On the 10 May 1924, 90 years ago this week, the nation
received a wonderful gift. 350 acres of Hatfield Forest were given to the
National Trust by the Buxton family. 215 acres of this land had been purchased
on his death bed by Edward North Buxton, whose efforts had done so much to
secure Epping Forest for the nation some 40 years earlier. The remainder had
been purchased by Buxton’s sons Gerald and Anthony in the weeks after their
father’s death, in tribute to his memory.
Hatfield Forest is a remarkable place. It is one of our only
surviving medieval forests – a wood-pasture that was originally established and
maintained as a Royal hunting ground. Passing into private hands, its last
owners were the Houblon family, who acquired it in 1729 as an adjunct to their
estate at Hallingbury in Hertfordshire. Evidence of the Houblon influence on
the landscape of Hatfield can still be seen today, with the Shell House next to
the ornamental lake dating from the ‘Capability’ Brown era and later 19th
century plantings of black pine and horse chestnut. Yet still the medieval
character of the forest is evident in its great ancient oaks and hornbeams.
A special ceremony was held at Hatfield on 10 May 1924 to
mark the occasion of the gift. Gerald Buxton symbolically handed the deeds over
to Lord Ullswater, the Trust’s vice-president. Ullswater in turn reminded the
guests of the huge contribution the Buxton family had already made to the
nation – through Edward North Buxton’s efforts to save Epping Forest, as well
as through the other gifts to the National Trust of Paycocke’s House in
Coggeshall (Essex) and Roman Camp in West Runton (Norfolk). Had the Trust not
been invented, Ullswater observed, the state would have needed to have stepped
in, such was the pressure on such ‘delectable and enjoyable spots’ from creeping
urbanisation. As The Times reported, this was a time when
the ‘preservation of flora and fauna’ was regarded as an increasingly vital
necessity. The Trust’s ambition at Hatfield was to ‘increase the places where
flora and fauna could multiply without being subjected to constant raids’.
Ullswater even ended his speech with a joke. He hoped the
public would respect Hatfield’s special character, and not leave it strewn with
litter. ‘We [are] indeed a littery nation’ was his jest, evidence for which he needed to look no further than the benches of the House of Commons after he, as Speaker,
had cleared them for a division.
The list of those attending the ceremony on 10 May 1924
includes some interesting figures. One was Harriet Yorke, Hon Treasurer to the
National Trust and companion of Octavia Hill. Another was the colourful figure of Daisy, Countess of Warwick, socialist socialite who lived nearby at Easton Lodge. Also present was Miss Dorothy Hunter,
the daughter of Hill’s colleague and fellow co-founder Sir Robert Hunter.
Dorothy served on the Trust’s Council until the mid-1960s and was a stalwart
supporter of the Trust’s work her entire life. Given that the last of the
founders, Canon Hardwicke Rawnsley, had died four years earlier in 1920, it
must have been especially gratifying for these survivors of the Trust’s first
generation to see a site as rich in ‘natural beauty and historic interest’
saved for the nation.
This weekend special events are being held at Hatfield to
mark the 90th anniversary of the Trust’s acquisition, including free
car parking and guided walks and talks.
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