National Trust Vs R...
 

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National Trust Vs Right Wing Restore Trust

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Hey Cakey, here's a question(s) that I don't think has been asked yet.

Do you visit these properties on a regular basis? What was the last one you visited? Are you an NT member?

Indeed, have you ever visited one?


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 8:01 pm
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I went to have a look at what restore trust are actually asking for and they've gone in to detail and it seems pretty reasonable to me and nothing to do with any of the topics discussed in this thread.

1) Disclosure of remuneration of senior NT staff. - I can see there's a case against, but it doesn't seem an unreasonable request, even if the members decide they don't want to do it.

2) Increase in the number of curators which has been reduced in recent years to the detriment of many sites. (Some job titles have changed to make it appear there are more curators now - in fact there are far less.) If they can't afford this fair enough, but I think most people in this thread agree that detailed descriptions are lacking so I think everyone would agree this is highly desirable even if it not affordable. The supporting statement suggests the direction is dumbing down not adding more detail.

3) Deploring treatment of NT staff and calling on the trust to treat volunteers with thought and respect. The supporting paragraph does have a paragraph about Volunteers not being made to wear political or social symbols but from insiders above that's not the case anyway - it's voluntary so as far as I can see no change.

I wouldn’t vote for anyone who ignored history

I think RestoreTrust might be totally in line with your thinking here. Far from dumbing down they want to cover things in more detail:

I was on the learning experience team at Montacute house for 15 years, delivering guided tours to school children aged between four and 16 years old. The content concentrated on the lives of rich and poor Tudors, discussions on the symbolism and meaning of portraits of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I, and we looked at the architecture and function of the rooms in the house. Relevant activities were also delivered, such as quilling, heraldry designs, dressing up in Tudor costumes (made by volunteers) and making pot-pourri and bouquet garni bags. The tours took place on most weekdays during the term and were popular with schools, many doing repeat visits. The feedback from the teachers was very good.

Overnight and with little and unsatisfactory explanation, our team was disbanded.

They might have needed to sack curators due to budget but those guys are volunteers.

https://www.restoretrust.org.uk/restore-trust-issues/

https://www.restoretrust.org.uk/

I understand budgets are tight and some of the issues are just matters of taste but almost everything RestoreTrust are advocating seems reasonable to me, some of it seems highly desirable and bang in line with the kind of stuff people are talking about in this thread. The NT shouldn't be running nice gardens and cake shops, they should be imparting some history too and they're moving fast away from that.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 8:44 pm
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Do you visit these properties on a regular basis? What was the last one you visited? Are you an NT member?
Indeed, have you ever visited one?

Good question but this is descending into McCarthyism ‘Have you now or have you ever been a member of the NT’

Having a good time means lots of things to lots of different people. I spent a brilliant day walking round an NT property with an academic who did a complete Marxist economic analysis of the landscape and showed how hard nosed the pursuit of beauty was (its all about how you artfully arrange the cash crops and keep the outers far enough away so that they look picturesque but you don’t have to hear or smell them). They then went on to prove what they were saying with the old account ledgers. I can’t imagine it would have been everyones cup of tea but a good walk and coming away with a new way at looking at the world is a day I won’t forget.

Most of the NT properties we go to I just go round with the kids and distract them enough to allow Mrs B to read the hand held information boards. My only argument with the current focus on slavery is that it allows people to maintain a Downtonesque fairy tale of how wonderful and fair life in Britain was in the past. The people who built these houses were equal opportunities exploiters. They didn’t really care what colour your skin was everyone ‘below' them was fair game (more a historically accurate rather than a political statement).


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 8:51 pm
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You’ve just made that up, you cannot possibly know what “most” people want. Some do, sure. But if I were to guess, and my guesswork is equally as valid as yours, I would expect that the majority of people who “just want a nice day out” and aren’t interested in the history of the place wouldn’t choose to walk around a stately home in the first place.

It seems to me the people who are interested in the history of these places are *exactly* the people Restore trust are trying to represent here. In contrast the NT seem to be pitching squarely at the cake eaters.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 8:57 pm
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I went to have a look at what restore trust are actually asking for and they’ve gone in to detail and it seems pretty reasonable to me and nothing to do with any of the topics discussed in this thread.

