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JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE
Visit Jane Austen's House - the Hampshire cottage at which Jane Austen lived and penned her novels, including the timeless Pride andPrejudice.
JANE AUSTEN’S HOUSE FROM HOME Jane Austen’s House From Home Visit Jane Austen's House from the comfort of your own home - wherever you are! Stroll through the House on our virtual tour, explore the gardens with the Museum cat, or take in an online exhibition.VISITOR INFO
Visitor Info. The team at Jane Austen's House are delighted to be able to welcome you to explore this special place. It was in this pretty Hampshire cottage that Jane Austen revised, wrote and had published all six of her treasured novels. Today you can step back in time to 1816 and follow in Jane's footsteps, see the rooms where she composed CHAWTON | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE Chawton. Jane Austen's House is located in the quintessentially English village of Chawton in Hampshire. There is much to discover throughout the village including beautiful parkland with a play area, Chawton House (the house that belonged to Jane Austen’s brother), St Nicholas Church where the graves of Jane Austen’s mother and sisterare
A TIMELINE OF JANE AUSTEN’S LIFE AND WORKS 1783 – 1786. Jane goes to school in Oxford, Southampton and Reading with her sister Cassandra; in 1783 she falls ill with typhus fever and nearly dies. 1787 – 1794. Jane writes her teenage writings, including Love and Friendship (1790), Lesley Castle (1792) and LadySusan (1794). 1795.
CHAWTON COTTAGE JULY 1809/JULY 2020 Chawton Cottage July 1809/July 2020. July 1809 was a time of bustle and excitement as Jane and her family of women (mother, sister Cassandra, and dear friend Martha Lloyd) moved into Chawton Cottage. For Mrs Austen, now almost 70, and Jane, 33, it would be their last settled home after years of removals and financial worries. THE MYSTERIES OF UDOLPHO The heroine of Udolpho, Emily St Aubert, is a strange mix of soppy swooning incompetence and a quietly impressive proto-feminism, standing up with fervour to her repellent aunt, the brigand Montoni and his wretched castle, and the banditti of the Apennines and Pyrenees. However, the naivety of young Emily makes her an obvioustarget for Jane
WINSTON CHURCHILL MEMOIR EXTRACT Winston Churchill memoir extract. This signed extract from Winston Churchill’s Second World War memoirs describes how Jane Austen’s novel, Pride and Prejudice, comforted him during a period of sickness in the middle of World War II. In 1943 Churchill was critically ill with pneumonia. Bed ridden, and with his doctors preventing him from ROOM 5: HOW TO WRITE AND FOLD A LETTER Letters consisted of a single sheet of paper, folded in half to make four pages. Jane Austen wrote with a goose-quill pen, using iron gall ink, either homemade or, more likely, bought from a stationer’s shop. The letter was written across the first three pages and the top and bottom thirds of the fourth page, leaving its middle third blank. ALAN TITCHMARSH PLANTS CHAWTON COTTAGE ROSE The Chawton Cottage rose follows the Jane Austen rose, unveiled in 2017 to mark the bicentenary of Austen’s death and the Pride and Prejudice rose, unveiled in 2013 to mark the 200th anniversary of the novel’s publication. Mr Titchmarsh has visited each year to plant the roses in the House’s garden. Alan Titchmarsh said: “JaneAusten
JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE
Visit Jane Austen's House - the Hampshire cottage at which Jane Austen lived and penned her novels, including the timeless Pride andPrejudice.
JANE AUSTEN’S HOUSE FROM HOME Jane Austen’s House From Home Visit Jane Austen's House from the comfort of your own home - wherever you are! Stroll through the House on our virtual tour, explore the gardens with the Museum cat, or take in an online exhibition.VISITOR INFO
Visitor Info. The team at Jane Austen's House are delighted to be able to welcome you to explore this special place. It was in this pretty Hampshire cottage that Jane Austen revised, wrote and had published all six of her treasured novels. Today you can step back in time to 1816 and follow in Jane's footsteps, see the rooms where she composed CHAWTON | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE Chawton. Jane Austen's House is located in the quintessentially English village of Chawton in Hampshire. There is much to discover throughout the village including beautiful parkland with a play area, Chawton House (the house that belonged to Jane Austen’s brother), St Nicholas Church where the graves of Jane Austen’s mother and sisterare
A TIMELINE OF JANE AUSTEN’S LIFE AND WORKS 1783 – 1786. Jane goes to school in Oxford, Southampton and Reading with her sister Cassandra; in 1783 she falls ill with typhus fever and nearly dies. 1787 – 1794. Jane writes her teenage writings, including Love and Friendship (1790), Lesley Castle (1792) and LadySusan (1794). 1795.
