National Trust places with strong photographic connections
From Lacock Abbey’s role in the birth of photography to the house of 20th-century photographer Edward Chambré Hardman, there are many stories to tell about the invention and development of photography at National Trust places. Learn about the important contributions towards photographic innovation, and the efforts to digitise collections for future generations.
Erddig, Wales
The Yorke family at Erddig, North Wales, were enthusiastic adopters of new photographic technology and made pictures of their staff from as early as 1852. The staff were encouraged to make their own photographs, and these were compiled into photographic albums, offering a unique and valuable insight into their lives.
Lacock Abbey, Wiltshire
William Henry Fox Talbot, polymath and pioneer of Victorian photography, moved to Lacock Abbey in 1827. He famously created the earliest surviving photographic negative in 1835, taken of a small window in the abbey's South Gallery.
The Fox Talbot Museum is housed in Lacock’s 16th-century barn. It tells the story of the birth and early development of photography through its photographic collection.
Mount Stewart, County Down
Theresa, Lady Londonderry of Mount Stewart, was a keen photographer and took many glass-plate negatives of her home and its staff.
With the help of volunteers, the team has been cataloguing, cleaning, and digitising the negatives. The pictures have helped to shed new light on the mysterious disappearance of the Mountstewart yacht, which vanished without a trace from Strangford Lough in 1895.
Shaw’s Corner, Hertfordshire
When George Bernard Shaw died in November 1950, he left behind a house filled with the relics of a long and fascinating life. As well as being a writer, he was a keen photographer and left a vast photographic collection of more than 20,000 items, taken by himself and others.
Shaw's pictures are now stored at the London School of Economics, which he helped to found, where the pictures are being digitised.