Not all if any of those are down to RestoreTrust. The volunteers thing is a result of the NT not paying the best wages in the game which means that you usually end up with someone fairly green in their late twenties as the volunteers officer trying to manage retirees who on the whole have had professional jobs. Its a clash of idealism, without too much practicality, meeting people who enjoy the company rather than the money and really don’t want to change. The false stories have stirred this up but there is a general issue with taking volunteers for granted and assuming they will jump at the idea of change

As you will have seen from other posts Covid lead to a complete cull of staff who will be needed in the future. It was a short term knee jerk reaction but pretty much in line with the NTs reputation for HR. That resolution to me says treat people better rather than anything too political


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:08 pm
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FFS, from the NT website how the hell can they recommend voting against "curatorial expertise".

Members’ resolution about curatorial expertise
Board of Trustees’ position: We recommend members vote against the resolution

https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/features/annual-general-meeting


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:11 pm
 grum
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I went to have a look at what restore trust are actually asking for and they’ve gone in to detail and it seems pretty reasonable to me and nothing to do with any of the topics discussed in this thread.

Are you one of those people who shares Britain First memes on FB about 'we should be nice to animals, share if you agree'?


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:14 pm
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Good question but this is descending into McCarthyism ‘Have you now or have you ever been a member of the NT’

I was just curious really as to whether our devourer of sweet baked goods actually had any direct interest or whether he'd just found something to randomly complain about.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:16 pm
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Not all if any of those are down to RestoreTrust.

They all are. Linked to the website. There are other resolutions on the NT website from other people.

As you will have seen from other posts Covid lead to a complete cull of staff who will be needed in the future. It was a short term knee jerk reaction but pretty much in line with the NTs reputation for HR. That resolution to me says treat people better rather than anything too political

I'm sure they needed to save money, but surely curators should be last out the door. And surely the NT should be saying they will hire knowledgeable people back when the situation changes. In fact it's looking far more like they're deliberately trying to make the NT a theme park business and deliberately dumbing down accordingly.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:17 pm
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FFS, from the NT website how the hell can they recommend voting against “curatorial expertise”.

I thought the same at first but it says to vote against "the resolution" and we don't know what that is. The resolution could be "let's get rid of cultural expertise" in which case it's worth voting against.

Or am I overthinking this?


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:19 pm
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I thought the same at first but it says to vote against “the resolution” and we don’t know what that is.

Yes we do, I quoted it and linked to it.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:20 pm
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You have to remember the primary purpose of the NT is to help the owners of these houses get the public to pay for their upkeep and to avoid inheritance taxes.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:34 pm
 grum
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The 'Common Sense Group' of Tory MPs - closely allied to Restore Trust, make their feelings about history very plain in this letter.

https://twitter.com/sundersays/status/1325750156487237633

We are not to teach multiple perspectives about history, and no criticism of anything to do with Churchill will be tolerated. It actually uses the phrases 'woke agenda', 'cultural marxist' and 'snowflakes', in case you weren't clear where they stand in the culture war.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:40 pm
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Yes we do, I quoted it and linked to it.

You quoted what the resolution was?

I'm missing something here, sorry. I don't really know how these things work, which doesn't help.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:41 pm
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Yes we do, I quoted it and linked to it.

And which takes such little effort to find, effort that good faith actors would bother to expend before slagging people off - plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:42 pm
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Check my post Cougar.

[ actually page 9 in the PDF, as the’ve published DPS as single pages ]

Basically a “they are ruining everything… bean bags… betraying the families who passed the houses on to them… etc” … so they’ve recommend it is rejected because otherwise it would damn those currently running the NT as vandals.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:42 pm
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Most people just want a nice day out, not a social justice sermon.

That does sound a bit crap so I am sure you will be able to provide us with the examples of it. I am guessing there is some glitch which has been preventing you doing so so far.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:43 pm
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In fact it’s looking far more like they’re deliberately trying to make the NT a theme park business and deliberately dumbing down accordingly.

So why is the cake scoffer upset since they seem to be wanting the NT to be mostly about people having a fun day out rather than that tedious history stuff.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:45 pm
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Check my post Cougar.

Why is yours better than mine? The text of the resolutions and the supporting text is identical.

Is it because the NT's includes their claim to have doubled the number of curators when in fact they made curators redundant and then retitled people in other roles with no expertise whatsoever as curators?

...and if they *really* had doubled the number of curators, couldn't they still have supported the resolution and said yes, we already have and we will do more of the same in the future when we have budget so we totally support the resolution.