CHAWTON COTTAGE JULY 1809/JULY 2020 Chawton Cottage July 1809/July 2020. July 1809 was a time of bustle and excitement as Jane and her family of women (mother, sister Cassandra, and dear friend Martha Lloyd) moved into Chawton Cottage. For Mrs Austen, now almost 70, and Jane, 33, it would be their last settled home after years of removals and financial worries. THE MYSTERIES OF UDOLPHO The heroine of Udolpho, Emily St Aubert, is a strange mix of soppy swooning incompetence and a quietly impressive proto-feminism, standing up with fervour to her repellent aunt, the brigand Montoni and his wretched castle, and the banditti of the Apennines and Pyrenees. However, the naivety of young Emily makes her an obvioustarget for Jane
WINSTON CHURCHILL MEMOIR EXTRACT Winston Churchill memoir extract. This signed extract from Winston Churchill’s Second World War memoirs describes how Jane Austen’s novel, Pride and Prejudice, comforted him during a period of sickness in the middle of World War II. In 1943 Churchill was critically ill with pneumonia. Bed ridden, and with his doctors preventing him from ROOM 5: HOW TO WRITE AND FOLD A LETTER Letters consisted of a single sheet of paper, folded in half to make four pages. Jane Austen wrote with a goose-quill pen, using iron gall ink, either homemade or, more likely, bought from a stationer’s shop. The letter was written across the first three pages and the top and bottom thirds of the fourth page, leaving its middle third blank. ALAN TITCHMARSH PLANTS CHAWTON COTTAGE ROSE The Chawton Cottage rose follows the Jane Austen rose, unveiled in 2017 to mark the bicentenary of Austen’s death and the Pride and Prejudice rose, unveiled in 2013 to mark the 200th anniversary of the novel’s publication. Mr Titchmarsh has visited each year to plant the roses in the House’s garden. Alan Titchmarsh said: “JaneAusten
HOUSE | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE The house – a 17th century building – was offered to the women rent-free for life. In May 1817, after a period of ill health, Jane Austen left the village to seek medical treatment in Winchester. She died two months later on 18 July 1817. Jane’s mother and sister continued to live at the house A TIMELINE OF JANE AUSTEN’S LIFE AND WORKS 1783 – 1786. Jane goes to school in Oxford, Southampton and Reading with her sister Cassandra; in 1783 she falls ill with typhus fever and nearly dies. 1787 – 1794. Jane writes her teenage writings, including Love and Friendship (1790), Lesley Castle (1792) and LadySusan (1794). 1795.
LEARNING RESOURCES
Learning Resources These learning resources have been developed with funding from the National Lottery Heritage Fund. They are designed for use by teachers and home-schooling parents to help you teach Austen effectively, using objects from the collection to A STATEMENT FROM JANE AUSTEN’S HOUSE A statement from Jane Austen’s House. The plans for refreshing the displays and decoration of Jane Austen’s House have been misrepresented. Jane Austen lived during the era of slavery and the Abolition by Britain of the Transatlantic Slave Trade in 1807. We are increasingly asked questions about this by our visitors and it istherefore
ANNOUNCING OUR NEW DIRECTOR Announcing our new director. Jane Austen’s House is delighted to announce the appointment of Lizzie Dunford as its new director. Lizzie started her new position on 14 April 2020 and brings more than a decade of experience working in museums and historic houses to the role. Prior to joining Jane Austen’s House, she was the operationsmanager
JOBS | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE Visitor Services Assistant Vacancies. We are recruiting for two Visitor Services Assistants to join our small, enthusiastic and lively team to play a key role in welcoming visitors to this special place. Visitor Services Assistants are the first and last people our visitors meet here at Jane Austen’s House. As a VSA you would play a vital A BRIEF HISTORY OF SANDITON The opening chapters of Sanditon, written in the first few months of 1817, are a precious, tantalising and frustrating fragment.They represent what could have come next, had Jane Austen survived her fatal illness. They are the beginning of a new story, a departure from the rural village settings of the earlier novels, stepping (or even diving) into new waters – an aspiring seaside resortFIRST EDITION: EMMA
First edition, Emma, 1816, in three volumes. Written by Jane Austen and published in 1816 by John Murray. Vol.1 Inscribed “George Augustus Frederic Dawkins July 1820”. Volumes II and III inscribed “F.W. Austen” – possibly Jane Austen’s brother Frank Austen.One of the twelve recipients of the novelist’s presentationcopies.
MARTHA LLOYD’S HOUSEHOLD BOOK Martha Lloyd’s Household Book. Text by Dr Lucy Worsley, Chief Curator at Historic Royal Palaces, author of Jane Austen at Home. The Austen women’s lifelong interest in recipes, groceries and the management of servants stamp them as coming from society’s middling ranks, not the comfortably rich. “Habits of domestic management”,intones
ILLUSTRATIONS FOR PRIDE AND PREJUDICE BY HUGH THOMSON Illustrations for Pride and Prejudice by Hugh Thomson. Text by Isabel Snowden, former Collections Officer at Jane Austen's House. Before television, film and even theatre productions, Jane Austen’s novels to life by illustrators. This ‘Peacock’ edition of Pride and Prejudice, published in 1894 by George Allen, was the first fullyJANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE
Visit Jane Austen's House - the Hampshire cottage at which Jane Austen lived and penned her novels, including the timeless Pride andPrejudice.
