952, it was re-issued in association with the National Trust in 1993.
Glendinning, Victoria. Vita. Penguin.
288
British Book News. British Council.
(1952): 157
Occupation Vita Sackville-West
VSW was a lecturer and broadcaster for the BBC as well as a hard-working and prolific journalist.
Staley, Thomas F., editor. Dictionary of Literary Biography 34. Gale Research.
34: 260-1
She has a place in any list of influential English gardeners, developing further some of the...
Textual Production E. Arnot Robertson
This too she dedicated to, and in reproof of, her husband , calling him her sailing partner and recalling some words he had used about her, which in the novel she puts in the mouth...
death Beatrix Potter
BP died, leaving the National Trust Hill Top Farm and 5,000 acres of farmland which became the basis of the Trust's Lake District holdings.
MacDonald, Ruth K. Beatrix Potter. Twayne.
Chronology
Grinstein, Alexander. The Remarkable Beatrix Potter. International Universities Press.
308

Timeline

23-24 June 1314: The English attempt to conquer Scotland was...

National or international item

23-24 June 1314

The English attempt to conquer Scotland was fought off by Scottish forces under Robert Bruce at the Battle of Bannockburn near Stirling.

12 January 1895: The National Trust was founded at Grosvenor...

Building item

12 January 1895

The National Trust was founded at Grosvenor House in London by Octavia Hill , Hardwicke Rawnsley , and Robert Hunter (who had been working towards its opening for nearly a year).

4 July 1940: The British government launched a project...

National or international item

4 July 1940

The British government launched a project known as Auxiliary Units , with headquarters at Coleshill House near Faringdon in Berkshire.
“Secret wartime past revealed”. National Trust: Near you, Berkshire / Buckinghamshire / Hampshire / Oxfordshire / Isle of Wight / London.
4

Texts

National Trust Handbook for Members and Visitors: March 1997 to March 1998. National Trust, 1997.