I suspect the RestoreTrust are bang on correct and this is all about the 10 year plan to dumb it down and turn the properties into theme parks for fewer people who are prepared to pay more. They're not alone in that view:

https://www.museumsassociation.org/museums-journal/news/2020/08/national-trust-defends-restructure-plans/

He rejected the idea that the trust was dumbing down, but said “there are many, many people who most of all just want to enjoy a place and I’m not embarrassed about that at all. I don’t think every visit is about deep learning. I think what we want to do is give people what they want and on the whole, we’re doing that”.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:53 pm
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I suspect the RestoreTrust are bang on correct

I bet you do.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:58 pm
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Most people just want a nice day out,

That does sound a bit crap so I am sure you will be able to provide us with the examples of it.

It's exactly the attitude within the NT that Restore Trust are trying to combat, in the words of the NT:

“there are many, many people who most of all just want to enjoy a place and I’m not embarrassed about that at all. I don’t think every visit is about deep learning. I think what we want to do is give people what they want and on the whole, we’re doing that”.

https://www.museumsassociation.org/museums-journal/news/2020/08/national-trust-defends-restructure-plans/


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 9:59 pm
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Why is yours better than mine?

Because I was helping Cougar go straight to the pages describing what the vote is on as regards that resolution, for them to read for themselves, rather than just linking to all the details of the AGM and leaving them to find it themselves (or accepting your edited version).

I find the wording of the supporting evidence for the resolution far more informative than the trustee’s take on it as it happens. Especially after the “bean bags” comment from the guy on PM.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 10:03 pm
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It’s exactly the attitude within the NT that Restore Trust are trying to combat,

And yet its exactly the argument the cake eater who is pro restore trust is arguing for. Its all very confusing and hence why some examples would be useful.
Plus I might be being cynical here but when you have the loony part of the tory party and a religious nutter supporting it I end up being somewhat doubtful about their claims.
Plenty of people have mentioned how they arent completely convinced by what the NT are up to. There is stuff I object to but as a rough rule getting some right wing loons in is unlikely to solve the issue.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 10:10 pm
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Is this kind of “fun day out” designed to attract more people to a NT site, good or bad?

https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/lanhydrock/features/cycling-at-lanhydrock

Is this the kind of “attracting more people” that the resolution is trying to stop?

Or it just about things like bean bags to look at ceilings, and the words of poets written on blinds that is too “fun” for them? New ways of getting people to engage with the buildings? Attracting the wrong kind of people (whoever they are) into the houses?


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 10:14 pm
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I find the wording of the supporting evidence for the resolution far more informative than the trustee’s take on it as it happens.

That was in my link too.

The only difference was the false claim that they've increased curators when they've reduced them. (...and that reduction is totally in line with their 10 year plan to dumb everything down and reduce access.)

I'm not really having a pop at the NT here, I suspect they're feeling the pinch and they have to go down the theme park route to survive. BUT curators are not a big cost in the grand scheme of things and volunteer educations teams are literally free - they even provide their own resources.

...and again, even if that's not possible they could still accept these things are desirable even if they don't have the budget.

Reading up this thread a common desire is not to dumb down but to provide *more* information and the 10 year Plan is squarely focussed on going the opposite way fast.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 10:18 pm
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That was in my link too.

I know, that’s where I got it from. I was just trying to save others the hunt! Jesus, you’re tetchy.

…and again, even if that’s not possible they could still accept these things are desirable even if they don’t have the budget.

The resolution isn’t that “curators are a good thing, on which we can all agree”. It is saying that sites are being ruined by the actions of the trustees and estate managers. They aren’t going to encourage people to support that sentiment, are they? It is a no confidence vote on how the NT is being run.

From the resolution (not even the supporting text)…

the Trust has made some reckless decisions on the presentation of its properties.

Bean bags being one of the examples in the supporting text. Which was six years ago, to allow, people a good look at an intricate ceiling. 🤷🏻‍♂️ Still, that was also the example cited by one of the disgruntled snowflakes of Restore Trust on Radio4 today. Doesn’t sound hugely reckless.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 10:20 pm
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Is this kind of “fun day out” designed to attract more people to a NT site, good or bad?

Not sure it matters. The point is a few volunteer educators costs nothing and doesn't impede the kind of fun day out you're looking for.

Equally, you can go and have some cake and "enjoy a place" and you won't be bothered by an excess of “curatorial expertise”, you won't even notice it. If you don't like information leaflets don't pick them up.