JANE AUSTEN’S HOUSE FROM HOME Jane Austen’s House From Home Visit Jane Austen's House from the comfort of your own home - wherever you are! Stroll through the House on our virtual tour, explore the gardens with the Museum cat, or take in an online exhibition.VISITOR INFO
Visitor Info. The team at Jane Austen's House are delighted to be able to welcome you to explore this special place. It was in this pretty Hampshire cottage that Jane Austen revised, wrote and had published all six of her treasured novels. Today you can step back in time to 1816 and follow in Jane's footsteps, see the rooms where she composed CHAWTON | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE Chawton. Jane Austen's House is located in the quintessentially English village of Chawton in Hampshire. There is much to discover throughout the village including beautiful parkland with a play area, Chawton House (the house that belonged to Jane Austen’s brother), St Nicholas Church where the graves of Jane Austen’s mother and sisterare
A TIMELINE OF JANE AUSTEN’S LIFE AND WORKS 1783 – 1786. Jane goes to school in Oxford, Southampton and Reading with her sister Cassandra; in 1783 she falls ill with typhus fever and nearly dies. 1787 – 1794. Jane writes her teenage writings, including Love and Friendship (1790), Lesley Castle (1792) and LadySusan (1794). 1795.
CHAWTON COTTAGE JULY 1809/JULY 2020 Chawton Cottage July 1809/July 2020. July 1809 was a time of bustle and excitement as Jane and her family of women (mother, sister Cassandra, and dear friend Martha Lloyd) moved into Chawton Cottage. For Mrs Austen, now almost 70, and Jane, 33, it would be their last settled home after years of removals and financial worries. THE MYSTERIES OF UDOLPHO The heroine of Udolpho, Emily St Aubert, is a strange mix of soppy swooning incompetence and a quietly impressive proto-feminism, standing up with fervour to her repellent aunt, the brigand Montoni and his wretched castle, and the banditti of the Apennines and Pyrenees. However, the naivety of young Emily makes her an obvioustarget for Jane
WINSTON CHURCHILL MEMOIR EXTRACT Winston Churchill memoir extract. This signed extract from Winston Churchill’s Second World War memoirs describes how Jane Austen’s novel, Pride and Prejudice, comforted him during a period of sickness in the middle of World War II. In 1943 Churchill was critically ill with pneumonia. Bed ridden, and with his doctors preventing him from ROOM 5: HOW TO WRITE AND FOLD A LETTER Letters consisted of a single sheet of paper, folded in half to make four pages. Jane Austen wrote with a goose-quill pen, using iron gall ink, either homemade or, more likely, bought from a stationer’s shop. The letter was written across the first three pages and the top and bottom thirds of the fourth page, leaving its middle third blank. ALAN TITCHMARSH PLANTS CHAWTON COTTAGE ROSE The Chawton Cottage rose follows the Jane Austen rose, unveiled in 2017 to mark the bicentenary of Austen’s death and the Pride and Prejudice rose, unveiled in 2013 to mark the 200th anniversary of the novel’s publication. Mr Titchmarsh has visited each year to plant the roses in the House’s garden. Alan Titchmarsh said: “JaneAusten
JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE
Visit Jane Austen's House - the Hampshire cottage at which Jane Austen lived and penned her novels, including the timeless Pride andPrejudice.
JANE AUSTEN’S HOUSE FROM HOME Jane Austen’s House From Home Visit Jane Austen's House from the comfort of your own home - wherever you are! Stroll through the House on our virtual tour, explore the gardens with the Museum cat, or take in an online exhibition.VISITOR INFO
Visitor Info. The team at Jane Austen's House are delighted to be able to welcome you to explore this special place. It was in this pretty Hampshire cottage that Jane Austen revised, wrote and had published all six of her treasured novels. Today you can step back in time to 1816 and follow in Jane's footsteps, see the rooms where she composed CHAWTON | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE Chawton. Jane Austen's House is located in the quintessentially English village of Chawton in Hampshire. There is much to discover throughout the village including beautiful parkland with a play area, Chawton House (the house that belonged to Jane Austen’s brother), St Nicholas Church where the graves of Jane Austen’s mother and sisterare
A TIMELINE OF JANE AUSTEN’S LIFE AND WORKS 1783 – 1786. Jane goes to school in Oxford, Southampton and Reading with her sister Cassandra; in 1783 she falls ill with typhus fever and nearly dies. 1787 – 1794. Jane writes her teenage writings, including Love and Friendship (1790), Lesley Castle (1792) and LadySusan (1794). 1795.
