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Posts Tagged ‘Steventon Parsonage’

 Inquiring Readers,

This post examines the fortunes of the Austen family via the number of servants they employed for the students and family members who lived in Steventon Rectory, and the servants they took with them after Rev Austen’s retirement, and then after his death. The topic is fully described in Linda Robinson Walker’s 2005 Persuasions-Online article, Why Was Jane Austen Sent away to School at Seven: An Empirical Look at a Vexing Question. After reading this short summary of her remarkable essay, I encourage you to click on the link above.

SteventonRectory-Wikipedia

Steventon Rectory, Public Domain, Wikipedia

Jane Austen scholars, readers, and fans know about her preoccupation with a single woman’s finances. She wove this topic masterfully into her novels. Women during her era (with very few exceptions) depended legally on their menfolk to see to their financial security. Many widows and spinsters, like Jane and her sister Cassandra, lived as total dependents, even though to our modern eyes some lived in the lap of luxury. Emotionally for Jane, this was not the case. A single woman’s financial security was never ensured. Witness Jane’s life before her father’s death and her quest for financial security afterward when she actively sought to earn some financial security through her writing. This was an uphill battle. Women in Jane’s social position who earned money through “work” were frowned upon, hence, during her lifetime, her novels were credited anonymously to “a lady.” 

ss-title-page-first-edition

First Edition, 1811, public domain image

Despite her financial worries about her future as a spinster, Jane enjoyed a life of relative privilege due to her status as a gentlewoman and the people with whom she associated. The Austen family belonged to a landless class known as the pseudo-gentry. 

Cassandra Austen née Leigh

Jane’s mother, Cassandra Austen, was a distant relative of the Leighs of Stoneleigh Abbey. By the turn of the nineteenth century the Abbey was worth around £19,000. (In 1764, £19,000 was equivalent in purchasing power to about £4,433,593.38 today, an increase of £4,414,593.38 over 259 years. The pound had an average inflation rate of 2.13% per year between 1764 and today, producing a cumulative price increase of 23,234.70%.- CPI Inflation Calculator)

Cassandra Leigh’s distant relative was Sir Thomas Leigh, the Lord Mayor of London under Queen Elizabeth I. “For assisting the Royalists against Cromwell in the English Civil War, Leigh was created a baron in 1643.” – Regina Jeffers

Despite her impeccable lineage, Cassandra benefited very little financially from her family. Her father, Thomas Leigh, was the rector of Harpsden, near Henley-on-Thames in Oxfordshire, and his means were modest compared to his richer relations. Her brother, James Leigh, added Perrott to his name when he inherited the estate of his rich great uncle, Thomas Leigh. This uncle and his heir largely ignored Cassandra and her family (most notably Jane and her sister Cassandra) in their wills. More about Cassandra’s ancestry can be found in this genealogy link

George Austen, Rector

George Austen was a smart, ambitious, self-made, and enterprising man. His mother died in childbirth and his father died a year after marrying a new wife. The widow did not want the responsibility of taking care of George and his sister Philadelphia. When he was nine years old he was separated from her, and taken in by an aunt in Tonbridge. He then earned a Fellowship to study at St. John’s. His impressive education was quite unusual for an orphaned boy with modest means, but he had an important connection – his uncle Francis Austen II, who lived in Sevenoaks, Kent. With his uncle’s support and influence, George received three degrees at Oxford: Bachelor of Arts, Master of Arts, and Bachelor of Divinity. (Discovering the Young Jane Austen in West Kent, England — Sheila Johnson.com.) 

Thomas Leigh died just a few months before the wedding of Cassandra and George … In the strictly snobbish sense, George was marrying above himself, and Thomas may have doubted whether George was good enough for his daughter. – Maggie Lane, p 52

Through his education and his influential connection, George became a cleric of the Church of England and rector of Deane and Steventon in Hampshire. As a rector, his Anglican clerical position was higher-ranking than a vicar’s (think of Mr Elton in Emma, who was desperate to marry a woman of means). And so George earned a respectable position that gave him the opportunity to finance his burgeoning responsibilities. Thankfully, he had a supportive and hard-working wife.

