The Man Who Went Shopping For Dining Chairs and Accidentally Bought Stonehenge.

On September 21, 1915, a British barrister named Cecil Chubb was given a very simple task by his wife, Mary. She sent him to a local auction in Salisbury with strict instructions: buy a nice set of dining chairs for their home.

But as Chubb sat in the auction house, he got distracted. "Lot 15" came up for sale, a 30-acre plot of land featuring a crumbling, dilapidated ring of ancient rocks.
@VisionaryVoid

Three years later, tired of his wife’s complaints and realizing the immense historical weight of his impulse purchase, Chubb donated the entire monument to the British government.

He attached one strict condition: the public must always have access to it. Today, it stands protected forever, all because a husband couldn't stick to a shopping list. #globalmuseum

@globalmuseum

The public must always have access? How's that going?

I've only been once. Couldn't get near.

@OneInterestingFact @globalmuseum

He didn't say the public must have access for free.

@geoffl @globalmuseum

It is a very long time since I was there but at the time the stones were fenced off and if you wanted in you had either to work for the government agency that looked after them or become a druid.
Is that what public access means?

@OneInterestingFact @globalmuseum

There didn't used to be any fence. I walked amongst the stones. But the stones were getting vandalised. people scratching their names into them, chipping bits off, painting crap on them, etc. I'm sure that wasn't what was meant by publicly accessible either but people are arseholes.

@OneInterestingFact @globalmuseum Depending on what was going on there were various levels of access at different times and during different festivals throughout the year.

@OneInterestingFact @globalmuseum

The number of visitors got so great that it eventually outweighed what was sustainable.

"In 1963, in an effort to minimise erosion, the inside of the circle was gravelled. By 1978 there were so many visitors that access to the stones had to be restricted."