CHAWTON COTTAGE JULY 1809/JULY 2020 Chawton Cottage July 1809/July 2020. July 1809 was a time of bustle and excitement as Jane and her family of women (mother, sister Cassandra, and dear friend Martha Lloyd) moved into Chawton Cottage. For Mrs Austen, now almost 70, and Jane, 33, it would be their last settled home after years of removals and financial worries. THE MYSTERIES OF UDOLPHO The heroine of Udolpho, Emily St Aubert, is a strange mix of soppy swooning incompetence and a quietly impressive proto-feminism, standing up with fervour to her repellent aunt, the brigand Montoni and his wretched castle, and the banditti of the Apennines and Pyrenees. However, the naivety of young Emily makes her an obvioustarget for Jane
WINSTON CHURCHILL MEMOIR EXTRACT Winston Churchill memoir extract. This signed extract from Winston Churchill’s Second World War memoirs describes how Jane Austen’s novel, Pride and Prejudice, comforted him during a period of sickness in the middle of World War II. In 1943 Churchill was critically ill with pneumonia. Bed ridden, and with his doctors preventing him from ROOM 5: HOW TO WRITE AND FOLD A LETTER Letters consisted of a single sheet of paper, folded in half to make four pages. Jane Austen wrote with a goose-quill pen, using iron gall ink, either homemade or, more likely, bought from a stationer’s shop. The letter was written across the first three pages and the top and bottom thirds of the fourth page, leaving its middle third blank. ALAN TITCHMARSH PLANTS CHAWTON COTTAGE ROSE The Chawton Cottage rose follows the Jane Austen rose, unveiled in 2017 to mark the bicentenary of Austen’s death and the Pride and Prejudice rose, unveiled in 2013 to mark the 200th anniversary of the novel’s publication. Mr Titchmarsh has visited each year to plant the roses in the House’s garden. Alan Titchmarsh said: “JaneAusten
HOUSE | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE The house – a 17th century building – was offered to the women rent-free for life. In May 1817, after a period of ill health, Jane Austen left the village to seek medical treatment in Winchester. She died two months later on 18 July 1817. Jane’s mother and sister continued to live at the house A TIMELINE OF JANE AUSTEN’S LIFE AND WORKS 1783 – 1786. Jane goes to school in Oxford, Southampton and Reading with her sister Cassandra; in 1783 she falls ill with typhus fever and nearly dies. 1787 – 1794. Jane writes her teenage writings, including Love and Friendship (1790), Lesley Castle (1792) and LadySusan (1794). 1795.
LEARNING RESOURCES
Learning Resources These learning resources have been developed with funding from the National Lottery Heritage Fund. They are designed for use by teachers and home-schooling parents to help you teach Austen effectively, using objects from the collection to A STATEMENT FROM JANE AUSTEN’S HOUSE A statement from Jane Austen’s House. The plans for refreshing the displays and decoration of Jane Austen’s House have been misrepresented. Jane Austen lived during the era of slavery and the Abolition by Britain of the Transatlantic Slave Trade in 1807. We are increasingly asked questions about this by our visitors and it istherefore
ANNOUNCING OUR NEW DIRECTOR Announcing our new director. Jane Austen’s House is delighted to announce the appointment of Lizzie Dunford as its new director. Lizzie started her new position on 14 April 2020 and brings more than a decade of experience working in museums and historic houses to the role. Prior to joining Jane Austen’s House, she was the operationsmanager
JOBS | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE Visitor Services Assistant Vacancies. We are recruiting for two Visitor Services Assistants to join our small, enthusiastic and lively team to play a key role in welcoming visitors to this special place. Visitor Services Assistants are the first and last people our visitors meet here at Jane Austen’s House. As a VSA you would play a vital A BRIEF HISTORY OF SANDITON The opening chapters of Sanditon, written in the first few months of 1817, are a precious, tantalising and frustrating fragment.They represent what could have come next, had Jane Austen survived her fatal illness. They are the beginning of a new story, a departure from the rural village settings of the earlier novels, stepping (or even diving) into new waters – an aspiring seaside resortFIRST EDITION: EMMA
First edition, Emma, 1816, in three volumes. Written by Jane Austen and published in 1816 by John Murray. Vol.1 Inscribed “George Augustus Frederic Dawkins July 1820”. Volumes II and III inscribed “F.W. Austen” – possibly Jane Austen’s brother Frank Austen.One of the twelve recipients of the novelist’s presentationcopies.
