Jane Austen lived and wrote in Chawton, Hampshire
built c1690 and later renovated
London Perfect
By 1807 Edward moved the women into his 2-storey red brick home, providing happy and productive years of Jane’s life. Each day included looking after Jane’s mother, writing at a small table, eating together, games with the nieces and nephews, piano playing, sharing long walks, going to church and sharing sewing with sister Cassandra in the evening.
Dining parlour and fire. Jane's writing desk
Pinterest
Much of what is known about Jane's domestic routine comes from the niece Caroline Austen who in later life recorded the daily routine at Chawton. But little was written about the house’s architectural history. So now, 63 years after I read the book in Literature, it is time to examine her treasured and final house in the charming Chawton village.
The house was originally built in C14th as a small farmhouse, with later additions and renovations made over the years. The house was a thatched, timber dwelling built on the site for use as a farmhouse and then a coaching inn. In 1769 it was bought by the Knight family, distant Austen cousins, and became part of their Chawton estate. The Knights didn’t have any children themselves, so they formally adopted Jane’s brother Edward as their heir.
There were many minor alterations made by Edward Knight for his family eg the blocking of the window from the drawing room to the street, and adding a new Gothic window, looking onto the garden. The garden was extended for privacy, but retained a view towards Chawton Park and the woods surrounding the House where the ladies exercised.
The Drawing Room
The current structure resulted from renovations, blending elements of medieval & Georgian architecture. The exterior featured stone and brick with a steeply pitched roof and a prominent chimney. The interior showed the era’s artistry: ornate fireplaces, wooden panelling, intricate plasterwork.
Kitchen,
pan360
Mrs Austen and Cassandra lived at the House for life. The house returned to the Chawton Estate with Cassandra’s death in 1845, and divided into 3 dwellings for estate workers, then as an estate office and a working men’s club.
In 1940 a local founded the Jane Austen Society to try to save the House. The Society attracted a patron, Mr TE Carpenter; he personally bought the House and bequeathed it to the nation as a permanent memorial to his son who’d been killed in action in WW2. Carpenter created the Jane Austen Memorial Trust to run the House as a Museum, and it was formally opened by the Duke of Wellington in July 1949. Jane Austen Society also built up the collections and funded the building renovations. In particular major roof repairs in 2021-2, via Historic England and the Historic Houses Foundation, keep the building watertight.
Since then, more parts of the House have been restored, the interior being restored to the time when the Austens lived there. Today Jane Austen’s House is a Grade I listed site, a certified Museum and an important literary site. It holds a major collection of Jane Austen’s treasures eg her loved jewellery, first editions of her books, personal letters, textiles, paintings and portraits of her friends and family, and the tiny table at which she wrote her famous novels. There’s also a beautiful cottage garden.
It was here her six novels of manners, ground-breaking at the time, critiqued the landed gentry of Regency England. Sense and Sensibility, published in 1811, was her first full-length; Pride and Prejudice 1813, and two more novels published in her lifetime: Mansfield Park (1814) and Emma (1816). Northanger Abbey and Persuasion were published postdeath in July 1817. Most of the places Jane referenced in her novels were places she lived in, visited or was inspired by. Most of her letters were burned but from those that survived, she was not a boring writer. She had a sharp wit, and she wasn't afraid to use it, especially in private
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Hampshire and surrounding counties






26 comments:
Standard Guided Tour. Explore the house where Jane Austen spent the last eight years of her life. Themed House Tours. We offer a range of informative and engaging House Tours, to introduce students to Jane Austen's life and world outside the classroom.
Please pre-book admission tickets. Due to the small size of our rooms, we limit capacity to 12 visitors entering the House every 20 mins. Once you are on site you can stay as long as you like.
Chawton House is an Elizabethan manor house still in the Knight family, owned by Edward Austen Knight, Jane Austen’s brother. Edward was adopted by the Knight family and he inherited three estates: Steventon, Chawton and Godmersham Park. Edward’s stewardship of his land and properties certainly served as a model for her grand land-owning Heroes in her novels: Mr. Darcy, Mr. Knightley, and Col. Brandon.
I have never read any of Jane Austen's books, they're far too "stuffy" for my liking.
Helen, Look at this blog I found.
Jane Austen’s House Museum (by Amanda Chua) said "I had thought that the house in Bath was the only Jane Austen centre in the UK. Austen did spend some time in Bath after her father retired but Austen, her mother and her sister moved to this house in Chawton after her father died. If you’re wondering what the difference is between the two museums, Jane Austen’s House Museum seems to distinguish itself by stating that this is the place where Austin wrote all her books. Personally after visiting both, I much prefer Jane Austen’s House Museum, mainly because the interpretation of this place is more about Austen and her life in general. In this review I’ll take you through the museum and point out things that made me like this place.
Jane Austen's House
many thanks for suggesting we book in the future, _before_ turning up at the front door. I had no idea that you limit capacity to only 12 visitors entering every 20 mins.
