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T-Time Talk: The Three Founders and the Fight for Green Space

Join historian and curator Helen Antrobus for a journey through the lives of three great environmental activists: Octavia Hill, Robert Hunter and Hardwicke Rawnsley.

From the Surrey Hills to the fells of the Lake District, explore the landscapes that instilled in them the fight, and how the struggle to protect green space for all led to the foundation of the National Trust. 

Helen Antrobus is Assistant National Curator of Social History at the National Trust, specialising in gender and political histories. From the industrial north’s fight for the right to access the mountains and shores of the Lakes and the Peak District, to children’s dresses worn in the election campaigns of the early 1900s, Helen’s research is rooted in exploring the lived experiences of all those connected to the Trust’s places.  Her first book, First in the Fight: Twenty Women Who Made Manchester was published in 2019, and she is the co-author 100 Things to Wear: Fashion from the collections of the National Trust. In 2022, she co-curated Beatrix Potter: Drawn to Nature, a major exhibition between the Victoria & Albert Museum and the National Trust.

Image Credit: Alana Wright

Please note:

  • Standard admission charges apply to non-members on arrival.
  • Meet at the Terrace Room, Leith Hill Place
  • There is disabled parking available at the front of the house and ramp access.

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    All - T-Time Talk: The Three Founders and the Fight for Green Space
    Free

    Standard admission charges apply to non-members on arrival.

    0 10 max

    Standard admission charges apply to non-members on arrival.

T-Time Talk: The Three Founders and the Fight for Green Space

Join historian and curator Helen Antrobus for a journey through the lives of three great environmental activists: Octavia Hill, Robert Hunter and Hardwicke Rawnsley.

From the Surrey Hills to the fells of the Lake District, explore the landscapes that instilled in them the fight, and how the struggle to protect green space for all led to the foundation of the National Trust. 

Helen Antrobus is Assistant National Curator of Social History at the National Trust, specialising in gender and political histories. From the industrial north’s fight for the right to access the mountains and shores of the Lakes and the Peak District, to children’s dresses worn in the election campaigns of the early 1900s, Helen’s research is rooted in exploring the lived experiences of all those connected to the Trust’s places.  Her first book, First in the Fight: Twenty Women Who Made Manchester was published in 2019, and she is the co-author 100 Things to Wear: Fashion from the collections of the National Trust. In 2022, she co-curated Beatrix Potter: Drawn to Nature, a major exhibition between the Victoria & Albert Museum and the National Trust.

Image Credit: Alana Wright

Please note:

  • Standard admission charges apply to non-members on arrival.
  • Meet at the Terrace Room, Leith Hill Place
  • There is disabled parking available at the front of the house and ramp access.

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