MARTHA LLOYD’S HOUSEHOLD BOOK Martha Lloyd’s Household Book. Text by Dr Lucy Worsley, Chief Curator at Historic Royal Palaces, author of Jane Austen at Home. The Austen women’s lifelong interest in recipes, groceries and the management of servants stamp them as coming from society’s middling ranks, not the comfortably rich. “Habits of domestic management”,intones
ILLUSTRATIONS FOR PRIDE AND PREJUDICE BY HUGH THOMSON Illustrations for Pride and Prejudice by Hugh Thomson. Text by Isabel Snowden, former Collections Officer at Jane Austen's House. Before television, film and even theatre productions, Jane Austen’s novels to life by illustrators. This ‘Peacock’ edition of Pride and Prejudice, published in 1894 by George Allen, was the first fullyJANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE
Visit Jane Austen's House - the Hampshire cottage at which Jane Austen lived and penned her novels, including the timeless Pride andPrejudice.
JANE AUSTEN’S HOUSE FROM HOME Jane Austen’s House From Home Visit Jane Austen's House from the comfort of your own home - wherever you are! Stroll through the House on our virtual tour, explore the gardens with the Museum cat, or take in an online exhibition.VISITOR INFO
Visitor Info. The team at Jane Austen's House are delighted to be able to welcome you to explore this special place. It was in this pretty Hampshire cottage that Jane Austen revised, wrote and had published all six of her treasured novels. Today you can step back in time to 1816 and follow in Jane's footsteps, see the rooms where she composed HOUSE | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE The house – a 17th century building – was offered to the women rent-free for life. In May 1817, after a period of ill health, Jane Austen left the village to seek medical treatment in Winchester. She died two months later on 18 July 1817. Jane’s mother and sistercontinued to
CHAWTON | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE Chawton. Jane Austen's House is located in the quintessentially English village of Chawton in Hampshire. There is much to discover throughout the village including beautiful parkland with a play area, Chawton House (the house that belonged to Jane Austen’s brother), St Nicholas Church where the graves of Jane Austen’s mother and sisterare
A STATEMENT FROM JANE AUSTEN’S HOUSE A statement from Jane Austen’s House. The plans for refreshing the displays and decoration of Jane Austen’s House have been misrepresented. Jane Austen lived during the era of slavery and the Abolition by Britain of the Transatlantic Slave Trade in 1807. We are increasingly asked questions about this by our visitors and it istherefore
GIFT SHOP | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE Gift Shop. Jane Austen’s House stocks a unique selection of Jane Austen gifts, including books, jewellery, stationery and homeware. The shop is open to everyone, not just ticket holders, so do pop in for a browse. There may be a short wait to enter the shop in order to maintain social distancing.A selection of our favourite products arenow
CHAWTON COTTAGE JULY 1809/JULY 2020 Chawton Cottage July 1809/July 2020. July 1809 was a time of bustle and excitement as Jane and her family of women (mother, sister Cassandra, and dear friend Martha Lloyd) moved into Chawton Cottage. For Mrs Austen, now almost 70, and Jane, 33, it would be their last settled home after years of removals and financial worries. THE MYSTERIES OF UDOLPHO The heroine of Udolpho, Emily St Aubert, is a strange mix of soppy swooning incompetence and a quietly impressive proto-feminism, standing up with fervour to her repellent aunt, the brigand Montoni and his wretched castle, and the banditti of the Apennines and Pyrenees. However, the naivety of young Emily makes her an obvioustarget for Jane
WINSTON CHURCHILL MEMOIR EXTRACT Winston Churchill memoir extract. This signed extract from Winston Churchill’s Second World War memoirs describes how Jane Austen’s novel, Pride and Prejudice, comforted him during a period of sickness in the middle of World War II. In 1943 Churchill was critically ill with pneumonia. Bed ridden, and with his doctors preventing him fromJANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE
Visit Jane Austen's House - the Hampshire cottage at which Jane Austen lived and penned her novels, including the timeless Pride andPrejudice.
