Beatrix Potter’s Lake District home, Hill Top, is preparing to open its doors on February 12 for the 2022 season.

After spending the winter cleaning the farmhouse and looking after the items in their care, staff at the National Trust site are delighted to be welcoming visitors back to the iconic house.

Bought by Beatrix Potter in 1905 with the proceeds of her first ‘little books’, the 17th century farmhouse is a time-capsule of Potter’s life and was the setting of several of her books, including The Tale of Tom Kitten and The Tale of Samuel Whiskers.

In an exciting year for the team at Hill Top, the Beatrix Potter: Drawn to Nature exhibition also opens on February 12 at the V&A Museum in London.

Created in partnership with the National Trust, a selection of the National Trust’s items belonging to Potter are on display at the London museum.

The Westmorland Gazette: Curator, Helen Antrobus, looking at the Beatrix Potter items before they head off to the V and A Museum, at The Royal Oak Conservation Studio at Knole, Kent

The exhibition details the author and conservationist’s life starting with her childhood in Kensington and charting her journey to the Lake District, and explores the impact she had on conservation and preservation of farming and the landscape.

Beatrix Potter spent the last 30 years of her life buying and protecting land in the Lake District, eventually leaving a significant bequest of over 4,000 acres of land, farms and cottages to the National Trust.

John Moffatt, the National Trust’s general manager of the South Lakes said: “It’s always a special moment to open the doors at Hill Top to the first visitors of the year.

“Over the last year, the team have been working hard to support the partnership with the V&A and preparing for some of Beatrix’s items to be showcased to a new audience. We’re delighted to be sharing the story of Beatrix’s vital role in the conservation of the Lake District, the bequest she left the National Trust, which is still one of the biggest the Trust has ever received, and how we continue her legacy today by caring for 20 per cent of the Lake District with help from the generosity of our supporters.”

The Westmorland Gazette: Curator, Helen Antrobus, looking at the Beatrix Potter items before they head off to the V and A Museum, at The Royal Oak Conservation Studio at Knole, Kent

Helen Antrubus, assistant national curator at the National Trust said: “We’re delighted to be working in partnership with the V&A to shine a light on the full life and legacy of a remarkable, multifaceted woman.

“The National Trust is proud to care for the items and places which were special to Beatrix. From Hill Top, to the vast Monk Coniston estate and fourteen traditional Lakeland farms with their flocks of Herdwick sheep.

“ Thanks to her pioneering conservation efforts and generous bequest of her homes, farms and land to the National Trust, we’re able to continue her legacy caring for the landscape, traditions and Lakeland way of life that inspired Beatrix so they can continue to inspire others.”