1925–1948
Support and collaboration
1925Â
The press supports our cause  Â
Under the chairmanship of critic and journalist John Bailey, we receive more sympathetic coverage from the press than at any other time in our history. On 25 October, a letter in The Times, appealing for funds for Ashridge in Hertfordshire, is signed by current and former Prime Ministers Stanley Baldwin, Ramsay MacDonald and Herbert Asquith.
1927 Â
We buy farmland around Stonehenge Â
We purchase more than 1,400 acres of farmland around Stonehenge following a national appeal.Â
1929Â
Beatrix Potter lends her support  Â
Beatrix Potter uses the income from her children's books to support our work in the Lake District. As a result, we're able to acquire Monk Coniston Estate, near Coniston Water.
1931Â
National Trust for ScotlandÂ
The National Trust for Scotland is established. It has similar statutory powers to us, but with an entirely independent constitution. It looks after historic and green spaces in Scotland.
1934Â
Our first village
West Wycombe, in Buckinghamshire, becomes the first village to come under our protection.Â
1937Â
The National Trust Act of 1937Â Â Â
The 11th Marquess of Lothian, Philip Kerr, proposes that we should be able to accept the gift of country houses with endowments in land or capital that are free of tax. These new powers are outlined in the National Trust Act of 1937.Â
1939Â
Quarry Bank Mill  Â
We’re gifted Quarry Bank Mill and Styal Estate in Cheshire, beginning our involvement with sites that are important for their industrial archaeology.Â
In the same year, our supporter Lord Lothian bequeaths us his Jacobean house, Blickling in Norfolk.
1945Â
Our 50th birthdayÂ
1945 marks our 50th anniversary, as well as the end of the Second World War. At this point, we manage 112,000 acres of land and 93 historic buildings. We also have 7,850 members.Â
1946 Â
The National Land Fund Â
The National Land Fund is established by Dr Hugh Dalton, the Chancellor of the Exchequer. Its purpose is to secure culturally significant places for the nation as a memorial to those killed in the Second World War. Many great country houses are subsequently transferred to us with assistance from this fund, beginning with Cotehele in Cornwall.
1948Â
Post-war collaboration  Â
We launch the Gardens Scheme in collaboration with the Royal Horticultural Society, which is designed to encourage and fund the acquisition of outstanding gardens.Â
In the same year, Hidcote in Gloucestershire is gifted to us by Major Lawrence Johnston, a garden designer.