JANE AUSTEN’S HOUSE FROM HOME Jane Austen’s House From Home Visit Jane Austen's House from the comfort of your own home - wherever you are! Stroll through the House on our virtual tour, explore the gardens with the Museum cat, or take in an online exhibition.VISITOR INFO
Visitor Info. The team at Jane Austen's House are delighted to be able to welcome you to explore this special place. It was in this pretty Hampshire cottage that Jane Austen revised, wrote and had published all six of her treasured novels. Today you can step back in time to 1816 and follow in Jane's footsteps, see the rooms where she composed HOUSE | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE The house – a 17th century building – was offered to the women rent-free for life. In May 1817, after a period of ill health, Jane Austen left the village to seek medical treatment in Winchester. She died two months later on 18 July 1817. Jane’s mother and sistercontinued to
CHAWTON | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE Chawton. Jane Austen's House is located in the quintessentially English village of Chawton in Hampshire. There is much to discover throughout the village including beautiful parkland with a play area, Chawton House (the house that belonged to Jane Austen’s brother), St Nicholas Church where the graves of Jane Austen’s mother and sisterare
A STATEMENT FROM JANE AUSTEN’S HOUSE A statement from Jane Austen’s House. The plans for refreshing the displays and decoration of Jane Austen’s House have been misrepresented. Jane Austen lived during the era of slavery and the Abolition by Britain of the Transatlantic Slave Trade in 1807. We are increasingly asked questions about this by our visitors and it istherefore
GIFT SHOP | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE Gift Shop. Jane Austen’s House stocks a unique selection of Jane Austen gifts, including books, jewellery, stationery and homeware. The shop is open to everyone, not just ticket holders, so do pop in for a browse. There may be a short wait to enter the shop in order to maintain social distancing.A selection of our favourite products arenow
CHAWTON COTTAGE JULY 1809/JULY 2020 Chawton Cottage July 1809/July 2020. July 1809 was a time of bustle and excitement as Jane and her family of women (mother, sister Cassandra, and dear friend Martha Lloyd) moved into Chawton Cottage. For Mrs Austen, now almost 70, and Jane, 33, it would be their last settled home after years of removals and financial worries. THE MYSTERIES OF UDOLPHO The heroine of Udolpho, Emily St Aubert, is a strange mix of soppy swooning incompetence and a quietly impressive proto-feminism, standing up with fervour to her repellent aunt, the brigand Montoni and his wretched castle, and the banditti of the Apennines and Pyrenees. However, the naivety of young Emily makes her an obvioustarget for Jane
WINSTON CHURCHILL MEMOIR EXTRACT Winston Churchill memoir extract. This signed extract from Winston Churchill’s Second World War memoirs describes how Jane Austen’s novel, Pride and Prejudice, comforted him during a period of sickness in the middle of World War II. In 1943 Churchill was critically ill with pneumonia. Bed ridden, and with his doctors preventing him from A TIMELINE OF JANE AUSTEN’S LIFE AND WORKS 1783 – 1786. Jane goes to school in Oxford, Southampton and Reading with her sister Cassandra; in 1783 she falls ill with typhus fever and nearly dies. 1787 – 1794. Jane writes her teenage writings, including Love and Friendship (1790), Lesley Castle (1792) and LadySusan (1794). 1795.
GARDEN | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE The oak tree, surrounded by seating, is a descendant of a tree believed to have been planted by Jane Austen. The Bricked Border holds dye plants which were used to obtain dyes from roots, leaves or flowers. The plants on and under the Front Wall of the house are a mix of climbing shrubs, seasonal bulbs and summer annuals framing thehouse doors.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF SANDITON The opening chapters of Sanditon, written in the first few months of 1817, are a precious, tantalising and frustrating fragment.They represent what could have come next, had Jane Austen survived her fatal illness. They are the beginning of a new story, a departure from the rural village settings of the earlier novels, stepping (or even diving) into new waters – an aspiring seaside resort GIFT SHOP | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE Gift Shop. Jane Austen’s House stocks a unique selection of Jane Austen gifts, including books, jewellery, stationery and homeware. The shop is open to everyone, not just ticket holders, so do pop in for a browse. There may be a short wait to enter the shop in order to maintain social distancing.A selection of our favourite products arenow
JOBS | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE Visitor Services Assistant Vacancies. We are recruiting for two Visitor Services Assistants to join our small, enthusiastic and lively team to play a key role in welcoming visitors to this special place. Visitor Services Assistants are the first and last people our visitors meet here at Jane Austen’s House. As a VSA you would play a vital ANNOUNCING OUR NEW DIRECTOR Announcing our new director. Jane Austen’s House is delighted to announce the appointment of Lizzie Dunford as its new director. Lizzie started her new position on 14 April 2020 and brings more than a decade of experience working in museums and historic houses to the role. Prior to joining Jane Austen’s House, she was the operationsmanager
FIRST EDITION: EMMA
First edition, Emma, 1816, in three volumes. Written by Jane Austen and published in 1816 by John Murray. Vol.1 Inscribed “George Augustus Frederic Dawkins July 1820”. Volumes II and III inscribed “F.W. Austen” – possibly Jane Austen’s brother Frank Austen.One of the twelve recipients of the novelist’s presentationcopies.
MARTHA LLOYD’S HOUSEHOLD BOOK Martha Lloyd’s Household Book. Text by Dr Lucy Worsley, Chief Curator at Historic Royal Palaces, author of Jane Austen at Home. The Austen women’s lifelong interest in recipes, groceries and the management of servants stamp them as coming from society’s middling ranks, not the comfortably rich. “Habits of domestic management”,intones
ROOM 5: HOW TO WRITE AND FOLD A LETTER Letters consisted of a single sheet of paper, folded in half to make four pages. Jane Austen wrote with a goose-quill pen, using iron gall ink, either homemade or, more likely, bought from a stationer’s shop. The letter was written across the first three pages and the top and bottom thirds of the fourth page, leaving its middle third blank. JANE AUSTEN’S RING Jane Austen’s ring. Text by Imogen Poole, Former Retail Supervisor at Jane Austen's House. The ring has a vibrant blue stone with no obvious blemishes or veins in it, and is set in a small gold band. It is not known whether the stone is definitely turquoise, and it has been suggested that it could be Odontalite, a substitute forturquoise.
JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE
Visit Jane Austen's House - the Hampshire cottage at which Jane Austen lived and penned her novels, including the timeless Pride andPrejudice.
VISITOR INFO
Opening Times. All tickets must be pre-booked.. We are open Wednesday – Sunday and Bank Holiday Mondays, from 10am – 4.30pm. You are required to wear a face covering (we have disposable face masks available if you forget yours) and we have put in place a range of measures to help you feel safe and comfortable during your visit.. Please note: All tickets must be pre-booked, including annual JANE AUSTEN’S HOUSE FROM HOME Jane Austen’s House From Home Visit Jane Austen's House from the comfort of your own home - wherever you are! Stroll through the House on our virtual tour, explore the gardens with the Museum cat, or take in an online exhibition. HOUSE | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE It was here that Jane’s genius flourished and where she wrote, revised and had published all her novels: Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, Emma, Northanger Abbey and Persuasion. Jane lived at what is now Jane Austen’s House for the last eightyears of her life.
CHAWTON | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSECHAWTON COTTAGE JANE AUSTENCHAWTON HOUSEENGLAND
Visitors are welcome to bring a picnic to enjoy at one of the picnic tables in the village parkland. For refreshments in the village there are three options; Cassandra’s Cup, The Greyfriar Pub (both opposite Jane Austen’s House) and The Old Kitchen Tearoom at Chawton House, a short walk away.Please check their websites for opening times and more information on their current services. A STATEMENT FROM JANE AUSTEN’S HOUSE The plans for refreshing the displays and decoration of Jane Austen’s House have been misrepresented. Jane Austen lived during the era of slavery and the Abolition by CHAWTON COTTAGE JULY 1809/JULY 2020 Chawton Cottage July 1809/July 2020 July 1809 was a time of bustle and excitement as Jane and her family of women (mother, sister Cassandra, and dear friend Martha Lloyd) moved into Chawton Cottage. THE MYSTERIES OF UDOLPHO The 2007 film Becoming Jane, in which American actor Anne Hathaway’s love affair as Jane Austen with Scottish actor James McAvoy as Irish lawyer Tom Lefroy, includes an improbable encounter in which the emerging novelist Jane Austen meets the bestselling novelist Ann Radcliffe.. Mrs Radcliffe, with her fourth novel The Mysteries of Udolpho of 1794, had become a literary sensation with her ROOM 5: HOW TO WRITE AND FOLD A LETTER Envelopes were not used in this period. Letters consisted of a single sheet of paper, folded in half to make four pages. Jane Austen wrote with a goose-quill pen, using iron gall ink, either homemade or, more likely, bought from a stationer’s shop. WINSTON CHURCHILL MEMOIR EXTRACT This signed extract from Winston Churchill’s Second World War memoirs describes how Jane Austen’s novel, Pride and Prejudice, comforted him during a period of sickness in the middle of World War II.In 1943 Churchill was critically ill with pneumonia.JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE
Visit Jane Austen's House - the Hampshire cottage at which Jane Austen lived and penned her novels, including the timeless Pride andPrejudice.
VISITOR INFO
Opening Times. All tickets must be pre-booked.. We are open Wednesday – Sunday and Bank Holiday Mondays, from 10am – 4.30pm. You are required to wear a face covering (we have disposable face masks available if you forget yours) and we have put in place a range of measures to help you feel safe and comfortable during your visit.. Please note: All tickets must be pre-booked, including annual JANE AUSTEN’S HOUSE FROM HOME Jane Austen’s House From Home Visit Jane Austen's House from the comfort of your own home - wherever you are! Stroll through the House on our virtual tour, explore the gardens with the Museum cat, or take in an online exhibition. HOUSE | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE It was here that Jane’s genius flourished and where she wrote, revised and had published all her novels: Sense and Sensibility, Pride and Prejudice, Mansfield Park, Emma, Northanger Abbey and Persuasion. Jane lived at what is now Jane Austen’s House for the last eightyears of her life.
