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Wednesday, August 28, 2024

“Ah! there is nothing like staying at home, for real comfort" - Exploring Jane Austen's Home at Steventon


Having got hold of the late Deirdre Le Faye's intriguing guidebook to Jane Austen's Steventon from Basingstoke Library's excellent Jane Austen collection, I thought I might have a walk around the village to get a good idea of what it looked like in Jane Austen's times. Le Faye did extensive research into the area, looking at parish records and such like to build a picture of village life from the medieval times to today. 

Steventon is situated about six miles south-west from Basingstoke and neighbours the parishes of Ashe, Deane and North Waltham. The parish of Steventon itself is a long, narrow stretch of land about 3 miles long and 2000 acres large. The village dates back to the Roman and Anglo-Saxon times, and Le Faye writes that the name of Steventon may have come from the Anglo-Saxon word, "Stif-in-tun" (the tun or homestead of Stif's people).

      The lane next to Jane Austen's childhood home. 

It was a lovely day for a walk, and Steventon was as peaceful as always and lush with its late summer greenery and golden yellow fields. It is easy to imagine Jane walking through narrow lanes  (muddy though as they would have been back in the day), but little has changed in this ancient, idyllic village. 

Jane lived in Steventon from her birth in 1775 to 1801 when she was forced to relocate to Bath with her family. Steventon Rectory was situated at the crossroads between Steventon Road and the road leading to St Nicholas Church where her father was rector. 

The field where Steventon Rectory - Jane Austen's childhood home - once stood. 

The rectory stood in this field, now barely visible to due all the overgrown summer vegetation and greenery. On the left there was a well, and a photo of its pump (now hidden by vegetation) can be seen in my earlier posts

The rectory had five rooms on the ground floor, seven bedrooms and three attics. In size and look it was very similar to Chawton Cottage where Jane moved later in life. 

At the back, the family grew vegetables and flowers and kept some dairy cattle and poultry. Anna Austen writes, "The walls of the inner garden were covered with cherry and other fruit trees...I remember this sunny cucumber garden - its frames, and also its abundance of pot-herbs, marigolds, etc." (p.50, Le Faye). Mr Austen also grew some crops, and his glebe-land farm was managed by his bailiff, John Bond, who served the family for a very long time. They also kept a cook ("Nanny" Littleworth), a washerwoman (Dame Bushell) a groom/coachman (Nanny's husband John Littleworth) and a housekeeper/ladies' maid (Anne Hilliard). 

When Mr Austen decided to retire to Bath in 1801, his eldest son, James, became his father's curate and later, following his father's death, Rector. James continued to live in Steventon Rectory and planted this large yew tree in front of the house in 1813, together with his son, as a token of their mutual love. 

James Austen's massive yew tree seen from the road.

Sadly James passed away in 1819, and the living conditions in the Rectory soon became squalid. There was a severe flood in the winter of 1820, which had made the downstairs of the Rectory so damp that it was almost unlivable: Caroline Austen remembers, "It was an unusually severe winter, and much snow fell. A thaw came on suddenly and one night we were roused by water pouring into the cellars... and on going down the men found all the ground floor under water.... the next morning, the cellar looked like the scene of a shipwreck... the hall and the two parlours retained so much dampness that we never lived downstairs again, and had all our meals brought upstairs".(p. 33, Le Faye)

Henry Austen then took orders and became Rector, but his tenure only lasted for 3 years and during that time, he was in no position to re-build the house. The living was then bequeathed to William Knight, one of Edward Knight's younger sons. Edward, who had not thought of rebuilding the house when his brothers stayed there, then decided to pull down the rectory and build a new rectory for his own son on the field across the road. This house can be seen from the road (and has recently been advertised for sale). 

William Knight's new rectory. 

As I walked towards Steventon Church, I admired the tree branches forming beautiful arches across the road. 


Approaching Steventon Church from the south, you can see a large yew tree, which is about 800 years old.


The church was built in the 1200s by the then lords of the manor, the Luvers family, and was dedicated to St Nicholas - in fact, there are around 400 churches in England dedicated to this saint. Please refer to my earlier post for photos from inside the church.


Steventon Manor, a house rented by the Digweed family, used to be directly opposite but has been replaced by a modern building. 


As you walk back towards the centre of the village, you can see a modern village hall by the 'triangle' at the crossroads between Steventon Road and Ashe Park Lane.

'The Triangle'. 

There is a seat in the middle of the triangle, facing a row of whitewashed cottages called Elm Tree Cottage, which was there during Jane Austen's times.

Elm Tree Cottage

The house to the left of Elm Tree Cottage is called Jasmine Cottage. This house previously used to be a smithy; however, I have seen it mentioned that Jasmine Cottage may have been the house where Jane lived with her wet nurse. As was customary within the gentry circles, Jane Austen was sent to be nursed by one of the mothers down in the village (likely the large Littleworth family) for the first few years of her life until she was able to walk and talk. Judging from her letters, Jane was close to the villagers, and this closeness may well have been the result of living so closely with village people during some of her most formative years. She continued to donate items of clothing that she had made or purchased to the poorer villagers. 

