Walking with Jane Austen

Jane Austens House Museum

I started walking with Jane Austen when I read Pride and Prejudice for the first time at nine. We were staying at my grandmother’s house, and there was a bookcase of classic books in the room I was staying in. During that visit, I read a few of them. The two that I still remember loving were Black Beauty and Pride and Prejudice.

At the time, parts of Pride and Prejudice confused me. Being only nine, I didn’t understand the subtle humor, sarcasm and wit of Jane Austen. Despite that, the novel captivated me and I devoured it. I remember thinking about it for months afterward. It was a puzzle that I wanted to solve.

Since then, I’ve read all six of Jane’s completed novels, most more than once. And, I’ve seen every film adaptation of them that I’m aware of. I’ve read and watched Austen fan fiction, some decent and some dreadful. Suffice it say that I am a fan, a Janeite.

When Kurt and I met, one of many things we bonded over was our mutual love of Austen’s writing. Of course, when our move to England came up, we knew we’d do a lot of literary tourism.

Visiting places significant to Jane’s life and writing as well as filming locations for the many adaptations of her work are high on our (quite long) list. We’ve already visited Bath and the Jane Austen Centre.

Jane Austen Day Trip

Just over 50 miles from our home is Jane Austen’s House Museum. It is the home where Jane spent the last eight years of her life. Jane’s brother, Edward, owned it as part of his inherited estate at nearby Chawton House. He gave the house to Jane, her sister (Cassandra) and their mother to live in. As devoted Janeites, we had to visit.

We made the day trip on a beautiful spring Sunday. We were enchanted from the moment we entered the village. The village is still small and has several thatched-roof cottages and other homes that clearly date to the time when Jane was a resident.

We parked and walked along the lane between Jane’s modest final home and her brother’s grand home. Sheep grazed in the fields and birds sang. It wasn’t hard to imagine that we were walking with Jane Austen.

Jane Austen House Museum

The first thing you see when you enter the museum is the donkey cart that Mrs. Austen and her daughters used to visit friends and go shopping.

Next is the original bakehouse where the Austen ladies’ maid baked pies and washed the household’s laundry. It’s quite a reminder to be grateful for modern conveniences (I wouldn’t mind a maid though).

The beautifully maintained garden is a delight to walk through, although it probably looks nothing like it did in Jane’s time. With no record of what it looked like then, the museum simply designed a delightful spot for visitors to sit and enjoy nature. They ensured that the flowers, trees and shrubs are all varieties that would have been familiar to Jane and her family.

Stepping into the kitchen; however, is a step back in time. It features an enormous brick fireplace where the Austen ladies’ cook prepared their meals. In here, the museum keeps a collection of ladies’ bonnets and gentlemen’s hats for visitors to try. Of course, we had to take a selfie sporting those.

Walking With Jane Austen
Regency bonnet and hat

In the years since Jane’s family lived there, the house has had different uses with accompanying changes to its layout. Originally, the kitchen was detached from the main house. It’s attached now but still has a separate entrance.

The museum has returned the house as much as possible to the configuration from Jane’s time, but the main entrance is no longer where it was. Instead, visitors enter through the drawing room.

The friendly docent greeted us and invited us to sign the guestbook. She couldn’t wait to tell us everything she knew about the room. As enthusiastic as she was, we may have overwhelmed her with our enthusiasm for all things Austen. And, I’m pretty sure the husband of the other couple in the room thought we were ridiculous (to put it as one of Jane’s characters might). It was clear that their visit to the museum wasn’t his idea.

Walking With Jane Austen
Rev. Austen’s bookcase and the reproduction wallpaper in the drawing room

In the drawing room, the museum put up wallpaper reproduced from the pattern that was on the walls when Jane lived there. This room also features Mr. Austen’s mahogany bookcase from their home at Steventon Rectory, where Jane grew up. That bookcase was a fixture in Jane’s life.

