Lord Gibson, the former chairman of the National Trust who died earlier this year, has left £30,000 to the trust.
Most of his £3 million estate will go to relatives, but Lord Gibson, who lived in a large country home in Groombridge, East Sussex, has also left sums to various arts organisations.
He has left £5,000 each to the National Art Collections Fund, Chelsea Physic Garden and Trinity Hospice, and £1,000 to the Society of Dilettanti charitable trust.
Lord Gibson, died on April 20, aged 88, after a successful business career in the media, including a period as a director of Westminster Press, which once owned The Argus.
He was born in 1916 to parents who were accomplished singers and instilled in him a love of the arts.
Educated at Eton and Magdalen College, Oxford, Lord Gibson was chairman of the National Trust between 1977 and 1986 and a trustee of Glyndebourne Opera.
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