Non-departmental public body Over the centuries, what is now called "heritage" has been the responsibility of a series of state departments. There was the "Kings Works" after the
Norman Conquest, the
Office of Works (1378–1832), the
Office of Woods, Forests, Land Revenues and Works (1832–1851), and the
Ministry of Works (1851–1962). Responsibility subsequently transferred to the
Ministry of Public Building and Works (1962–1970), then to the
Department of the Environment (1970–1997), and it is now with the
Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS). The state's legal responsibility for the historic environment goes back to the
Ancient Monuments Protection Act 1882. The central government subsequently developed several systems of heritage protection for different types of assets, introducing listing for buildings after the
Second World War, and for conservation areas in the 1960s. In 1983, Secretary of State for the Environment
Michael Heseltine gave national responsibility for the historic environment to a semi‑autonomous agency (or "
quango") to operate under ministerial guidelines and to government policy.
The Historic Buildings and Monuments Commission was formed under the terms of the
National Heritage Act 1983 on 1 April 1984. The 1983 Act also dissolved the bodies that had previously provided independent advice – the Ancient Monuments Board for England and the
Historic Buildings Council for England – and incorporated those functions into the new body. Soon after, the commission was given the operating name of
English Heritage by its first chairman,
Lord Montagu of Beaulieu. and a register for historic battlefields (e.g. the
Battle of Tewkesbury) was created in March 1995. 'Registration' is a material consideration in the planning process. In April 1999 English Heritage merged with the
Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England (RCHME) and the
National Monuments Record (NMR), bringing together resources for the identification and survey of England's historic environment. By adoption, that included responsibility for the national record of archaeological sites from the
Ordnance Survey, the National Library of Aerial Photographs, and two million RAF and Ordnance Survey aerial photographs. Those, together with other nationally important external acquisitions, meant that English Heritage was one of the largest publicly accessible archives in the UK: 2.53 million records are available online, including more than 426,000 images. In 2010–11, it recorded 4.3 million unique online user sessions and over 110,000 people visited NMR exhibitions held around the country in 2009–10. The administration of the
listed building system was transferred from DCMS to English Heritage in 2006. However, actual listing decisions still remained the responsibility of the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport, who was required by the
Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 to approve a list of buildings of special architectural or historic interest. Following the Public Bodies Reform in 2010, English Heritage was confirmed as the government's statutory adviser on the historic environment, and the largest source of non-lottery grant funding for heritage assets. It was retained on grounds of "performing a technical function which should remain independent from Government". However, the department also suffered from budget cuts during the recession of the 2010s, resulting in a repairs deficit of £100 million. The change occurred on 1 April 2015 with the statutory planning and heritage protection functions remaining an independent,
non-departmental public body, rebranded as
Historic England. The care of the properties in the National Collection and the visitor experience attached to them were transferred to the new English Heritage Trust, although the English Heritage name and logo remains. == National Collection ==