                                                                            Jasmine Cottage

Walking down Ashe Park Lane, there are some more modern houses that were built later on, but Jane would have been familiar with Yew Tree Cottage. 

Yew Tree Cottage 

Also down Ashe Park Lane is Bassett's Farm, which during Jane's time was part of Steventon Manor Farm, run by the Digweed family who lived opposite St Nicholas Church, and such a large farm that it covered nearly the whole parish. 

The original Bassett's farm house, which is divided into two cottages. 

Jane was also familiar with the two Hatch Cottages at the crossroads of Waltham Lane and Ashe Park Lane.

Hatch Cottage

At the opposite end of Ashe Park Lane, there is an old forge near the railway tunnel that was there during Jane Austen's times (the railway was built a few centuries later). There has always been a blacksmith in the village. 

The forge. 

There was no inn in the village, the closest one being the Deane Gate Inn a few miles away. The Austens would often board a stagecoach from here. When I last saw the building, it looked rather derelict, and I was pleased to see a new brasserie being opened there. 



Rural life in Steventon does look and sound idyllic. The fields were dotted with grazing sheep, and the white-washed cottages were covered in grapevines and woodbine. It was in these cottages that villagers lived, and James-Edward Austen-Leigh in his Memoir remembers the cottagers' wives sitting at home spinning flax and wool. Many of the cottages in Steventon, though well-kept, became damp and were later replaced with more modern buildings, but it is delightful to see a selection of the original period architecture in the village, and the character of the village remains authentic and unspoilt. 


As I was walking down the lanes of Steventon, I stopped to overhear an elderly gentleman chattering with a neighbour in the local, rural Hampshire dialect, with rounded vowels and rolled r's, and I truly felt like I had gone back in time to the 1800s.  


References and further reading: 

Austen-Leigh, J.-E. (2002) A Memoir of Jane Austen. OUP.

Le Faye, D. (2007). Jane Austen's Steventon. Sarsen Press.

Do have a look at my earlier blogs as well: 

Steventon Church: 

https://austenised.blogspot.com/2019/07/uncovering-steventon-church.html

Places around Steventon: 

https://austenised.blogspot.com/2019/08/adventures-around-jane-austens.html

Steventon in winter: 

https://austenised.blogspot.com/2019/02/a-drive-through-wintry-steventon.html

My first visit to Steventon: 

https://austenised.blogspot.com/2016/08/my-pilgrimage-to-steventon-cradle-of.html




Monday, August 26, 2024

Broken Lids and Dinosaur Fossils - Who Was Mary Anning?

The portrait of Mary Anning from Wikipedia

Having seen Kate Winslet's film, Ammonite,
 I have been fascinated by the life of fossil hunter Mary Anning for a while now - not least because she was a contemporary of Jane Austen, but also because she lived in Lyme Regis where Jane Austen spent some of her seaside holidays. So when I visited Lyme Regis a few weeks ago, I had to visit Lyme Regis Museum to learn more about Mary Anning and see where she held her shop. Did Jane Austen and Mary Anning ever come across each other? Intriguing!

Mary Anning's statue with Jurassic coastal cliffs in the background. 


Mary Anning was born in Lyme Regis in 1799 to cabinet maker and carpenter, Richard Anning, and Mary Moore. Lyme Regis is situated in what is known as "Jurassic Coast" and is an area where several fossils from the Jurassic era can be found. From a very young age, Mary was taught by her father how to collect and prepare fossils from the cliff-side fossil beds, which was certainly not a typical hobby for a young girl to have and a dangerous one at that!

Kate Winslet's (Mary's) costumes from the film "Ammonite" on display at the Lyme Regis Museum.

The Anning family lived in dire poverty, in crowded living conditions, so much so that 8 of their 10 children died in childhood. Due to food shortages caused by the Napoleonic wars, this was a hard time for the poor. As fossil collecting was in fashion at the time and fossils were sold as curios, the young Mary started selling fossils, such as ammonites, to visiting tourists in order to augment the family's income. I wonder if the Austen family ever bought her fossils as a souvenir? 

A 190-million-year-old ammonite on display at the museum. 

After Mary's father's death, the family were left deeply in debt and Mary, who was then just 11 years old, started a full-time business selling fossils with her mother and sister. Looking for fossils, especially vertebrate ones, was risky work due to landslides and other dangers. Amazingly, in 1811 when Mary was 12 years old, she and her brother found the fossil of an ichthyosaur and sold it for £23 to a lord who passed it onto public display in London. She would draw a picture of each skeleton and write a detailed description of it based on her reading of scientific literature.  