 

The Austens support of their burgeoning family, and students and servants

The position of rector made George far from a wealthy man. To stay out of debt, he farmed an allotment of land that came with the parishes of Steventon and Deane. He also rented Cheesedown Farm from his Uncle Francis, where he grew food to feed his family, and sold the surplus for profit. George also started a boarding school for boys. With the income from his lands, the tithes, and tuition from male students, the Austens supported their growing family of eight children, as well as the servants required to help with household and farming duties. According to Robinson Walker:

“In 1781 and 1782 the Austen household was bursting with as many as twelve young people – which included the Austen children and pupils. In the four years between 1779 and 1782, as many as sixteen to twenty-two people made their home in the rectory.”

Then, in 1783,  Edward was adopted by the Leighs, and Cassandra and Jane were sent to boarding school. This alleviated the burden of feeding so many mouths. Robinson Walker surmises that these two events opened spaces for 4-8 additional students inside the rectory, attracting much needed income. One can only imagine the emotional effect on Jane at the tender age of nine when she left her beloved home to follow her sister to a boarding school, if even for only a year.

Number of Servants

The increase in students necessitated a change in servant numbers. 

The servants employed at the time Jane was sent away to school in 1783 were enough to fill the attics. With the attics filled by the servants, the rest of the household occupied seven bedrooms. Robinson Walker Provides an idea of the number of people at Christmas in 1786:

 

“One hint of the number that could squeeze into the rectory, albeit for a brief period, is given by Mrs. Austen when she enumerated the thirteen present for Christmas celebrations in 1786:  herself and Rev. Austen; five of their children; Mr. Austen’s sister, Philadelphia Hancock; Hancock’s daughter, Eliza de Feuillide and her young son with his French maid, and the two motherless Cooper children (Le Faye 54).  In addition, there would have been the Steventon servants.” 

The author provides extensive descriptions from contemporary sources about the number of rooms in the Rectory. These come from the memories and writings of family and visitors, with some variations in their recollections. Catherine Austen Hubback, Jane’s niece, never saw the rectory. She simply quoted her father, Frank, and others who she recalled that “The Parsonage consisted of three rooms in front on the ground floor—the best parlour, the common parlour and the kitchen; behind these were Mr. Austen’s study, the back kitchen, and the stairs.”  She also mentioned “seven bedrooms, and three attics. The rooms were low-pitched, but not otherwise bad, and compared with the usual stile of such buildings, it might be considered a very good house.” 

Anna, another niece, had actually lived in the rectory. She recalled a number of personal details, including her grandfather George’s study which was secluded in the back of the house, far from household activities. The dining room and common sitting room were situated next to the front door. This door opened into a smaller entrance parlour, where Cassandra Austen would greet her visitors.

The kitchen was most likely situated in the southwest wing of the house over a cellar that stored foodstuff. 

 

“The southwest wing is also dominated by a broad fireplace and tall chimney, suggesting that it was used for cooking, roasting, and baking.  A kitchen on that side of the house would also be near the outbuildings which we know included not only the granary, but a dairy, hen house, stables, and other farm buildings.  The glebe map and Anna’s footpath both indicate that these buildings lay to the west of the house.” – Robinson Walker 

Robinson Walker admits to not knowing the precise number of servants who lived at the parsonage. There were servants who lived in their homes and came when required, such as the washer women, cleaning ladies, George’s bailiff, and male farm laborers. Some servants, due to circumstance, might have had to stay overnight – especially if the lady of the house was ill disposed or during canning and food preparation seasons. Temporary tutors (music, painting, and dancing) might have needed one or two nights’ lodging before moving on. 

The number of servants who stayed at the rectory during certain events is covered extensively in Robinson Walker’s article. Her tables take into account the number of people living in Steventon Rectory from 1775 (Jane’s birth year) to 1779 (when George Austen stopped teaching.)

“In a letter to Cassandra, Jane wrote fondly of Nanny Littlewart dressing her hair. Nanny is Anne Littleworth, who fostered Jane and Cassandra when they were quite young. Jane mentions as many as nine servants in her letters in 1798. The laundry, for example, “was to be handed over from Mrs Bushell to Mrs Steevens; there was a new maid: ‘we have felt the inconvenience of being without a maid so long, that we are determined to like her.” (Worsley, p.95.)

After Rev Austen retired in 1801, the number of servants the family employed when they moved to Bath was reduced dramatically. The number of servants they took with them reflected the size of their new townhouse and reduced financial situation. 

The Austens kept a fairly constant ratio of one live-in servant per family member. When vacationing in Lyme Regis in 1804, Jane and her parents (Cassandra was at Godmersham) traveled with 4 servants:  Molly, Jenny, a cook, and a manservant named James, of whom she wrote to Cassandra. “My Mother’s shoes were never so well blacked before, & our plate never looked so clean.”

