Home Page Education What's On
Artist

Octavia Hill believed in the life-enhancing virtues of “pure earth, clean air and blue sky”. Her Larksfield home in Kent became the base for campaigns to save nearby open spaces from building development and both local and national footpaths.


Alfriston Clergy House
Alfriston Clergy House
She was the first to use the term “Green Belt” for London. Three Kentish Hills (Mariners Hill, Toys Hill and Ide Hill) that Octavia saved from developers before her death, became part of that belt.

The purchase of Alfriston Clergy House in 1895 marked the beginning of the National Trust’s building conservation work.
 

further information
 
 
Mariners Hill
>> Click here
to find out more information.
 
Mariners Hill  
 
  Toys Hill
 
Toys Hill
>> Click here
to find out more information.
 
 
 
 
 
Ide Hill
>> Click here
to find out more information.
 
Ide Hill  
 


 
To be seen in the Birthplace House...

To be seen in the Birthplace House:
The Founders of The National Trust Room details her pioneering conservation work.

white