It doesn't have to be either/or.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 10:31 pm
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Agree with that comment 100%.

I’ve never ridden those trails though, but been in the house and gardens many times. Recommended. But read the supporting text of the resolution again, they are basically snobs complaining about attempts to make the properties attract and engage more people, in ways they don’t like.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 10:34 pm
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. I was just trying to save others the hunt!

Hmmmm, you just happened to choose a source that included and outright lie that had already been debunked... but actually I do fully accept that it ought to reasonable to quote the NT's own document on this, I just picked a clumsy way to point out the curator lie.

The resolution isn’t that “curators are a good thing, on which we can all agree”. It is saying that sites are being ruined by the actions of the trustees and estate managers. They aren’t going to encourage people to support that sentiment, are they? It is a no confidence vote on how the NT is being run.

That would be a perfectly reasonable thing for the NT to argue. They could say "We regard curatorial expertise as desirable but this resolution strays outside that into criticism of the NT". ...But they're not, and they summarise the resolution as the “curatorial expertise” resolution not the 'defacto no confidence' resolution.

The reality is the reason they can't say anything positive about “curatorial expertise” is because they have a 10 year plan that involves reducing it and they've already got rid of the curators and they won't be rehiring.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 10:45 pm
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Agree with that comment 100%.

I’ve never ridden those trails though, but been in the house and gardens many times. Recommended. But read the supporting text of the resolution again, they are basically snobs complaining about attempts to make the properties attract and engage more people, in ways they don’t like.

This place is hilarious. All day people have been saying the NT need to provide more information. Then someone checks and it turns out the NT are firmly on the opposite side of the 'more information' argument and now a curator, a few volunteer educators and a handful of leaflets telling people about stuff is dismissed as "snobbery". Classic STW.

But as I say (and you agreed for one line before disagreeing again): "A few volunteer educators costs nothing and doesn’t impede the kind of fun day out you’re looking for. Equally, you can go and have some cake and “enjoy a place” and you won’t be bothered by an excess of “curatorial expertise”, you won’t even notice it. If you don’t like information leaflets don’t pick them up. It doesn’t have to be either/or."


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 10:53 pm
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Check my post Cougar.

[ actually page 9 in the PDF, as the’ve published DPS as single pages ]

Found it now. Apologies, when you said page 16 I foolishly looked at page 16. (-: (and it's page 9 but PDF page 5...)

So,

FFS, from the NT website how the hell can they recommend voting against “curatorial expertise”.

I thought the same at first but it says to vote against “the resolution” and we don’t know what that is. The resolution could be “let’s get rid of cultural expertise” in which case it’s worth voting against.

The resolution says this:
"Presentation is to change ‘from evolution to revolution’, by ‘moving objects or taking them off display where needed’, in order to ‘flex our mansion offer to create more active, fun and useful experiences’. "

and the NT's response is:
"The resolution and supporting statement make unsubstantiated allegations that have little basis in fact."

This reads to me a bit he said / she said and I don't know where the truth actually lies. But rather than suggesting voting against expertise, the resolution appears to be "we don't have any experts so stop pretending we do" with a(n understandable) side order of sour grapes. It's fairly clear why they'd want members to vote against it, it's all a bit Boaty McBoatface.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 10:58 pm
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Hmmmm, you just happened to choose a source that included and outright lie that had already been debunked

It was your source. I just pointed to the page in it for the resolution you selective quoted from, so we could read it all.

a few volunteer educators and a handful of leaflets telling people about stuff is dismissed as “snobbery”

Absolutely not. That stuff is core to what the NT do and will always do. I called those rallying against “attracting more people” (or as they put it to make it sound out of control and negative “ever-increasing visitor numbers”) to NT properties snobs.

As you said…

It doesn’t have to be either/or.

History and fun days out. We all want the NT to do both, don’t we?


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 11:06 pm
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This reads to me a bit he said / she said and I don’t know where the truth actually lies. But rather than suggesting voting against expertise, the resolution appears to be “we don’t have any experts so stop pretending we do” with a(n understandable) side order of sour grapes. It’s fairly clear why they’d want members to vote against it, it’s all a bit Boaty McBoatface.

