Posts tonen met het label Neighbours of the Austens. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label Neighbours of the Austens. Alle posts tonen

zaterdag 25 juli 2015

Miss Benn.

Mary Benn was the younger sister of Reverend John Benn (1766-1875) who presided over the parish of Farringdon, nearby Chawton in rural Hampshire.  Mr. Benn and his wife had as dozen children, which probably meant they could not do much to help Miss Benn. She was unmarried and living in very poor circumstances in Chawton, close to the Austen’s. She dined with them frequently, as we can see in some of Jane’s letters and is often remembered by Cassandra who gave her a gift of a shawl.


On May 25, 1811, Miss Mary Benn dined at Chawton Cottage with Jane Austen, and -- one assumes -- her mother Mrs. Cassandra Austen and their co-resident, Martha Lloyd.

Jane tells her sister that the Pinks and Sweet Williams are blooming and the Syringas coming out. She relates family news, upcoming journeys  and that very day a second encounter with Miss Benn  over their tea table.


Miss Benn is a poor spinster who lives in reduced circumstances in Chawton; though we know little about her, she is mentioned in Jane Austen's letters more than a dozen times in the few years between the Austen's arrival in Chawton and Miss Benn's death at age 46 in early January, 1816.  Some biographers have speculated that her extreme poverty caused the Austens to invite her for meals frequently.  In her 1997 biography Jane Austen: A Life, Claire Tomalin  writes, "'Poor Miss Benn' appears very much oftener in Jane's letters than their few better-off neighbours; she was not very interesting, but then nor were they"

Thatch Cottage (below) was home to Miss Benn,  She lived in this building until 1816


 

donderdag 23 juli 2015

Revd John Rawstorn Papillon

Revd John Rawstorn Papillon
 
On Friday 9 December 1808 Jane Austen wrote to her sister Cassandra about their move from Southampton to Chawton in Hampshire to a house on the estate of her, wealthy brother Edward, who had been adopted by rich, childless relatives, the Knights. Mrs. Knight had suggested that the local rector, John Papillon, would be a good catch for Jane as a husband. Jane wrote,

'I am very much obliged to Mrs. Knight for such a proof of the interest she takes in me, and she may depend upon it that I will marry Mr. Papillon, whatever may be his reluctance or my own. I owe her much more than such a trifling sacrifice.'

The family joke was still continuing in December 1816 when Jane wrote to her nephew, 'I am happy to tell you that Mr Papillon will soon make his offer, probably next Monday, as he returns on Saturday. - His intentions can be no longer doubtful in the smallest degree, as he has secured the refusal of the House which Mrs Baverstock at present occupies in Chawton & is to vacate soon, which is of course intended for Mrs Elizth Papillon.'          
 

  • The Papillons were Huguenots. 
  • Title: Rev 1 2 3
  • Name: John Rawstorn PAPILLON 1 2 3
  • Sex: M
  • Note: John's middle name is customarily spelt 'Rawstone', or 'Rawston.' However the spelling recorded here appears to be correct - it is, for example, the version given in the record of Cambridge alumni, and on his Will. This name entered the family with the marriage of John's great-great-aunt Sarah Papillon to Samuel Rawstorne in 1683. No doubt he was given the name because of an arrangement with his Godmother, Anne Rawstorne, that he should inherit the estate of Lexden from her. 1 3 2
  • Birth: 1763 2 3
  • Education: Papillon, John Rawstorn Adm. pens. at QUEENS', Dec. 22, 1781. Of Kent. [S. of David, of Acrise and Lee.] Matric. Michs. 1784; Scholar, 1786; B.A. 1786; M.A. 1789. Fellow, 1788. V. of Tonbridge, 1791-1804. R. of Chawton, Hants., 1802-36. Jane Austen and her mother and sister were living at Chawton at this time, and there are numerous references to Papillon and his sister in her letters. The living was in the gift of her brother Edward. Brother of Thomas. (Foster, Index Eccles.; Clerical Guide.) 1781 1
  • Death: 04 APR 1837
  • Note: He was buried at Lexden, which Manor and Estate he had inherited from his godmother and second-cousin-once-removed, Anne Rawstorne. He later devised the property to his sister Elizabeth, for life, with Remainder to his great-nephew Philip Oxenden Papillon.
  •  
    In 1794, the Revd John Rawstorn Papillon was given first refusal of the Rectory of Chawton, Hampshire, at the next vacancy i.e. at the death of the then incumbent, the Revd John Hinton. However, if he did not wish to accept the living, it was stated that it should be offered to Henry Austen, Jane's brother. Although Henry was with his regiment in East Anglia, he quite liked his original idea of ordination and asked his brother Edward Knight to buy Mr Papillon's refusal in advance of the vacancy occurring. Edward offered up to œ1,200 (a tidy sum in 1794) but he was refused.

