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Heritage & Environmental Conservation

How a Heritage Documentary was instrumental in securing grant funding for The Lovell Quinta Arboretum

Nearly £44,000

Grant funding secured via Veolia Environmental Trust

The challenge

Decades of living memory – stories held by the friends, collaborators and family of Sir Bernard Lovell – had never been formally recorded. Without a film, they would simply be lost.

What we did

We created a ten-minute historical documentary capturing the voices of the people closest to the Arboretum’s story, from the Lovell family to the friends who planted it alongside Sir Bernard.

What changed

The film preserved irreplaceable personal histories – and became the centrepiece of a successful grant application, securing nearly £44,000 to restore the lake Sir Bernard’s family built by hand.

About this project

Lovell Quinta Arboretum is a 28-acre living legacy in the heart of Cheshire – created by Sir Bernard Lovell, founder of Jodrell Bank Observatory, from open grassland in 1948 and now stewarded by the Tatton Garden Society. Home to three Plant Heritage National Collections and over 2,500 trees and shrubs, the Arboretum holds both scientific significance and deep personal history. The Tatton Garden Society came to Majestical needing to do two things: preserve the living memories of the people closest to that history before they were lost, and make a grant application that could secure the funding to restore the lake Sir Bernard’s family built by hand. Together, we created a ten-minute heritage documentary. The film achieved both.

The Challenge

A story worth preserving

Before anything else, the priority was people. The Arboretum carries decades of living memory – stories held by the friends, collaborators and lifelong companions of the Lovell family that had never been formally recorded. Ray and Ann Lowe, close friends of the family for much of their lives. Peter Sullivan, an informal apprentice of Sir Bernard himself, who worked alongside him planting the young saplings that form the avenues and groves standing tall across the Arboretum today. These were not archive sources or historical footnotes – they were real people whose connection to this place and this family had shaped their lives in profound ways. And those stories, if left unrecorded, would simply be lost.

That was the true brief: to capture something irreplaceable before time took it. The grant application to the Veolia Environmental Trust – and the nearly £44,000 it would unlock to restore the lake – came later in the process. But it is a measure of what honest, careful storytelling can do that the same film built to preserve a human legacy also became the most compelling evidence a funder could ask for.

At a glance

Client

Tatton Garden Society / Lovell Quinta Arboretum

Sector

Environmental Conservation
Heritage
Community

Services

Documentary Film Production
Scriptwriting
Post-Production

Duration

2021-2022

Deliverables

1 x ten-minute historical mini-documentary

Team

KN

Sara Walker
Copywriter

KN

Rachel Mellor
DOP / Producer

BC

George Roberts
Editor

Usage

Grant funding application
historical resource
education, awareness

Our Approach

Understanding the people, priorities and purpose

We began where every good documentary begins – listening. Working closely with the Sara Walker of the Tatton Garden Society, we identified the people whose stories mattered most and spent time with them before a camera was ever switched on. The Arboretum sits behind Sir Bernard Lovell’s former home – what began as his personal garden, just a stone’s throw from Jodrell Bank Observatory. For years he worked tirelessly to build and plant this landscape himself. The stories held within it are extraordinary – trees gifted by royalty and heads of state, each one with a history that collection curator Rhoderic Taylor carries as if the trees were old friends. The film brought together a remarkable group of voices: Roger Lovell, Sir Bernard’s son, speaking with quiet pride about his father’s vision. David Skidmore, Chairman of the Tatton Garden Society, whose commitment to the Arboretum’s future is as personal as it is professional. Rhoderic Taylor, the Collection Curator, describing the trees with the intimacy of decades of devoted care. And the friends – Ray and Ann Lowe, Peter Sullivan – whose memories of building this place alongside Sir Bernard gave the film its emotional heart. The brief evolved with several late revisions as the Society worked through what they most wanted to say. Our team stayed calm, collaborative and creatively engaged throughout – Sara Walker later reflected that the process had been handled with patience and good humour to the end. The completed documentary was submitted directly as part of the Veolia Environmental Trust grant application, giving assessors an immediate, immersive understanding of why this project mattered.

If your charity has a story that deserves to be told - whether for a grant application, a fundraising campaign, or simply because it matters - we'd love to hear about it.

Tell us your story

Watch the heritage documentary

Very professional service and attention to detail. Our project was subject to many last minute revisions and Katie and team kept their patience and sense of humour to the end!

Sara Walker, Marketing Manager, Tatton Garden Society

£ 0 k

Grant funding secured

National collections protected

0 +

Trees and shrubs

The Impact

Restoring the lake, preserving the story, protecting the wildlife

The people who sat in front of our camera gave us something that no brief could have anticipated. Listening to Ray and Ann Lowe speak about the Lovell family, or hearing Peter Sullivan describe the days he spent planting saplings alongside Sir Bernard — you could feel the weight of what was being preserved. These were not performances. They were memories, freely and generously shared, captured on film for the first time.

They were joined by Roger Lovell, Sir Bernard’s son, who spoke with quiet pride about his father’s vision for this place. By David Skidmore, Chairman of the Tatton Garden Society, whose commitment to the Arboretum’s future is as personal as it is professional. And by Rhoderic Taylor, the Collection Curator, who spoke about the trees with the kind of intimacy that only comes from years of devoted care. Together, these voices formed something rare: a portrait of a place that is genuinely, deeply loved.

And then came the grant. The Tatton Garden Society submitted the film as part of their application to the Veolia Environmental Trust and secured nearly £44,000 to restore the lake — the very lake Sir Bernard and his family built with their own hands. Work began in spring 2023. The lake is now open, refurbished, and alive again as a sanctuary for wildlife and a place the local community can enjoy for generations to come.

In September 2023, Katie received a personal invitation to the official lake opening — with a note that the film had been instrumental in making it possible. That felt like the right ending to a project that was never really about the film. It was about the people, and making sure their stories had somewhere to live.

“This is an absolute joy to watch. It has the lightest touch which effortlessly reaches the deepest depth of the subject. The editing is perfect.” Judith Lovell

“This is a terrific film, very well done to all involved.” Bryan Lovell

Can a film really make a difference to a grant application?

In our experience, yes – particularly when the grant requires you to communicate the human significance of a project, not just its practical detail. A well-made film gives assessors something written copy rarely can: the feeling of why a project matters. In this case, the Tatton Garden Society’s documentary helped secure nearly £44,000 from the Veolia Environmental Trust to restore a lake with deep personal and community significance. The film did not just explain the project. It made people care about it. 

How do you approach filming people who are emotionally connected to a subject?

With patience, and without agenda. When we worked with the friends and family of Sir Bernard Lovell, we knew these were precious, personal memories – not interview subjects to be managed. We spent time listening before filming, created a calm environment on the day, and let people speak in their own way and at their own pace. The result is always richer than anything a scripted approach could produce. Authenticity cannot be manufactured – it can only be created by making people feel genuinely safe and valued. 

How long does a heritage or impact documentary take to produce?

This project ran across several months, from initial conversations through to the finished film. The timeline for any documentary depends on the complexity of the story, the number of contributors involved, and how much the brief evolves along the way. We build flexibility into our process because stories rarely arrive fully formed – and the most honest films are usually the ones that were allowed to find their shape. For a project like this, allow at least eight to twelve weeks from brief to delivery. 

Frequently Asked Questions

Does your charity have a story the world needs to hear?

Whether you’re preparing a grant application, marking a milestone, or simply trying to capture something that matters before time moves on – we’d love to find out more about your project and the people at the heart of it.

Tell us your story
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