
Founded in 1927 to save the dreaming spires views, we now own over 900 acres in and around Oxford. We encourage public access where ever possible, and hope you will enjoy visiting our land – enjoy the views of Oxford from Boars Hill, walk by the river at Heyford, visit the Community Orchard at Wolvercote or stroll in the hay meadows at Hinksey.
If you have enjoyed our green spaces why not consider making a donation to the Oxford Lund Fund to help us preserve and maintain Oxford’s Green Spaces. Text OPTL01 £1 to 70070 (or £2/ £3 / £4 / £5 or £10). Your support will help us Keep Oxford Green Forever.
Thank you.
The Trust owns many Oxford places that we all take for granted.
South Park and Shotover Country Park owe their existence to the Trust, who gave them to the City Council in the 1950s. Punting on the Cherwell leads to the Victoria Arms at Marston, owned by the Trust, and in the western hills the open land at Boars Hill, which so many people visit to walk and admire the open views to the ‘dreaming spires’ made famous by poet Matthew Arnold, is ours. Meadowland at Old Marston, North Hinksey, Old Headington, Wolvercote and the Glebe Field at Iffley all contribute to the rural feel of these ‘villages within a city’ which are such a special part of Oxford’s character. Add to this the winding river banks and the meadows of the Thames at Swinford by the Toll Bridge, and at Kennington and Sandford to the south, and a glorious picture begins to emerge of Oxford with its green fingers running into and around the City. East St Helen Street, Abingdon, is the home of the Trust’s medieval merchant’s house, where our custodian is pleased to show off the splendid 15th century wall paintings. In Oxford, a visit to the Trust’s offices will take you back to an earlier St Ebbes when our row of 17th century cottages were part of a very different area, where today we sit alongside the developing site of the Westgate shopping centre.
Where possible, the Trust welcomes visitors to its land. In keeping with sound environmental management much of it is grazed for at least part of the year. Visitors are therefore requested to
The Trust does not accept responsibility for any loss or injury suffered on its land.