RSA
Sophie Churchill CEO, Chief Executive of the National Forest Company
"It’s almost impossible to summarise the significance of trees to us. Let’s only imagine that we did not have them and had thereby lost their connection to the past, their movement, their hospitality, their generosity and their usefulness to us and the entire ecosystem."
Sophie Churchill CEO, Chief Executive of the National Forest Company


27470
trees planted



A donation today of £15 will enable a tree to be planted and maintained to maturity on your behalf. Complete the online form today....and lets get planting
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Our History - Your Future

Duke of Beaufort
In 1758 the Society made the first of its many awards intended to promote reafforestation in Great Britain. A gold medal was awarded to Henry, fifth Duke of Beaufort (pictured here), to mark the planting of acorns' for the raising of Oak Timber'.

Our History ……

From the 1750’s through to the 1820’s the RSA encouraged tree planting across the UK. Well over 50 million trees were planted giving rise to many of the woods we enjoy in Britain today…

By the 18th Century Britain’s great forests had been largely squandered, partly by the extravagant use of wood as domestic fuel and for industries such as iron-smelting, but mainly because it hadn’t occurred to anyone that a programme of replacement was necessary.

The position was made critical by the ever increasing demands of the Navy for more timber. So in 1755 the Society called for the “planting of timber trees in the commons and waste ground all over the Kingdom, for the supply of the Navy, the employment and advantage of the poor, as well as the ornamenting of the nation”.

From 1757 the Society began offering premiums or prizes for tree planting. It specified the types to be planted beginning with Oak, Chest and Elm and followed by others including Weymouth Pine “being the properest for masts” – the list eventually reaching 17 varieties of trees useful for timber. The first award of a gold medal was made to the Duke of Beaufort for the planting of a million trees on his estate at Hawksbury, Gloucestershire.

By the time the last award was made in 1835 well over 50 million trees, and perhaps up to a 100 million if hedgerows etc were taken into account, had been planted as a result of the Society’s initiative.

An article in Sylva Magazine at the beginning of the next Century by Alexander Hunter praised the Society for “having greatly contributed by their honorary and pecuniary premiums, to restore the spirit of planting.”

Your Future…

On 20th April 2004 the RSA launched a new initiative to mark its 250th Anniversary and hopes to plant in excess of 250,000 trees.

Trees are fundamental to our life system on earth and currently the world is using trees at an unsustainable rate. Today the need to plant trees remains as urgent as it was 250 years ago.

Trees provide stability at a number of different levels and critically their disappearance constrains our ability to cope with rapidly changing political and economical circumstances.

You can be part of this exciting initiative and help ensure that the forests for future generations are well established and sustainable.


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