Actually yeah, the resolution doesn't request hiring more Curators just wines about sacking the old ones which is whiney bollocks,.it should have said 'Please hire X new curators over the next 10 years'. (Maybe the rules don't allow that sort of specificity) But doesn't really change my point, I've already agreed the NT couldn't support it, but they could have acknowledged curators were a good thing and also refused to support it, something I've said above in more detail. And the NT themselves summarised the whole resolution as the “curatorial expertise” so they clearly understood and accepted the point being made.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 11:19 pm
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I’ve already agreed the NT couldn’t support it, but they could have acknowledged curators were a good thing and also refused to support it

Is that not exactly what their response to AGM says? It makes it clear they consider curators as not only a “a good thing” but essential and central to what they do.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 11:25 pm
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That stuff is core to what the NT do and will always do.

I don't think the 10year plan says what you think it does and you have certainly forgotten which roles they've already made redundant.


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 11:30 pm
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curators will continue to ensure that we tell the rich history of each place as fully as possible


 
Posted : 13/10/2021 11:34 pm
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Can I just quickly introduce a point of order?

Part of what I do involves school visits to a Tudor building, doing exactly what was previously described. We likewise had a schools programme that was burgeoning, a great tour with brilliant 'hands on' activities that had great feedback from every school that came, repeat visits etc - and then we were absolutely knocked for six by Gove's reforms of the National Curriculum.

The Tudor 'element' of the KS2 Curriculum was entirely removed, and our school bookings literally dropped off a cliff. We talked to other local 'providers' that basically just gave up, where we started pushing a 'Great Fire of London' tour alternative.

We are nowhere near getting back the levels of yesteryear - obviously Covid has played its part in that, but other factors were in play way before that.

So when you hear a disaffected soul say of something eerily familiar -

Overnight and with little and unsatisfactory explanation, our team was disbanded.

- one wonders whether it was actually perfectly well satisfactorily explained, but not accepted well.

This from someone who has no love for the NT, and has ways of making you love them less.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 12:29 am
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Two thoughts. There’s an inherent conflict between “maintaining a house or property” as it was conceived or lived in sometimes by generations and exploring history (always messy and usually contested).

It is perfectly feasible for Restore Trust to put forward proposals that superficially align with reasonable behaviour. This in no way means that the intentions of Restore Trust are “straight down the bat”.

I’m not a fan of the Disneyfication of the U.K. by the NT but equally I’d have to recognise how much the NT has done in preserving public assets. I’m quite certain that the attempt to co-opt our collective history by chancers like Restore Trust is not cool and should be called out.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 12:37 am
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If we’re just talking about ‘facts’, why are we not told that the vast majority of African slaves were actually enslaved by other Africans?

I’m aware of it, in the same way that I’m aware of the fact that an estimated million people from the south of England, Ireland and even Iceland were captured and soled into slavery by North African and Mediterranean pirates.
Similar happened under Roman rule, and even the Vikings.
The information is there for those who choose to read it.

rather the BLM movement is trying to address inequality.

Sadly, communism isn’t the answer.

Ah, yes, the sort of response I’d expect from someone who might well be described as extreme Right Wing, or a Republican if in America - people to whom anyone to the left of Atilla the Hun is Stalinist.
I’m sure that CakeFace will be appalled to learn that, not only do I support BLM, as well as LBGTQ+, I’m also Antifa, that is, I’m Anti- Fascist, but I’ve never even voted for Labour in my life, I used to vote for the local Conservative candidate, more recently Liberal, which makes me pretty Centrist. But from the perspective of where Cakehole is looking, that makes me a veritable Stalinist as well.

You use cultural Marxist terms but seem surprised that BLM is communist?

No, it isn’t it’s a Humanist concept. But you’re too ignorant to understand that.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 2:39 am
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While I agree that the aims of Restore Trust are, on the face of it, reasonable. the people using it to gain an entry onto the board are not. One is the current head of a climate-denying lobby group, and other fiances the same sorts of organisations, one is a violent fundamentalist Christian who supports marital rape and wants to criminalise homosexual marriage and their rights.

