Foreword - Dame Helen Ghosh, director general, National Trust
I. ‘The habit of seeing and sorting out problems’: Octavia
Hill’s life and afterlife
1. Octavia Hill: ‘the most misunderstood … Victorian reformer’ -
Elizabeth Baigent
2. Octavia Hill: lessons in campaigning - Gillian Darley
II. ‘Beauty is for all’: art in the life and work of Octavia
Hill
3. Octavia Hill: the practice of sympathy and the art of housing -
William Whyte
4. Octavia Hill’s Red Cross Hall and its murals to heroic
self-sacrifice - John Price
5. ‘The poor, as well as the rich, need something more than meat
and drink’: the vision of the Kyrle Society - Robert Whelan
6. Octavia Hill: the reluctant sitter - Elizabeth Heath
III. ‘The value of abundant good air’: Octavia Hill and the
meanings of nature
7. Octavia Hill, nature and open space: crowning success or
campaigning ‘utterly without result’ - Elizabeth Baigent
8. Octavia Hill and the English landscape - Paul Readman
IV. ‘A common inheritance from generation to generation’:
Octavia Hill and preservation
9. ‘To every landless man, woman and child in England’: Octavia
Hill and the preservation movement - Astrid Swenson
10. Octavia Hill and the National Trust - Melanie Hall
V. ‘The loving zeal of individuals which cannot be legislated
for by Parliament’: Octavia Hill’s vision in historical
context
11. At home in the metropolis: gender and ideals of
social service - Jane Garnett
12. Octavia Hill, Beatrice Webb, and the Royal Commission on the
Poor Laws, 1905–9: a mid Victorian in an Edwardian world - Lawrence
Goldman
VI. Hill’s legacy
13. ‘Some dreadful buildings in Southwark’: a tour of
nineteenth-century social housing - William Whyte
14. For the benefit of the nation: politics and the early National
Trust - Ben Cowell
Ask a Question About this Product More... |