The idea of a South Downs National Park originated in the 1920s, when public concern was mounting about increasing threats to the beauty of the
downland environment, particularly the impact of indiscriminate speculative housing development on the eastern Sussex Downs (
Peacehaven was an example of this). In 1929, the
Council for the Preservation of Rural England, led by campaigners including the geographer
Vaughan Cornish, submitted a memorandum to the Prime Minister urging the case for national parks, including a national park on part of the South Downs. When however, towards the end of World War II,
John Dower was asked to report on how a system of
national parks in England and Wales might be established, his 1945 report,
National Parks in England and Wales, did not identify the South Downs for national park status, but rather included it in a list of "other amenity areas".
Sir Arthur Hobhouse's 1947
Report of the National Parks Committee took a different view, and he included the South Downs in his list of twelve areas recommended for designation as a national park, defined by John Dower as an "extensive area of beautiful and relatively wild country in which, for the nation's benefit...the characteristic landscape beauty is strictly preserved". The South Downs was the last of the original twelve recommended national parks to be designated. Extensive damage to the chalk downland from 1940 onwards through arable farming, and a resulting decline in sheep grazing, militated at an early stage against further work on designation. When in 1956 the National Parks Commission came to consider the case for the South Downs as a national park, it found designation no longer appropriate, noting that the value of the South Downs as a potential national park had been reduced by cultivation. It did however recognise the "great natural beauty" of the area, and proposed it be designated as an
Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. In due course two AONBs were designated, split along the county boundary, namely the
East Hampshire AONB in 1962 and the
Sussex Downs AONB in 1966. These were later to form the basis of the South Downs National Park. In September 1999, the government, following a review of national parks policy, declared support for a South Downs National Park and announced a consultation on its creation. In January 2003 the then
Countryside Agency (now
Natural England) made an Order to designate the proposed park in 2003 which was submitted to the
Secretary of State for the Environment on 27 January 2003. As a result of objections and representations received on the proposed Order, a
public inquiry was conducted between 10 November 2003 and 23 March 2005, with the aim of recommending to ministers whether a national park should be confirmed and, if so, where its boundaries should be. The results of the inquiry were expected by the end of 2005, but were delayed pending a legal issue arising from a
High Court case challenging part of the Order designating the
New Forest National Park. Following an appeal on the High Court case and new legislation included in the
Natural Environment and Rural Communities Act 2006, the South Downs Inquiry report was published on 31 March 2006. It recommended a 23% reduction in the size of the originally proposed national park, focussing it more narrowly on the chalk downland and excluding from it a large part of the existing East Hampshire and Sussex Downs AONBs. This proved controversial, leading to calls from the
Campaign for the Protection of Rural England and others for the inclusion of the so-called
western Weald, a region within the two AONBs possessing a geology, ecology and landscape quite different from the chalk hills of the South Downs, within the park boundary to ensure that it remained protected from development. The Secretary of State invited objections and representations on new issues relating to the proposed national park in a consultation that ran from 2 July to 13 August 2007. In the light of the responses received, the Secretary of State decided that it was appropriate to re-open the 2003–05 public inquiry. The inquiry re-opened on 12 February 2008 and was closed on 4 July 2008 after 27 sitting days. The Inspector's report was submitted on 28 November 2008. On 31 March 2009, the result of the inquiry was published. The
Secretary of State,
Hilary Benn, announced that the South Downs would be designated a national park, and on 12 November 2009 he signed the order confirming the designation. He confirmed that a number of disputed areas – including the western Weald, the town of
Lewes and the village of
Ditchling – would be included within the national park. The new national park came into full operation on 1 April 2011 when the new South Downs National Park Authority assumed statutory responsibility for it. The occasion was marked by an opening ceremony which took place in the market square of
Petersfield, a town in the western Weald just north of the chalk escarpment of the South Downs. In 2016 the national park was granted
International Dark Sky Reserve status, to restrict artificial light pollution above the park. It was the second such area in England and the 11th in the world. ==Administration==