None of the folk standing for election under the banner of Restore Trust feel that it's in their interests to mention their links to that organisation in their personal bios in the AGM booklet accompanying the election, which is, you have to admit, a wee bit odd, if the aims of Restore Trust are so reasonable.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 7:25 am
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As @sparksmcguff alluded to, a lot of the dissatisfaction stems from the trust having to foot the bill for a vast estate of mostly old, mostly rural often remote buildings. Some of them are suited to being successful visitor attractions with inventive interpretation, a lot are money pits. Any large scale maintenance has to be project funded, so the property effectively burrows the money internally, and has to show a return on it. So the problem either doesn't get fixed or the property extends the car park, increases the cafe seating area or develops a full on wedding offer to try to balance the books. The trust constantly tries to find efficiencies through reorganisation and creative budgeting, but the problem of the leaky roof or the rotting windows or the huge heating bill never go away. They can't get rid of a building or property as they are bound to look after them "in perpetuity". Wages are low, budgets tiny, staff turnover is high, and committed and dedicated staff and volunteers get disaffected and cynical. And a significant number of long term members who love these places do as well because they don't see the changes on the ground having much effect on overall management. The lockdown turned off the revenue (including membership subscription, one fifth of direct debits were cancelled in the first two months) and brought forward a(nother) operational review. Which was, I think panicked and poorly implemented. I survived the axe, but after 13 years of trying to play my part in maintaining a sustainable visitor offer with no budget and shifting goalposts I moved on.

What looks like on the face of it a gammony spat about slavery, rainbow lanyards and for god's sake beanbags is the tip of a far bigger divisive issue (for the trust) of what do we want with our built heritage, and how are we going to pay for it.
Edit. Some of the values and beliefs displayed by the so called restore trust reflect those of only a small number of volunteers and vocal visitors and Christ it wears you down having to deal with them on a daily basis.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 7:30 am
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Thanks @gallowayboy

how are we going to pay for it.

I suspect it really comes down to this, the NT aren't idiots, I'm sure they haven't chosen this route for a laugh.

It's still a pretty depressing way forward. 🙁


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 7:58 am
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NT aren’t idiots, I’m sure they haven’t chosen this route for a laugh.

No. Its not easy. It boils down to:
1. Become more and more commercial, compromise historic accuracy, conservation principals and alienate a proportion of the supporters;
2. Be less insistent internally on individual properties meeting costs;
3. Be allowed, by govt legislation, to sell off certain properties which can never be managed to cover costs, alienate a proportion of supporters;
4. Be funded from central taxation.
Number 4 aint happenning. Number 3 is unlikely, but would allow the organisation to be more stable financially. There's not really enough money for 2 to work.
So as I see it they have been stuck with 1 for years, while costs soar through decaying building stock and increasing compliance costs and poor procurement choices.
I'd do 3, but then i'd be double glazing and insulating all listed buildings and sod the historic fabric 🙂


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 8:41 am
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Loving your insights.

To my own surprise 3 is looking tempting, and with modern digital recording techniques you could store a 3D walk around of anywhere that was lost. However, I can see why 1 is the only game in town.

Turns out a well meaning arsonist could do a lot of good. 😢


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 9:02 am
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While I agree that the aims of Restore Trust are, on the face of it, reasonable. the people using it to gain an entry onto the board are not. One is the current head of a climate-denying lobby group, and other fiances the same sorts of organisations, one is a violent fundamentalist Christian who supports marital rape and wants to criminalise homosexual marriage and their rights.

We've come full circle in this thread. But this says everything that any right minded NT member needs to know.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 9:20 am
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^this.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 9:26 am
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Isn’t one of the problems is that a lot of these properties are of no significant architectural or cultural merit and were effectively stripped of furniture and fittings when given to the NT? Paying to walk round a half-empty building with a non-original interior that was once owned by people you’d never heard of who had got rich doing some dodgy deals isn’t actually a great way to spend an afternoon.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 9:41 am
 csb
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Great insights @gallowayboy

As a lapsed member (we stopped when they didn't vote to stop upland shooting a few years back and instead joined NT Scot) I'm not sure why they aren't more ruthless about what makes each of their places special and focus on that. It's the landscape setting that is special in most cases, too many samey houses. Turn them into hotels.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 10:23 am
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Isn’t one of the problems is that a lot of these properties are of no significant architectural or cultural merit and were effectively stripped of furniture and fittings when given to the NT? Paying to walk round a half-empty building with a non-original interior that was once owned by people you’d never heard of who had got rich doing some dodgy deals isn’t actually a great way to spend an afternoon.

Based on a low sample count I think this is true, and I think that's why they are often very 'same-y', they even smell the same. I don't see any resolution to that though.

Massive 19thC Stately Homes with non-original decor and no significant interesting back story are exactly the sorts of places I'd be (reluctantly) tempted to put in "group 3".

I suspect another problem is your use of the word 'paying'. As the 10 year plan report spells out (a bit too bluntly) a vast number of people have memberships and aren't really paying at all - or rather are paying a token amount.

