
Morris in his Morris Minor, 1931. By kind permission of the Warden and Fellows of Nuffield College, Oxford
The National Trust has been offered Nuffield Place, the 1930s home of William Morris, Viscount Nuffield, the owner of the Morris Motor Company. The Trustees of the National Trust have agreed to fund an endowment, on condition that the property is able to pay for itself within five years. We now need to raise an additional £600,000 in order to put appropriate staff and visitor facilities in place.
Lord Nuffield began his business making and repairing bicycles in 1895, with a starting capital of £4. He designed his first car in 1912 and was one of the first British carmakers to produce cars for the masses. By 1937 Morris Motors was the largest car manufacturer in Europe.
Much of Lord Nuffield’s fortune went to good causes in healthcare, research and education. During his lifetime he gave away £30 million, the equivalent of £11 billion today.
One of the institutions he founded, Nuffield College, Oxford, was given his house after his death in 1963. Nuffield College has now decided that the National Trust would be better placed to care for the house and open it to the public.
The majority of Lord and Lady Nuffield’s furniture is still in the house, making it an early-to-mid-twentieth-century time capsule. Lord Nuffield loved clocks and he installed a miniature workshop in a cupboard in his bedroom where he would relieve his insomnia by doing delicate mechanical work.
More about the house and the appeal can be found here.