    The Revd John Hinton died in 1802 and John Papillon and his sister, Elizabeth, took up residence at the rectory at Chawton, which still exists opposite the entrance to the drive to Chawton Great House, owned by Edward Knight. Six years later Jane Austen with her mother and sister moved into Chawton Cottage. Following Mrs. Knight's proposal that Jane marry Mr Papillon it became the family joke that the marriage would take place one day. Both John Papillon and his sister Elizabeth appear frequently in the surviving letters of Jane Austen. Elizabeth called often on the Austens and the two families dined together on a regular basis. Some references do seem to show that she did not always think highly of them. In a letter to her sister Cassandra written on Sunday 24 January 1813, she wrote, '...I have walked once to Alton, & yesterday Miss Papillon & I walked together to call on the Garnets. She invited herself very pleasantly to be my companion, when I went to propose to the indulgence of accommodating us about the Letters from the Mountains. I had a very agreeable walk; if she had not, more shame for her, for I was quite as entertaining as she was...'

    In fact the Rector did inherit a sizeable property at Lexden in Essex. In the early 17th century Sir
    Thomas Lucas acquired the tenter house in Lexden Street, which was in ruins in 1561. He apparently built a new house on that site and gardens were laid out around and across the road, opposite the house, where Lexden springs were landscaped to give a prospect of ornamental water with plantations. In 1701 the manor was sold to Samuel Rawstorn of London. Thomas Rawstorn, son and heir of Samuel, devised the manor to his widow Sophia, with remainder to his daughter Ann. She then devised Lexden to the Revd. John Rawstorn Papillon. Lexden Heath, comprising 290 acres, was enclosed by Act of Parliament in 1821. Under the award John Papillon acquired 151 acres by allotment and bought common rights on 18 acres. By 1838 the Papillon family owned 1,216 acres out of 2,312 acres in the parish.
     janeaustensoci

    Miss Patience Terry and Miss Mary Benn

    John Papillon was obviously considered a good catch even if Jane Austen had no interest in becoming Mrs Papillon. Two spinsters, Miss Patience Terry and Miss Mary Benn were after him. Miss Benn was desperate, being the unmarried sister of the rector of a neighbouring village who had 13 children. She lived on the charity of others, with invitations to dinner most evenings. The Papillons were generous towards her, having her for dinner on a very regular basis. The efforts of the two women did not go unnoticed by Jane Austen. In the same letter she noted,

    '...I could see nothing very promising between Mr. P. & Miss P.T. She placed herself on one side of him at first, but Miss Benn obliged her to move up higher; - & she had an empty plate, & even asked him to give her some Mutton without being attended to for some time. - There might be some design in this, to be sure, on his side; - he might think an empty Stomach the most favourable for Love...'

    woensdag 23 mei 2012

    The Chutes and the Mildmays, neighbours of Jane Asten

    the Vyne
     
    Dogmersfield 
     
    In the outer circle of their neighbourhood stood the houses of three peers--those of Lord Portsmouth at Hurstbourne, Lord Bolton at Hackwood, and Lord Dorchester at Greywell. The owners of these places now and then gave balls at home, and could also be relied upon to bring parties to some of the assemblies at Basingstoke. Hardly less important than these magnates were the Mildmays of Dogmersfield and the Chutes of The Vyne.         
                                                                          
    Jane Mildmay
     
    Born in 1764 Jane Mildmay was the eldest of Carew Mildmay and Jane Pescod’s three daughters.  Thanks to her wealthy (and childless) great uncle Carew Hervey Mildmay, Jane inherited her childhood home of Shawford House in Hampshire, plus estates in Essex and Somerset.The only condition was that her husband and any children of the marriage should take the name of Mildmay.  We know she was musically accomplished from the portrait of her playing the harp painted by Francis Riguard in 1785, the year before her marriage.  And we know she liked dancing because Jane Austen tells us in a letter to her sister Cassandra dated 1798 that Lady Jane St John Mildmay was among her party at the Basingstoke Assembly. 
     
    the Vyne

    Jane Austen was also friendly with Thomas Chute's adoptive daughter Caroline Wiggit. Well-to-do eighteenth century families sometimes adopted young girls. The idea was to train a girl to look after her adoptive parents in their old age. Caroline was in this position, and she inspired the character of Fanny Price in Jane Austen's novel Mansfield Park.

