Kinver Edge is a remnant of the
Mercian forest, although much planting dates from post-1945. There are two
Iron Age hillforts on Kinver Edge; the larger one,
Kinver Edge Hillfort, is at the northern end, while
the other is at the southern end, on a promontory known as Drakelow Hill. The area has been a popular local tourist destination since
Edwardian times, when an electric tramway, the
Kinver Light Railway, connected Kinver to the
Birmingham tram system. The
National Trust was given 198 acres of Kinver Edge in 1917 by the children of
Thomas Grosvenor Lee, a Birmingham solicitor born in Kinver, in memory of Lee and his wife. The Trust acquired a further 85 acres between 1964 and 1980. In 2014 Worcestershire Council Cabinet approved the transfer of
Kingsford Forest Park (also known as Kingsford Country Park) to the National Trust. The Forest Park, which covered approximately , lay entirely in Worcestershire where it adjoined the southern end of the Edge. The transfer had been completed by 2018, with 'Kingsford Forest Park' signs being replaced by 'National Trust Kinver Edge' signs. The total area covered by Kinver Edge now amounts to approximately 600 acres. Subsequent to the incorporation of the Forest Park, National Trust notices displayed in 2019 requesting that dogs be kept on leads during the breeding season for heathland birds stated "This request only applies to around 100 acres of the approximately 600 acres of Kinver Edge". == Rock houses ==