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Ethel
The Peak District, 1924–31
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When Ethel Gallimore was widowed just over a year after getting married, she became ill with grief. Only walking in the Peak District near her home in Sheffield saved her. In 1924 she formed a local conservation committee, to protect the Peak District from development, which would later become the Sheffield and Peak branch of the Council for the Protection of Rural England (CPRE). She and other ramblers also campaigned for wider public access to the forbidden moorlands of Kinder Scout, Bleaklow and other privately owned grouse-shooting estates. In 1927 her committee raised enough money to buy part of the Longshaw Estate, and handed the deeds over to the National Trust. In the early 1930s she began her campaign to have the Peak District included in the areas of land considered for designation as National Parks. When the Addiston Committee’s report into National Parks was published in 1931 she was disappointed to see the Peak District was not among the primary list of favoured areas, such as the Lake District and Snowdonia.

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