Posts tonen met het label Chawton house. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label Chawton house. Alle posts tonen

zaterdag 28 augustus 2021

Chawton House, Hampshire: Virtual Garden Tour

The gardens

The gardens are open to the public, with access to a tearoom. The restoration programme for the gardens was extensive, and focused in particular on the restoration of the walled garden. 

Edward Knight had the idea to build a new walled garden during Jane Austen's lifetime. In 1813, she wrote to her brother Frank, "He [Knight] talks of making a new Garden; the present is a bad one & ill situated, near Mr Papillon's; — he means to have the new, at the top of the Lawn behind his own house."

Knight's original walls are mostly still intact, but the glasshouses and potting sheds, had to be rebuilt. The gardens have been restored using Edward Austen Knight's original planting scheme.

The central space is used for the production of vegetables, soft fruits, herbs and flowers. Chawton House is registered with the Soil Association, and is now certified as an organic producer.[citation needed] Everything grown in the walled garden is for use by the Library, with any surplus being sold locally in aid of the charity.

The park and gardens of Chawton House are Grade II listed on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens.

zondag 8 juli 2018

The garden of Chawton estate.

‘Edward is very well and enjoys himself as well as any Hampshire born Austen can desire. – He talks of making a new Garden…’
Jane Austen, 1813
Jane Austen was a frequent visitor to the estate, and some believe Mr Knightley’s Donwell Abbey in Austen’s Emma was modelled upon Chawton House.
The grounds have been restored to the English Landscape style popularised by Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown in the late eighteenth century, with an informal lawn and open views across the estate, including a ‘ha-ha’ (a ditch that is invisible from the distance to keep grazing animals back from the house without spoiling the view).
The south lawn leads to a lime avenue that provides distant views into the parkland beyond, as well as a ‘wilderness’ (a wooded area that appears natural while in fact being planted and tended, a feature that dates back to the seventeenth century).
The gardens feature two terraces both of which were built by Montagu Knight in the early 1900s and b
At the highest point of the grounds is the Walled Garden, built by Edward Austen, and referred to in Jane Austen’s letters (though sadly, she died before its completion). The newest addition within the Walled Garden is the Elizabeth Blackwell Herb Garden, inspired by Elizabeth Blackwell’s A Curious Herbal (1737-9), a guide to different plants and their uses in medicine. This remarkable work includes Blackwell’s detailed engravings, which she individually hand-coloured. The proceeds from this endeavour secured her husband’s release from debtor’s prison.
The gardens also feature a Fernery and a Shrubbery – the latter was typically where the ladies of the house would take their exercise in Jane Austen’s time.
‘One likes to get out into a shrubbery in fine weather.’
Mrs Bertram in Jane Austen’s Mansfield Park, 1814
chawtonhouse

zondag 6 maart 2016

Emma 1816:"" English verdure, English culture, English comfort, seen under a sun bright, without being oppressive.”

Chawton House Library is celebrating the 200th anniversary of the publication of Jane Austen’s Emma, by John Murray, in December 1815, with a landmark exhibition ‘Emma at 200: from English Village to Global Appeal’. Dr. Gillian Dow, Executive Director, Chawton House Library and curator of the exhibition said, “I am pleased to say that the interest in our exhibition on the much-loved novel has already been “global” and we are looking forward to welcoming visitors from around the world when we open the exhibition on the 21st March.”

We have been fortunate enough to have a wide range of exhibits offered to us on loan from some of the world’s most prestigious research libraries, including the National Library of Scotland, the Huntington Library in California, King’s College, Cambridge, and the University of Göttingen, Germany. We will exhibit unique items such as a letter from Charlotte Brontë on her reading of Emma, a rare first English edition, the first American edition and the first French translation, first editions of books mentioned in Emma, and manuscript material, including music books, commonplace books, and original letters from other nineteenth-century women writers who read and responded to Jane Austen.

However, the opportunity to exhibit such treasured possessions for the very first time at Chawton House Library does come at a price. For even though the items are kindly being loaned to us for free, we have to cover all the extra logistical costs, such as transport, security and insurance.

To help us meet these exceptional costs, we need to raise at least £8,000.
Every donation, no matter how small, will be gratefully received and will help contribute towards the cost of staging this important exhibition.
chawtonhouse

woensdag 1 april 2015

History of Chawton House.

