The United Kingdom 79 
-3^505, from the late Earl of Wharn- 
cliffe, the money being raised by 
means of donations. The fifteen acres 
of cliff land which form the top of this 
promontory, and the original vegeta- 
tion, will thus be preserved inviolate. 
Nearer London, too, in a district 
which is already being invaded by 
villas, the Trust has secured two hills 
overlooking the Weald. Toy's Hill 
was given to the Trust in 1898 in 
memory of the late Mr Frederick 
Feeney, by Mr and Mrs Richardson 
Evans ; and in the following year, 
Ide Hill, fifteen acres of wooded hill- 
side, was purchased for 1,636, by 
means of donations. 
In the same year, 1899, two small 
strips of Wicken Fen, Cambridge- 
shire, were acquired. This Fen is 
nearly the last remnant of the original 
fenland of East Anglia, and is of 
special interest to botanists and ento- 