Next is the vestibule, which was the main entrance during Jane’s time. Now, it houses a small collection of Jane’s original letters. They are hard to read due both to writing style and size. Paper was expensive and not readily available at the time, so people used it to its fullest leaving almost no margin and writing very small.

Jane’s Writing Table

Walking With Jane Austen
Jane’s writing table

One of the highlights of our visit was the dining room, which is glorious. Jane’s writing table is here to admire but understandably separated from visitors by a plexiglass partition. It’s like they know we’d want to sit down and pose for a picture like we’re writing at it. I wonder how many people were able to do that before they put up the partition.

The dining room also houses other artifacts from Jane’s time, including pieces of the Wedgewood dinner service her brother, Edward, purchased. Jane would have used these dishes when dining with her brother’s family.

One corner of the dining room is a tea cupboard that Jane kept the key to. Inside it is a teapot featuring the Austen family crest and believed to have been Cassandra’s.

The final room downstairs is a reading room filled with versions of Jane’s published novels. It was fun identifying the titles of her works in Polish, German, Spanish and other languages we didn’t recognize.

Up the very creaky stairs, we found the bedroom Jane that shared with Cassandra. At this point, the experience of walking in Jane’s footsteps overwhelmed me, and I had to take a moment to do a little happy dance. The other visitors clearly weren’t as excited as I was, but I didn’t care.

The rest of the upstairs houses a collection of Austen family memorabilia. This includes quite a few items that belonged to her two brothers, Francis and Charles, who had successful careers in the Royal Navy. Francis rose to the rank of Admiral of the Fleet, while Charles was a Rear Admiral.

Among the treasures particular to Jane’s life are some of her jewelry, a light shawl she wore, and a beautiful quilt handsewn by Jane, Cassandra and Mrs. Austen.

The museum is fairly small, but we spent almost two hours taking it all in. After lunch at the pub across the street, we walked to Chawton House.

Chawton House

The four-hundred-year-old house is worth a visit, but it’s a very different experience than the museum. The docents are just as friendly and informative, but the house itself has a varied life. It also serves as a library of early English women writers and literature.

Little remains from the time that Edward Austen and his family lived here and maintenance of the house has been inconsistent in the years since. But, the house itself is worth seeing and it contains some interesting art and artifacts and its grounds feature pretty English gardens.

Jane, Cassandra and Mrs. Austen dined frequently with Edward and his family here. In the dining room, there’s a portrait of Edward and a child’s outfit thought to have been his.

St. Nicholas Church

Part of the estate and adjacent to the house is the church where Jane’s family attended Sunday services. It’s a beautiful little church with stained glass windows. A few Austen family members have served as its priest over the years. Its graveyard is the final resting place for Cassandra and Mrs. Austen.

We both thoroughly enjoyed our day trip to visit a piece of Jane Austen’s life and walk where she walked. It’s a simple country house in a small village, but for a time, it was her world and I’m so glad that we were able to visit it.

That bookcase of classic books from my grandmother’s house was instrumental in launching my lifelong love of reading and literature. My mother inherited it from grandma when I was in high school, and six years ago, she gave it to me.

Jane Austen’s Bath

Royal Crescent, Jane Austen's Bath

Bath is either a three-hour drive or a 20-minute drive followed by a 90-minute train ride from our house. We opted for the train ride four our visit to Jane Austen’s Bath.

After getting up early on a cold Saturday morning in January, we drove to the station in the dark. We parked in a nearly empty lot, and then boarded the Great Western Railway to Reading where we switched to the high-speed train that would take us to Bath. We arrived at nine-thirty in the morning to a city that was just starting to come to life.

There’s a lot to see and do in Bath, and we wanted to fit as much in as possible so I had created an agenda for our day. We left the train station and went next door to the bus station and hopped on a bus to get to Royal Crescent Park.

Royal Crescent

Royal Crescent, Jane Austen's Bath

The bus dropped us off a block below the park. We walked up the public footpath between the houses and through a car park. At the top, we emerged to a splendid view of Royal Crescent (above). We walked to the western end to begin our walk along the length of the Crescent. People were out, but we were mostly alone as we walked along admiring the Georgian architecture.