     
    Caroline Wiggett was “adopted” by Eliza and William Chute. Cousin to William Chute of The Vyne, and the youngest of seven motherless children, Caroline went to live at The Vyne when she was 3-and-half years old. Caroline always called them Aunt and Uncle Chute.
    the-vyne

    woensdag 16 mei 2012

    the Portsmouths of Hurstbourne Park


    At nearby Hurstbourne Park, residence of the Earl of Portsmouth, a very public adulterous relationship was turning the Earl into a cuckold. Jane Austen had known the Earl as a young boy when he had lived with her family at Steventon as one of George Austen's pupils. As a young woman she occasionally attended balls at Hurstbourne Park. Mrs. Austen had commented when he lived with them on the backwardness of the little boy, and as he grew up the Earl's mental condition worsened. In spite of his mental incapacity, however, he was married off in 1814 to Mary-Anne Hanson, daughter of the family lawyer. Locking up her mad husband and treating him with great cruelty (she had him whipped on a regular basis), Mary-Anne very soon brought her lover William-Rowland Alder into the house. Together they had three children. The Earl was formally declared insane only many years after Jane Austen's death. Mary-Anne was then able to marry her adulterous lover (Letters [Notes] 564-65). the free library

     
    A magnificent, mid-18th century, walnut trestle table retaining its original gilding; from Hurstbourne Park, the former seat of the Earl of Portsmouth 


    dinsdag 15 mei 2012

    Hackwood House, Baron Bolton, Lady Bolton (Jane Mary Powlett)

    At the time Jane Austen was writing about it, the house was owned by Lord and Lady Botlon. Lady Bolton, Jane Mary Powlett, was the illegitimate daughter and eventual magnificently rich heiress of Charles Powlett, the 5th Duke of Bolton. Her husband  Thomas Orde-Powlett, took her name when she inherited the estate and others from the Duke. 

    The Duke had failed to produce a son to inherit his title, and while the title could not be inherited by Jane due to her illegitimacy and sex, she could inherit the non entailed estates. She eventually inherited most of the Bolton estates on the death of her uncle,the 6th Duke who died without any legitimate male issue. Her husband was elevated to the peerage on 20th October 1797 by George III. He took the name of Baron Bolton of Bolton Castle in honour of his wife’s family. So I think we can assume that the latest fashions would have been worn at the virtual ducal home…
     
     
    Baron Bolton 
    As well as spending time with the family friend Madam Lefroy, who lived at Ashe Rectory, we know that Jane and Cassandra came into contact with the infamous Boltons of Hackwood Park. (Jane dryly comments after meeting the illegitimate daughter of Lord Boltonin the Bath assembly rooms that she was ‘much improved with a wig’)  dancing-years

    zaterdag 12 mei 2012

    Neighbours of the Austens. the Dorchesters of Kempshott Park

     
    Kempshott House
     
    Miss Austen, however, forged a strong connection with Kempshott in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, being a guest of Sir Guy Carleton, first Baron Dorchester (1724-1808), who succeeded the Prince of Wales as tenant of Kempshott Park in 1796 upon his retirement, remaining there until 1803.  
     
     
    Lord Dorchester

     The balls she attended at Kempshott House were important influences on her writing. Miss Austen was even engaged briefly at one point to Harris Bigg-Wither, son of one of Kempshott's neighbouring landowners.  Also acquainted with Lord Dorchester, inter alia, were the Terry family of nearby Dummer House, as was a 'tall young man named Golding', so wrote Stephen Terry, with connections to The Goldings, a private residence near Basingstoke, a possibility.
    We found Kempshott House  to be a stone classical structure such as Miss Austen describes as "a modern residence." It has a large bowed centre, three windows wide, supported by a colonnade of pillars. Lord Dorchester took over Kempshott House, in the year 1796, from George, Prince of Wales, who had used it as a hunting residence. At the time of the French Revolution, a large number of émigrés of high rank were entertained at Kempshott. 
     
     
    Kempshot House, Adam Room (2)
    (Kempshott Park Saloon - Impression)
    St Louis Art Museum, Missouri, USA, 1929
    On December 28, 1798, Jane wrote to Cassandra:

    “Mrs. Lefroy has just sent me word that Lady Dorchester means to invite me to her Ball on the 8th of January, which tho’ an humble blessing compared with what the last page records, I do not consider as any Calamity.” 

    Then, the day after the ball she reports: 

    “There was the same kind of supper as last year, and the same want of chairs.  There were more dancers than the room could conveniently hold, which is enough to constitute a good ball at any time.” 

    But how did she know what the supper was like in 1797 unless she had attended that ball also, perhaps along with Cassandra?  In a letter of November 1, 1800, she describes a ball held on Thursday, October 30: “It was a pleasant Ball, & still more good than pleasant, for there were nearly 60 people, and sometimes we had 17 couple.  The Portsmouths, Dorchesters, Boltons, Portals & Clerks were there, and all the meaner and more usual &c. &c.’s – There was a scarcity of Men in general, & a still greater scarcity of any that were good for much.”
     jasna.org/persuasions
    Kempshott-House