View of the landscape above Force Cragg mine in the Lake District.
Coledale Beck dam above Force Cragg mine in the Lake District, Cumbria. © Historic England DP054914.
Coledale Beck dam above Force Cragg mine in the Lake District, Cumbria. © Historic England DP054914.

Management Agreements for Field Monuments

We can offer funding to improve the management of monuments via term agreements with landowners or tenants.

What are monuments?

England's landscape has a rich and diverse legacy of field monuments that help us understand all periods of our past, from prehistory to the Cold War.

Monuments may consist of buried or scattered remains, earthworks or standing structures or a combination of these features.

How do Management Agreements work?

We can offer funding to improve the management of monuments or access to them through agreements with the owner or occupier of the land. These agreements usually run for a term of three or five years.

We can include payment for one-off repairs which would usually be carried out at the start of the term. More major repairs can be considered under our Repair Grants for Heritage at Risk grant scheme.

Our priorities for funding through management agreements will be scheduled monuments at risk.

Natural England

We work closely with Natural England, whose agri-environment funding scheme, known as Environmental Stewardship, is the primary source of funding for landscape management.

We will concentrate our management agreements on sites where environmental stewardship is not available or appropriate.

Interested?

If you would like to discuss the possibility of entering into a management agreement for a monument on your land, please contact the Business Manager in your local Historic England office.