Just four years after his retirement, George Austen died unexpectedly. With the loss of his income, Mrs Austen and her daughters downsized into more affordable townhouses. The women now relied on monies that the Austen sons were able to share with them. After two years, Mrs Austen, Cassandra, Jane, along with good friend Martha Lloyd, moved into a house in Southhampton.

In a letter written in January 1807, Jane mentioned three maidservants:  Molly, Jenny and Phebe. Shortly thereafter she reported that a Mrs Hall assisted in moving them in, and the addition of a gardener. 

At Chawton Cottage, which was Jane’s home from 1809 until her death in 1817, two maidservants roomed with them. The women also kept a cook and a manservant. During the Chawton years, Cassandra and Jane were often separated, with Cassandra frequenting Godmersham and Jane visiting her brother Henry in London. One imagines that the number of servants the women hired were just the right amount for their modest lifestyles. Robinson Walker followed the Austen family’s up and down fortunes through the number of servants they employed in a wide-ranging and fascinating account.

More on the topic:

Jane Austen in Vermont, The Saga of the Steventon Parsonage

Jane Austen’s World, Keeping a Clean House Regency Style

Jane Austen At Home, Lucy Worsley, St. Martin’s Press, NY, 2017

 

 

 

 

 

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Gentle Readers, With this article we once again benefit from Tony Grant’s expertise as a tour guide in England. He has written a lovely post about Steventon Rectory and its influence on Jane Austen’s description of Barton Cottage in Sense and Sensibility.

Does Barton Cottage, the cottage that Mrs Dashwood, Elinor and Marianne in Sense and Sensibility, retreat to and which is located in Devon, just north of Exeter, owe much to Steventon in Hampshire, Jane’s first home?

Elinor ( Emma Thompson) and Mrs. Dashwood (Gemma Jones) in front of Barton Cottage. Sense and Sensibility, 1995

I recently went to Steventon again, the birthplace of Jane Austen and where she spent her formative years until the age of twenty six. Steventon was where she thought she would spend the rest of her life. As soon as she was born she was sent to live with a family in the village. The mother of the household she was sent to became Jane’s wet nurse. Mrs Austen had nothing to do with her children as babies. This might provide an explanation for Jane’s aversion towards her mother as she grew older but it also explains that her attachment to Steventon was not just through her own family and the rectory but it was linked to the wider community and she had very close ties to some of the villagers.

Row of cottages in Steventon. Image @Tony Grant

Steventon is set in a small Hampshire valley about five miles south west of Basingstoke, the nearest large town. When you visit Steventon today there are a few cottages and houses, not dissimilar in number to Jane’s days and a cross roads that has a cluster of old cottages, some of them terraced, set in a beautiful verdant landscape of fields and trees and gently rising downland.

The Dashwood women see Barton Cottage for the first time. Sense and Sensibility, 2008.

“a view of Barton Valley as they entered it gave them cheerfulness. It was a pleasant fertile spot, well wooded and rich in pasture.”

The site of the Rectory at Steventon. You can see the fence that surrounds the pump in back of the tree. Image @Tony Grant

Take the fork at the cross roads along the valley and within a few hundred yards you come to a lane that branches off to the right, almost hidden by bushes and trees. If you can stop at this corner and look into the field on the right, there are two or three tall mature trees , sycamore and ash, and next to one tree is a rustic wooden fenced area with an old water pump in the centre. This is the site of Steventon Rectory, Jane’s old home. The pump is presumed to be the pump the Austens had in their back yard. This rectory had become derelict, and was demolished by Edward Austen Knight when his son, William Knight, took over as vicar of Steventon.  When George Austen retired, he moved Jane, Cassandra and their mother to Bath. James Austen became the new vicar until his death in 1819, when Henry Austen stepped into the position.

The pump. Relic at Steventon Rectory. Illustration by Ellen G. Hill, 1923.

Edward had the new rectory built in the valley in fields on the opposite side of the road.  It still stands today, a fine white house on the sunny side of the valley facing south east.

Steventon House, built by Jane's brother Edward c. 1820-22. Image @Jane Austen Today

Behind the site of the original rectory where Jane lived there is a grassy meadow sloping steeply upwards for a quarter of mile to where her father’s church, St Nicholas, is situated next to a large house where the Digweeds lived. Jane, Cassandra and her brothers often scrambled up the hill behind their rectory to play with the Digweed children.They were some of their childhood friends. There are cultivated fields, meadows and woody areas all around, especially on the top of the hill near the Digweeds home behind the rectory site.

