List of National Trust properties in Somerset

1. Barrington Court
2. Bath Assembly Rooms
3. Brean Down
4. Bruton Dovecote
5. Burrow Mump
6. Cadbury Camp
7. Cheddar Gorge
8. Clevedon Court
9. Coleridge Cottage
10. Crook Peak to Shute Shelve Hill
11. Dolebury Warren
12. Dovecot at Blackford Farm
13. Dunster Castle
14. Dunster Working Watermill
15. Ebbor Gorge
16. Fyne Court
17. Glastonbury Tor
18. Holnicote Estate
19. King Alfred's Tower
20. King John's Hunting Lodge
21. Leigh Woods National Nature Reserve
22. Lytes Cary
23. Montacute House
24. Prior Park Landscape Garden
25. Sand Point and Middle Hope
26. Solsbury Hill
27. Stembridge Mill
28. Stoke sub Hamdon Priory
29. The Priest's House
30. Tintinhull Garden
31. Treasurer's House
32. Tyntesfield
33. Walton and Ivythorn Hills
34. Wellington Monument
35. West Pennard Court Barn
36. Yarn Market, Dunster

The National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty (informally known as the National Trust) owns or manages a range of properties in the ceremonial county of Somerset, England. These range from sites of Iron and Bronze Age occupations including Brean Down, Cadbury Camp[1] and Cheddar Gorge to Elizabethan and Victorian era mansions, which include examples such as Montacute House and Tyntesfield.[2] Some of the smaller properties include Coleridge Cottage and Stembridge Mill, the last remaining thatched windmill in England.[3]

Somerset consists of a non-metropolitan county, administered by Somerset County Council, which is divided into five districts, and two unitary authorities. The districts of Somerset are West Somerset, South Somerset, Taunton Deane, Mendip and Sedgemoor. North Somerset and Bath and North East Somerset historically came under Somerset County Council. In 1974 they became part of county of Avon, and in 1996 they became administratively independent when Avon was broken up into unitary authorities.[4]

Many of the buildings included in the list are listed buildings or scheduled monuments. Listed status refers to a building or other structure officially designated as being of special architectural, historical, or cultural significance; Grade I structures are those considered to be "buildings of exceptional interest".[5] Listing was begun by a provision in the Town and Country Planning Act 1947. A scheduled monument is a "nationally important" archaeological site or historic building, given protection against unauthorised change. Scheduled Monuments are specified in the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979, which defines a monument as:

Any building, structure or work above or below the surface of the land, any cave or excavation; any site comprising the remains of any such building, structure or work or any cave or excavation; and any site comprising or comprising the remains of any vehicle, vessel or aircraft or other movable structure or part thereof ...

— (Section 61 (7)).[6]

Properties

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