Jane Austen in Vermont
You asked if the reader has any doubts about Edward Knight’s generosity. No but I do think he was very caring and sensible.
Firstly Jane's father left NONE of his estate to his wife or daughters, only to his son.
Secondly Edward became the adopted son of wealthy cousins and inherited three estates from himself, his wife Elizabeth and their many children.
Thirdly Jane was welcome to make herself comfortable in the libraries of Edward's three estates at any time.
River
you are not the only one to find Jane Austen's novels a bit dark and a bit cruel.
In my Year 10 English Literature choices, most of the girls chose Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen and most of the boys chose The Call of the Wild by Jack London.
Joe
I agree that I loved Jane Austen’s House Museum, mainly because the interpretation of this place was more about Austen and her life in general. But I must admit I have never been to the Jane Austen Centre in Bath, even though it is a permanent museum that would normally be calling my name.
Thank you Amanda: https://mainlymuseums.com/post/616/jane-austen-s-house-museum/
Boa noite minha querida amiga Helen. O Solar Notre Revê, passou por uma grande reforma. Nunca li nada sobre Jane Austen. Obrigado pela excelente aula de história, aproveito para desejar um bom final de semana e um grande abraço do seu amigo brasileiro.
Would be good if one could visit and see where Jane lived for 8 years, and wrote some of her books. I've seen a few of her movies, I believe there were about 26, Hels.
Luiz
I must ask you if in High School you studied literature, especially 19th century novels. Jane Austen was probably a key choice of novelists for students in the old British Empire, but were you ever given novels originally written in English, Spanish or French for example?
Margaret,
films were much easier to watch for high school & university students; books took more effort. The best film adaptations given by Watch and Discover:
Pride and Prejudice (1940)
Northanger Abbey (1987)
Persuasion (1995)
Clueless (1995) and
Pride and Prejudice (1995).
A beautifully written and well-researched piece. It really brings Chawton and Jane Austen’s world to life in a grounded, human way. The detail about her daily routine and the small domestic rhythms makes her feel much closer and more real than just a literary figure, and the preservation of the house adds a strong sense of continuity between past and present.
I found Jane Austen's house surprisingly small and bare the last time I visited. The table at which she wrote is tiny.
Melody
Jane Austen was engaged once briefly, but lived all her life without a husband or child. I know she would never have married just for a Good Look, so her daily routine was critical for a satisfying life: writing, family activities, music etc.
jabblog
very small yes but since they were living off Edward's belief in supporting the women, they would have been grateful for their good life. The furniture is not bare now and the garden is still full of pleasure.
See Jane Austen’s music: the world at home
https://www.bl.uk/stories/blogs/posts/jane-austens-music-the-world-at-home
Jane first began learning music aged 7-8. Austen kept learning, and her family later purchased a square piano by Christophe Ganer for her use.
By the mid-1790s, at the time she began the first versions of Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility, she was taking lessons from the Winchester organist George Chard.
Like many young women, she kept manuscript copybooks in which she entered favourite pieces obtained from friends and relatives. She also purchased printed sheet music, produced in abundance by London publishers and distributed through provincial networks of music teachers.
Austen participated in family amateur theatricals, and she was a keen theatregoer in London etc. Much of her musical repertoire was drawn from popular stage works, encouraging her to bring theatrical characters to life herself.
At Jane Austen’s House Museum, the quiet domestic rhythms that sustained Jane Austen reveal themselves as the very forge of her incisive wit and enduring novels.
roentare
quiet domestic rhythms, family activities and love, plus literary and music achievements, yes. I am not surprised her novels have endured since 1811 till now and into the future.
I will ask my oldest granddaughter, who loves late 19th century novels (eg French, Russian), whether she has read or will read Jane Austen.
Thank you Prof Jeanice Brooks, University of Southampton.
I didn't know anything about Jane's musical talents and commitment. Yet she spent hours every day practising. How did noone mention that she instilled her love into her books' heroines? I may have to write part II of the Jane Austen post.
Anon,
please delete your irrelevant and rude comment.
I'd love to visit Jane Austen's home. What a fascinating post.
Erika
the best thing about blogging is that you are introduced to books, historical figures and tourist sites you may never have thought of. Jane Austen's home is one of those very places that I loved.
Hello Hels, They did a great job of restoring Austen's house and locating original objects. Still, it hardly looks like Jane just left the room and will come back any minute. Imagine all of those great books written at that tiny desk. I have read all of them, and recently re-read Emma, which contained the Westons and that line about "Mr. Weston's good wine", which T.F. Powys in turn stole for the title of his weird allegory, which I also enjoyed immensely.
--Jim
Parnassus
the house looks terrific, but it was indeed very small. And as we know, women were left dependent on the support or otherwise of the men in the family. The women knew how fortunate they were to live in Chawton, and loved it. Even the desk, which wouldn't hold my A4 paper and a pen, made Jane feel professional.
Mr Weston had been a military officer :)
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