The first Itcthyosaur. 

A letter with a detailed drawing of an itchthyosaur written by Mary Anning to Sir Henry Bunbury.

Mary was 24 years old when she found her first complete plesiosaur, which was a huge breakthrough in geology and anatomy. She continued to find fossils and made (often unsuccessful) efforts to interact with the scientific community.  In 1826, at the age of 26, Mary purchased a sea-front house with a glass window and started her shop there. Many collectors and experts visited her there. The shop was later pulled down but stood where the Lyme Regis Museum is now located. 

Lyme Regis Museum - Mary Anning's shop was located on this site. 


I find it astounding to think that a young impoverished girl, who had very limited education, would have made such significant discoveries. Self-taught and disciplined, Mary must have worked extremely hard in order to support her family, and her contributions to science have made her one of the best known women scientists and fossilists of all time.   

Now to the significant question: did Jane Austen ever meet Mary Anning and was there a connection? 

The view from Pyne House where Jane Austen stayed. 

Jane may well have visited Mary Anning's father's shop and met young Mary. In 1804, when Mary was 5 years old, Jane Austen was visiting Lyme Regis with her parents, staying at Pyne House, which was around the corner from Mary Anning's home. Jane wrote to her sister Cassandra, who was staying with her close friend Martha Lloyd in Ibthorpe: "I have written to Mr Pyne, on the subject of the broken lid; it was valued by Anning here, we were told, at five shillings, & as that appeared to us beyond the value of all the furniture in the room together, We have referred ourselves to the owner." Jane Austen was hoping to have a broken lid fixed, but obviously found Mr Anning's rates too high. As we have learnt, it is likely that Mr Anning really needed the money!

Hazel Mills has written more about this fascinating connection on her Facebook page Jane Austen Daily.

Street lights are in the shape of fossils here. 

References:

Le Faye, Deirdre. (2011) Jane Austen's Letters. Fourth Edition. OUP.  


Thursday, August 15, 2024

"There is real beauty at Lyme; and...altogether my impressions of the place are very agreeable."


Thus says Anne Elliott in Persuasion when she thinks back on her time at Lyme Regis. Seaside resorts were all the rage during Regency times, and the Austen family frequently visited resorts such as Lyme for their healing sea waters. Lyme Regis was a huge inspiration for Persuasion, and I have always wanted to visit there; I wasn't disappointed when I finally made it there last weekend. 



The sea views and views across the cliffs of the Jurassic Coast are stunning. 


Much of Lyme Regis has been preserved from the Regency times - in fact, there are several buildings that would have existed during Jane Austen's times. 




Jane Austen is believed to have stayed at this cottage at Pyne House, 10 Broad Street, when she visited Lyme in 1803 and 1804. 






The cottage is situated close to the seafront in a bustling street with several shops and restaurants. 





The seaside promenade was one of the first of its kind, created in 1771. The promenade is lined with pretty pastel-coloured cottages, such as these guesthouses. 



Wouldn't it be charming to stay with the Harvilles and Benwicks in these pastel pink cottages? 






I enjoyed browsing the Jane Austen Collection at the Lyme Regis Museum close by.  Several Jane Austen-related items that have been donated by a family member called Diana Shervington. I would love to know more about their authenticity.



This coquelicot-coloured cockade really caught my eye. Feathers and ribbons in this shade of red were fashionable after Nelson's triumph over the French at the Battle of the Nile, and this feather probably came from an egret - a heron common in the Nile Delta. This cockade is said to have belonged to Jane Austen, and I can well believe that it did; in 1798 Jane wrote in a letter about an evening cap that she was altering, "I still venture to retain the narrow silver around it, put twice round without any bow, & instead of the black military feather shall put in the Coquelicot one, as being smarter; - and besides Coquelicot is to be all the fashion this winter." (p. 26, Letters).


These glasses are said to have belonged to Cassandra Austen, Jane's older sister. They remind me of Jane's ones, which I have seen on display at the British Library. 


The gaming pieces, on the other hand, remind me of the humiliating episode at Box Hill! 


The Museum is situated in the building where the famous fossil hunter, Mary Anning, had her shop. I am fascinated by her life and had to visit her statue around the corner - I will share more about her in another post. 


No visit to Lyme Regis is complete without a walk on the Cobb. 



The walk was so pretty with the water glinting in the August sunshine. 


I also had a go at climbing down Granny's Teeth; in Persuasion, Louisa Musgrove, of course decides not to walk down these treacherous steps but tries to jump into Captain Wentworth's arms, only to fall onto the hard floor below with dreadful consequences!


I was amused by the fact that there was a warning sign at the bottom - perhaps this would have helped poor Louisa Musgrove! 

References: Le Faye, Deirdre. (2011) Jane Austen's Letters. Fourth Edition. OUP.