Edward Austen’s inheritance of Chawton and Godmersham from his benefactor Thomas Knight is well documented.  Thomas Knight and his new bride, Catherine, were on a tour of their recently inherited estates.  At Steventon, they visited their distant cousin, the Rev. George Austen and his family. When Thomas and Catherine failed to produce any heirs, they officially adopted the sixteen-year-old Edward in 1783 (Nokes 72-73).  It is a little known fact that for over one hundred sixty years, the Knight family were also owners of a third estate in addition to Chawton and Godmersham:  Abbots Barton and Abbey Farm, the former Hyde Abbey’s lands in Winchester.

The owners of the three estates were affluent landowners and many served as members of Parliament.  Financially savvy gentry expanded their estates by carefully considered marriages between important local families and sometimes through the consolidation of an estate by means of land exchanges. jasna.org/persuasions/on-line/

The Chawton estate dates to at least the late Saxon period. After the Norman Conquest william the Conqueror granted the estate to Hugh de Port, and Chawton remained a de Port possession for over 300 years. Henry III and the future Edward I were frequent visitors during the 13th century. The estate passed down through the male line for 3 centuries, then passed through the female line for another two centuries until, in 1551, it was sold to John Knight, whose family had been tenant farmers at Chawton for centuries. John's son, also named John, replaced the medieval manor house with the attractive Elizabethan building we can see today. britainexpress

In 1524 William Knight had a lease of the ' cite of the Manor place ' and farm of Chawton, with the West Park, for which he paid 25.

In April 1551, the land was sold for £180 to John Knight, whose family had been tenant farmers in Chawton since the thirteenth century and who had prospered sufficiently to wish to acquire a large estate. The medieval manor house was replaced by John Knight’s grandson, also called John, with the largely Elizabethan house that can be seen today. The building work began c.1583 and continued until the mid 1660s to create the house as it stands today. chawtonhouse

Some times later.
Sir Richard had no children, and devised his estate to the grandson of his aunt Dorothy, who had married Michael Martin of Ensham in Oxfordshire. This grandson, Richard (Martin) Knight, his brother Christopher, and his sister Elizabeth, were all owners in succession, the last named for much the longest period. She was also the most prominent figure of the three in our history; for fate directed that she should have the final disposition of the estate. archive/stream/chawtonmanoritso00austuoft/chawton

Anne Mynne
The story of the Knight family’s involvement in Winchester begins with Anne Mynne. Anne’s husband, George Mynne of Woodcote Park, Epsom, was described as a merchant, draper, clothier, royal servant, politician, ironmaster, moneylender, clerk in Chancery, and extortionist (Malden 271-78).3  Following George’s death in 1648, his trustees managed his estate on behalf of his widow, Anne.  In 1649 Anne purchased the reversionary interest of the Manor of Steventon in Hampshire from Thomas Brocas (Page 171-74).  In 1650 she purchased the manor belonging to Edward Darcy in Epsom.

 In 1650 Anne Mynne purchased Abbots Barton from the financially-ruined owner.  On Anne Mynne’s death in 1663 her estates passed to her daughters:  Elizabeth (wife of Richard Evelyn5) and Lady Anne (wife of Sir John Lewkenor of West Dean, Sussex).  The Epsom estate passed to Elizabeth, Abbots Barton to Lady Anne, and Steventon was shared between them.  Under the law at that time, Sir John was seen as the owner of all Lady Anne’s wealth and property.  Sir John died in 1669 (aged 46) and Lady Anne (then aged 35), as was common for a young widow, soon married again.  Her second husband, Sir William Morley of Halnaker, Sussex, was also a rich and respected member of the gentry (Page 171-74). archive/Chawton

Elizabeth Martin
When Lady Anne died in 1704, all her estates, including Abbots Barton, passed to her son John.  John died in 1706 with no legitimate heirs, and Abbots Barton passed to Elizabeth Martin, a distant cousin, through her parents Michael and Frances (née Lewkenor).  Elizabeth already owned extensive property, inheriting lands at Chawton in 1702 after the deaths of her brothers, Richard and Christopher.

The Knight family had owned Chawton from 1524 when William Knight had taken on the lease of the manor place and farm.  When his descendent, Sir Richard Knight died in 1679 without heirs, the estate passed to the grandson of his aunt, Dorothy.