EDIT: I swear I didn't read the post above before I wrote this.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 10:30 am
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@csb If only it was as easy as that!

I’m not sure why they aren’t more ruthless about what makes each of their places special and focus on that

Been tried several times.....endless "spirit of place" workshops and consultations, visitor profiling etc. The problem is the subsequent strategies get watered down for cost reasons or subverted by competing views and interests. Its often the interpretation and presentation that looses out.

too many samey houses. Turn them into hotels

Your view, and mine to an extent, but there are many powerful voices which would say otherwise.
Anyway, the thread has got a bit diverted, i'm going out on my bike!


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 10:36 am
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too many samey houses. Turn them into hotels

I'd vote for that. Rewild the grounds inc grouse moors. No pheasants. Allow trailbuilding. Bish bash bosh rainbow lanyards for all.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 10:52 am
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I’d vote for that. Rewild the grounds inc grouse moors. No pheasants. Allow trailbuilding. Bish bash bosh rainbow lanyards for all.

What date would you rewild to? If you're suggesting Jurasic Park, I'm in.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 11:00 am
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What date would you rewild to?

I'd just kind of leave it and see what happens. If it's pigeons and feral cats so be it, but dinosaurs would be good.

(Forgot we actually had our wedding do in an NT property: https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/features/discover-sutton-house which if left would go pigeons etc.)


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 11:04 am
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I'd be happy to see a lot of the "Stately Homes" either sold off or knocked down, and the grounds return to the commons (as lots of them were before being enclosed/stolen )

The history of this country shouldn't be all about the posh nobs after all, they're a vanishingly small group of folk who've had a mostly pernicious and divisive effect on nearly everything they touch. It's high time we had a reckoning


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 11:10 am
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(Forgot we actually had our wedding do in an NT property:

...and I'd forgotten I had my wedding reception in an NT property. (Barn, not a poncey stately home.)


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 11:12 am
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From my link:

One of London’s last remaining Tudor houses, Sutton House was originally built in 1535 by Sir Ralph Sadleir. By 1540 he was Secretary of State to Henry VIII and this was his family home.

The house has seen many transformations: it was a Victorian school, a Men’s institute in World War One, a Trades Union office in the 1960s and 70s and a punk squat in the 1980s.

Seems like an okay trajectory for most stately homes...


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 11:17 am
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Thanks to gallowayboy I see the dilemma now.

Someone quipped earlier about 'Disneyfication' which, whilst a tad on the hyperbolic side, does describe the issue quite colourfully.

Historical buildings should be maintained as exactly that. But there's no money. So the NT has to attract visitors with, uh, attractions. Which a minority of people (who likely don't pay a membership anyway) understandably complain about, but at the end of the day a business decision has to trump everything if they want to stay afloat. It probably sticks in the NT's craw at least as much as the visitors.

This reminds me of something else, but I can't quite put my finger on it...


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 11:41 am
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I used to live in a national trust property* and they really do know how to mismanage, over spend & rub tenants up the wrong way all at the same time.

* a tiny 15th century house not a mansion 🙁


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 11:50 am
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I’d be happy to see a lot of the “Stately Homes” either sold off or knocked down, and the grounds return to the commons (as lots of them were before being enclosed/stolen )

Agreed. Not convinced we need to preserve every posh old house forever. Monuments to greed and privilege but hey they have nice gardens and a cafe.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 12:14 pm
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This reminds me of something else, but I can’t quite put my finger on it…

Oooh I see what you mean, another national institution managing an existential crisis but with more freeloaders.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 12:20 pm
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Very clever Cougar.

But it’s not just about money… the NT increasingly control spaces suitable for all sorts of recreation, not just looking around historically interesting buildings… and they should be opening them up to more people, not just their traditional base of old house sniffers (which includes me).


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 12:27 pm
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they should be opening them up to more people, not just their traditional base of old house sniffers

Yeah. And this again is part of the problem. In improving appeal to one group you risk turning off another, ultimately you can't please everyone so it becomes a numbers game. Long-time members might suddenly be getting sniffy because it's no longer done the way they think it should be done, but the uncomfortable truth is that the organisation has to adapt or die.

(Looks like the NT are having the same problem...)


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 12:41 pm
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In seriousness though, what do you do? Is it worth upsetting a few old lags in order to build Snodgrass Hall Adventure Playground in a couple of unused acres out back if it attracts young families in droves?

