The Daily Telegraph

Gay Pride, flapjacks and Easter rows ‘alienated the public’

Outgoing boss of the National Trust admits charity may have gone ‘too far’

- By Daily Telegraph Reporter

THE outgoing head of the National Trust has admitted that the organisati­on has alienated “traditiona­l visitors” in the wake of rows over Easter egg hunts, gay pride badges and flapjacks.

Dame Helen Ghosh, who takes over as Master of Balliol College, Oxford University, next April said that while Trust membership was healthy, “sometimes some of our perhaps more traditiona­l visitors have felt that they are not being catered for as they once felt that they were”. She told Radio 4’s The World This Weekend: “Sometimes I see signs that our places, or things going on, that perhaps tread too far in one direction than another.

“It is sometimes the case that we appeal too much to one audience, and not enough to another.”

Dame Helen, who succeeded Dame Fiona Reynolds in 2012, continued: “I think what I’m describing is that in order to be openarmed to welcome the widest possible group of visitors to our places, sometimes some of our perhaps more traditiona­l visitors have felt that they are not being catered for as they once felt that they were.”

The Trust has endured a torrid summer, during which it has faced criticism for requiring volunteers to wear Gay Pride badges, the public “outing” of Robert Wyndham Ketton-cremer, former owner of Felbrigg Hall near Cromer, and a change in the recipe for its celebrated flapjacks.

Earlier in the year, the Trust was accused of “airbrushin­g faith” after the word “Easter” was dropped from the annual egg hunt it runs with Cadbury.

Speaking on Radio 4, Sir Roy Strong, a former director of both London’s Victoria & Albert museum and the National Portrait Gallery, was damning in his assessment of the Trust, which attracts 20 million visitors a year.

He blamed successive “left-leaning” director generals, and suggested it may be time for the organisati­on – which attracts more than £500million in annual funding – to be “broken up”.

Sir Roy, 82, said: “If you go to a National Trust house or property, you’re being almost told what to think and how to react.

“They’re obsessed with children, play areas, fun things at Easter and Christmas, and so on. The signs are the National Trust is being turned into a branch of the leisure industry. Within the last 20 years it’s really begun to alienate its own public.

“They’ve had two director generals, both competent in their own ways, and a balance has gone. Both were left-leaning.

“My own view [is that] it’s too large, and therefore it’s kind of alienating a lot of its members. I think there is a big discrepanc­y between the historic houses and gardens, which certainly the present DG is possibly embarrasse­d about, and landscape and coastline, and it may well benefit from splitting.

“It’s ticking the boxes against the disabled, the aged, LGBT, the ethnic communitie­s … and something gets lost along the way.”

 ??  ?? Dame Helen Ghosh said the National Trust sometimes went too far in one direction
Dame Helen Ghosh said the National Trust sometimes went too far in one direction

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