CHAWTON | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSECHAWTON COTTAGE JANE AUSTENCHAWTON HOUSEENGLAND
Visitors are welcome to bring a picnic to enjoy at one of the picnic tables in the village parkland. For refreshments in the village there are three options; Cassandra’s Cup, The Greyfriar Pub (both opposite Jane Austen’s House) and The Old Kitchen Tearoom at Chawton House, a short walk away.Please check their websites for opening times and more information on their current services. A STATEMENT FROM JANE AUSTEN’S HOUSE The plans for refreshing the displays and decoration of Jane Austen’s House have been misrepresented. Jane Austen lived during the era of slavery and the Abolition by CHAWTON COTTAGE JULY 1809/JULY 2020 Chawton Cottage July 1809/July 2020 July 1809 was a time of bustle and excitement as Jane and her family of women (mother, sister Cassandra, and dear friend Martha Lloyd) moved into Chawton Cottage. THE MYSTERIES OF UDOLPHO The 2007 film Becoming Jane, in which American actor Anne Hathaway’s love affair as Jane Austen with Scottish actor James McAvoy as Irish lawyer Tom Lefroy, includes an improbable encounter in which the emerging novelist Jane Austen meets the bestselling novelist Ann Radcliffe.. Mrs Radcliffe, with her fourth novel The Mysteries of Udolpho of 1794, had become a literary sensation with her ROOM 5: HOW TO WRITE AND FOLD A LETTER Envelopes were not used in this period. Letters consisted of a single sheet of paper, folded in half to make four pages. Jane Austen wrote with a goose-quill pen, using iron gall ink, either homemade or, more likely, bought from a stationer’s shop. WINSTON CHURCHILL MEMOIR EXTRACT This signed extract from Winston Churchill’s Second World War memoirs describes how Jane Austen’s novel, Pride and Prejudice, comforted him during a period of sickness in the middle of World War II.In 1943 Churchill was critically ill with pneumonia. NEWS | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE Visit Jane Austen's House - the Hampshire cottage at which Jane Austen lived and penned her novels, including the timeless Pride andPrejudice.
A STATEMENT FROM JANE AUSTEN’S HOUSE The plans for refreshing the displays and decoration of Jane Austen’s House have been misrepresented. Jane Austen lived during the era of slavery and the Abolition by A TIMELINE OF JANE AUSTEN’S LIFE AND WORKS 16 December 1775 Jane Austen is born at Steventon Rectory, in Hampshire. 1783 – 1786 Jane goes to school in Oxford, Southampton and Reading with her sister Cassandra; in 1783 she falls ill with typhus fever and nearly dies. JANE AUSTEN’S ARTFUL LETTERS Jane Austen’s Artful Letters A virtual exhibition exploring the importance of letters in Jane Austen's life and work. Through an array of objects from the collection at Jane Austen's House, we reveal how much an artfully written letter can tell us about her life and herfiction.
GARDEN | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE Garden Although no record of its layout exists, it is probable that this garden was of simple country cottage style with little formal design. The original garden was bigger with an orchard, and also a large vegetable patch which Jane’s mother tended. JOBS | JANE AUSTEN'S HOUSE Jane Austen’s House Museum is recruiting for new members to join our Board of Trustees. We are seeking individuals with the experience, credibility and dedication to ANNOUNCING OUR NEW DIRECTOR This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website.FIRST EDITION: EMMA
First edition, Emma, 1816, in three volumes. Written by Jane Austen and published in 1816 by John Murray. Vol.1 Inscribed “George Augustus Frederic Dawkins July 1820”. Volumes II and III inscribed “F.W. Austen” – possibly Jane Austen’s brother Frank Austen.One of the twelve recipients of the novelist’s presentationcopies.
MARTHA LLOYD’S HOUSEHOLD BOOK The Austen women’s lifelong interest in recipes, groceries and the management of servants stamp them as coming from society’s middling ranks, not the comfortably rich. SAVE THE ROOF: SPONSOR A TILE Save the Roof: Sponsor a Tile Jane Austen’s House Museum is launching a fundraising appeal to restore its historic roof, giving the public the opportunity to help secure the House for the future.Jane Austen
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WELCOME TO THE MOST TREASURED AUSTEN SITE IN THE WORLD*
THE ENCHANTING HAMPSHIRE COTTAGE WHERE JANE AUSTEN LIVED AND WROTE HERNOVELS
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STEP BACK IN TIME TO 1816 AND FOLLOW IN JANE AUSTEN'S FOOTSTEPS we’re OPEN TODAY 10:00 - 16:30 BOOK TICKETSEVENTS
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CHAWTON VILLAGE WALK Wednesday 9 June2:00pm — 3:00pm
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VIRTUAL TOUR LIVE Saturday 19 June3:00pm — 4:00pm
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CHAWTON VILLAGE WALK Friday 16 July5:00pm — 6:00pm
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VIRTUAL TOUR LIVE Sunday 18 July7:00pm — 8:00pm
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CHAWTON VILLAGE WALK Saturday 24 July11:00am — 12:00pm
Jane Austen’s House From HomeNEWS
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PRIDE NOT PREJUDICE Thursday 3 June*
A BRIEF HISTORY OF SANDITON Thursday 3 June*
SAVE THE HONRESFELD LIBRARY Monday 31 MaySponsor a Roof Tile
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JANE AUSTEN ON HOLIDAY 19 May — 31 Dec 2021*
ONLINE: CREATIVES IN RESIDENCE 1 Jan — 31 Dec 2021*
ONLINE: JANE AUSTEN'S LETTERS 29 Sep — 31 Dec 2021The Collection
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