Site of the Steventon Rectory today. The fenced in pump is at left.

“The situation of the house was good. High hills rose immediately behind, and at no great distance on each side; some of which were open downs, the other cultivated and woody.”

The rectory Jane lived in would have been quite spacious because at least seven children lived there, five of her six brothers, herself and her sister Cassandra as well as her mother and father, a couple of servants and for much of the year, sons of some of the local gentry who sent their boys to the Reverend Austen for education and entry to Oxford or Cambridge. Oxford had been the Reverend Austen’s university. Her brother George did not live with the family however because of his disabilities. He was virtually adopted by another family who cared for him. Whether it was for financial gain I am not sure. So the rectory must have been spacious.

“Barton Cottage, though small, was comfortable and compact; but as a cottage it was defective, for the building was regular, the roof was tiled, the window shutters were not painted green, nor were the walls covered with honeysuckles. A narrow passage led directly through the house into the garden behind. On each side of the entrance was a sitting room about sixteen feet square; and beyond them were the offices and the stairs. Four bedrooms and two garrets formed the rest of the house.”

Cottage of local stone. Image @Tony Grant

Barton cottage doesn’t resemble the rectory from this description but Jane must have used her knowledge of cottages in the area of Steventon. Jane is very precise about the size of the two sitting rooms, sixteen feet square. The cottage is used in a special way within the novel. She describes it as being , “defective.” This is symbolic of the situation Elinor, Marianne and their mother are in. They are experiencing fractured times and are out of place financially, socially and the cottage they have come to, places them in a different strata of society than they are accustomed to. From the exact dimensions of the sitting rooms Jane Austen gives us, aren’t those rooms too small to socialise in the manner they are used to? It is a,”defective,” place on many levels and it’s not like other cottages.

Cottage without honeysuckle. Image @Tony Grant

Jane would have been very familiar with the traditional country cottage but she makes Barton Cottage different, almost an eye sore, bare of climbing honeysuckle and green painted windows. Mrs Dashwood has plans for it, to change it and develop it. But can these come to fruition? Can the cottage be developed and grow? Can the Dashwood sisters adapt, develop and grow ? Does Barton owe much to Steventon? I would say so. Steventon formed Jane’s knowledge and experience of cottages and she used that knowledge of how cottages are and the meaning in social class and wealth different cottages might portray to incorporate the cottage at Barton into the fabric and meaning of Sense and Sensibility.

Cottage. Image @Tony Grant

Hampshire cottages:
If you ever visit Hampshire and pass through the countryside you will see a variety of types and styles of cottage. Cottages have always been built with local materials readily at hand.

Clay tile roofs. Image @Tony Grant

In the Cotswolds you will find most villages made from Cotswold stone and roofed with tiles sliced from the same stone. This is a creamy yellow colour. Climbing roses, wisteria, lichen and mosses have had plenty of time to insinuate themselves into and on these mellow warm coloured buildings.

Roses round the door. Image @Tony Grant

Hampshire, with its oak, elm and ash forests has many timber frame cottages. Great beams of wood cut from massive oaks have been merely incorporated into the frame and the spaces between the oak beamed framework filled with wattle and daub.

Cottage with wattle and daub. Image @Tony Grant

Wattle and daub being made from woven ash fencing and plastered with a mixture of cow dung, lime and straw. (Click here for a video.)

The oldest building in Winchester is made with wattle and daub. Image @Tony Grant

The roofs are thatched with reeds or wheat stalks. Some have clay tiles where local clay deposits provide the raw material and Hampshire brick works do the work of firing the tiles.

Thatched cottages. Image @Tony Grant

Many buildings are made of flint. Hampshire has large areas of chalk downland. Within the chalk are found nodules of flint.

Winchester College Shield erected on a wall made with flint building material. Click on photo for a larger image. Image @Tony Grant

Nobody is quite sure how flint is formed in the chalk but it is a very hard crystalline rock, glassy in substance. It has been one of the most versatile materials ever.

More thatched cottages. Image @Tony Grant

Stone age man used it for axes, arrow heads, scrapers and knives. It has been used and is still used to build strong walls. Flint lock muskets used tiny bits of flint fixed into their firing mechanism to create a spark which ignited the gunpowder to propel the musket ball down the barrel. Flint can be struck against flint or metal to create a spark to light a fire.

Chawton Cottage. Image @Tony Grant

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