Is that not a gateway, even? Get them through the door, give them ice cream and park to play in, then "hey, while we're here, why not take a look around?"


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 12:44 pm
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Agree, and the loss of the CEO suggests that the pressure of being in the hot seat trying to square this circle is pretty unpleasent.

I wouldn't want the job.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 12:47 pm
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Interesting article in the Guardian about the anti-Woke pushback in the NT:

Link


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 1:16 pm
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and the grounds return to the commons (as lots of them were before being enclosed/stolen )

Aren't they more or less that now? The NT is a charity with acts of parliament to enable it. Anyone can spend time in and enjoy NT lands/properties.

Should they be 'true' commons? Not sure I want to see kids tearing them up on motorbikes and travellers camping on them myself.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 1:22 pm
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Interesting article in the Guardian about the anti-Woke pushback in the NT:

The Guardian is selling stories on *both* sides of an invented 'woke' squabble.

Good click generation for them but nothing to do with what's actually going on at the AGM on either 'side'.

Unfortunately I clicked, so I'm part of the problem. 😢


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 1:23 pm
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The Guardian is like an inverse Daily Mail these days. Full of polarising and 'click-baity' opinion pieces catering to the 'right on' middle-class progressives.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 1:38 pm
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The Guardian is like an inverse Daily Mail these days. Full of polarising and ‘click-baity’ opinion pieces

I fear all media has gone that way. And it's our fault. This thread is only here because of the invented 'woke war' narrative. It's generating clicks. If they'd done a reasoned explanation of the pressures on the NT and the resolutions none of us would have clicked.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 1:44 pm
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The Guardian is like an inverse Daily Mail these days. Full of polarising and ‘click-baity’ opinion pieces catering to the ‘right on’ middle-class progressive

What a load of cobblers


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 2:02 pm
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Should they be ‘true’ commons? Not sure I want to see kids tearing them up on motorbikes and travellers camping on them myself.

It's not beyond our whit to manage though is it.. I mean it's clearly a wrong to have so much of the UK essentially "off limits" to everyone, and it shouldn't be a right to do what you please and be an anti-social tosser.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 2:02 pm
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Interesting article in the Guardian about the anti-Woke pushback in the NT:

Whilst you are finding examples dont suppose you have any of the evidence you keep being asked for.
I note the same with that piece. It never bothers to ask are the complaints valid or just some nutters getting upset.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 2:14 pm
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Is it worth upsetting a few old lags in order to build Snodgrass Hall Adventure Playground in a couple of unused acres out back if it attracts young families in droves?

I guess it depends if those unused acres are part of a Capability Brown landscape.
In several areas they are facing the classical beauty spot issue. If they make it capable of handling the crowds then a)it may well attract more and hence back to square 1 and b)the act of building the car parks and other facilities impact the beauty spot.
Some areas will be better suited to it than others eg the one nearest to me would be crap for it. The roads to it are appalling and there isnt much space there.
The different groups wanting different things are always going to put pressure on it. I knew someone who only had membership every other year on the grounds they supported the natural landscape side of things but werent a fan of country houses.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 2:19 pm
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" the natural landscape "

Opens up another can of worms....


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 2:24 pm
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Opens up another can of worms….

Well we dont seem to be getting any good examples of the wokeness. Soooo:
Rewilding vs green deserts.
Round one seconds out.


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 2:27 pm
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Interesting article in the Guardian about the anti-Woke pushback in the NT:

Couple of things spring to mind: 1. That "article" is in fact an opinion piece. 2. It doesn't say let's hide away some ugly truths or ignore our past lest it offend people "just having a nice day out"  it just says frame it better and review what you're going to say before launching it on an unsuspecting audience who are being primed by culture-war hyperbole


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 2:35 pm
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The NT place I volunteer at is returning a small part of its land from a green desert back to how it was…. The backlash and sheer idiocy from some is unbelievable


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 2:46 pm
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The NT place I volunteer at is returning a small part of its land from a green desert back to how it was…. The backlash and sheer idiocy from some is unbelievable

Years ago, when I lived nearby, I used to love visiting Hampton Court Palace grounds. There was a really wild patch at one end which felt fantastically different from anything around there, and I much preferred it. It's probably not there these days. (And I know HCP isn't NT!)


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 2:54 pm
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Rewilding gets my vote, with some bike trails thrown in of course!


 
Posted : 14/10/2021 2:54 pm
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