Elizabeth Martin was a strong woman with a sense of duty and took an active part in managing her estates (Austen-Leigh and Knight 124).  Her detailed accounts have survived at Hampshire Record Office.8  As a requirement of her inheritance, Elizabeth changed her name to Knight as her brothers in their turn had done.  When Elizabeth married her cousin William Woodward (son of Elizabeth Lewkenor, her mother’s sister), he too changed his name to Knight, thus perpetuating the Knight family name even though the last direct heir had died in 1679 (Burke 442-44; Austen-Leigh and Knight 122-24, 127-29).  Four years after William Knight (né Woodward) died in 1721, Elizabeth married Bulstrode Peachey, who was at one time MP for Midhurst.  Her second husband also relinquished his family name, becoming known as Peachey Knight; such was the power of the inheritance conditions. Elizabeth died in 1737, leaving no surviving heirs and no immediate relatives.


The freehold has remained in the Knight family ever since the sixteenth century, though on many occasions the ownership passed laterally and sometimes by female descent, requiring several heirs to change their surnames to Knight. Sir Richard Knight, who inherited at the age of two in 1641, had no children and he left the estate to a grandson of his aunt, Richard (Martin) Knight. His brother, and then his sister, Elizabeth, inherited in their turn. During the first part of the eighteenth century, Elizabeth undertook the further development of the house and gardens. She married twice, but again no children were born, and when she died the estate passed to her cousin Thomas Brodnax May Knight, who united it with his own large fashionable property in Kent, Godmersham Park.
In 1781, Thomas Knight II inherited the house. He and his wife Catherine had no children of their own, but through family connections with Jane Austen’s father, the Reverend George Austen, they eventually adopted Jane’s third brother, Edward, in the year of his sixteenth birthday.   Edward Austen eventually took over management of the estates at Godmersham and Chawton in 1797, living mostly at Godmersham and letting the Great House at Chawton to gentlemen tenants.

In 1826, the house became the home of Edward (Austen) Knight’s son, also Edward, who carried out extensive work on the estate, building a new Servants Hall, a Billiard Room wing and replacing some of the wooden sash windows with stone casements. On his death the title passed to his son Montagu who spent considerable amounts of time and money continuing the restoration and modernising of the house, with the influence of Edwin Lutyens being apparent in many areas. As Montagu was childless, his nephew, Lionel, inherited the estate, followed by his son Edward Knight III. Inheritance taxes and increased running costs following the war then started a long period of decline, the sale of most of the outlying manor and the subdivision of the house into flats.


vrijdag 20 maart 2015

Chawton House


                                                       Chawton House Library

vrijdag 2 januari 2015

Georgian Christmas event held at Chawton House Library

 
This short film showcasing the Georgian Christmas event held at Chawton House Library (http://www.chawtonhouse.org/) on Saturday 13th December, 2014. This stunning country house was decorated to depict Christmas in the long 18th Century. Food historian, Dr Annie Gray (http://www.anniegray.co.uk/), gave a talk about Georgian Christmas foods and also provided examples of cakes and biscuits from the 'Knight Family Cookbook' (Late 18thC). https://comestepbackintime.wordpress....

zondag 30 november 2014

We continue our celebration of the festive season by counting down the Sundays until Christmas Eve

 We continue our celebration of the festive season by counting down the Sundays until Christmas Eve, highlighting different holdings, with connections to Christmas and the festive period, in our library's collection. Today we have an insight into the preparations for the Twelve Days of Christmas by an eighteenth-century housewife.
In Elizabeth Moody’s mock-heroic, a strain that pervades Moody's works, poem ‘The Housewife, or The Muse Learning to Ride the Great Horse Heroic’ (1...798), the narrator asks her muse to aid her in her domestic chores and the preparation for Christmas, who in turn summons Greek heroes to help the narrator in her works. The poem’s final stanza describes the narrator preparing a Twelfth Night cake, a treat which can be enjoyed at our Georgian Christmas on 13 December, amongst other delicious Georgian Christmas treats taken from the Knight Family’s Cookbook. For more information on the Georgian Christmas or the recipe of Georgian Ginger Cake see Dr. Annie Gray’s blog on our website: www.chawtonhouse.org

zaterdag 29 november 2014

Chawton House Library's

Chawton House Library
Chawton House Library's team of library volunteers and interns begin the annual deep clean of the reading rooms and store rooms today (including Josje and Suki pictured here). We are extremely grateful for all the work they do throughout the year!

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