The Circus, Bath, England
The Circus, Bath

At the end of Royal Crescent, we walked the short block to The Circus, a circle of Georgian homes around a park. Adjacent to The Circus are the Bath Assembly Rooms. They weren’t open yet, so I took a picture of the front of the building, and we continued on to the Jane Austen Centre.

Jane Austen Centre

The city was fully alive by this time, so we had to wait our turn for the official greeter at the door. The Centre itself is a thoroughly delightful tourist trap. The building itself has no relation to the Austen family, although Jane did stay at a home up the street during her first visit to Bath.

Jane Austen Centre, Bath, most photographed man in Bath
The most photographed man in Bath and Lynnette in front of the Jane Austen Centre

The Centre houses few items that date to Jane Austen’s time but many reproductions used in film adaptations of her books. Everyone working there was dressed and in character as someone from one of Austen’s novels. Our tour guide, “Mr. Wickham, please don’t hold that against me,” was entertaining and informative. Now, that’s a job I would love to have in retirement.

After our tour and a browse of the gift shop, we were getting hungry for lunch. Although the Jane Austen Centre has a tea room, we decided to have lunch at the Assembly Rooms. Walking back, we passed the home where Jane stayed with her aunt during her first visit to the city in 1797.

Bath Assembly Rooms

Lunch was tea and cheese sandwiches and a shared piece of carrot cake for dessert in the cafe at Bath Assembly Rooms. We looked at the rest of Assembly Rooms before and after lunch and enjoyed taking photos with almost no one else around. January seemed to be a good time to go to visit Jane Austen’s Bath.

It was almost magical to be in the rooms we’ve seen on screen so many times. Kurt refused to dance a country dance with me, but it still felt like we were truly in Jane Austen’s Bath.

From the Assembly Rooms we walked through the city to Pulteney Bridge to take in the view of the bridge over the River Avon. That’s where we started encountering the crowds and about when we started encountering protesters.

River Avon, Bath
River Avon, Bath

We crossed the street and walked through the Guildhall Market, the oldest shopping venue in Bath, to reach Bath Abbey. The market itself was interesting and I bought a souvenir tea towel for half the price we saw at any of the tourist hot spots.

Bath Abbey

After leaving the Guildhall, we crossed the street to avoid a group of Brexit protesters and walked the short distance to the Abbey. It is majestic, beautiful and old, and it was crowded. We photographed a few unique features including a dusty American flag with only 48 stars but didn’t spend a great deal of time there. I hate to say it, but once you’ve seen a few dozen grand abbeys, churches and cathedrals, they lose some of their charm.

Although, I did wonder if Jane ever attended services here when she was in Bath.

Roman Baths

The Roman Baths are next door so we headed over and were relieved to find the ticket line was short. That was the last easy thing about our visit. From the moment we left the ticket counter, there were people everywhere and most of them seemed blissfully unaware that other people were also trying to move through and see the Roman Baths.

We navigated around groups blocking access to the baths from the ticket hall. At the first area inside the baths, I was asked to move so someone could take a photo of their friend sprawled across the sign describing what was in that area of the baths. I stepped aside so they could get their photo and then moved back so that I could see the baths. Again, I was tapped on the shoulder and asked to move so another member of their group could be photographed in the same Instagram pose.

I rolled my eyes and we moved on. About ten minutes later, when we were on the opposite side of the terrace, and that same group of tourists was still taking photos and monopolizing that same area. I stopped and posed to make sure I was in the background of at least one of their photos (#passiveaggressivephotobomb).

We moved through the rest of the baths amid a crush of people. Some areas were worse than others because of the layout of the ancient structure. Before long, we had both reached our maximum tolerance for crowds and hurried through the rest. Well, we hurried as much as we could with people stopping and standing in the middle of the path blocking anyone from getting through.

The Pump Room

After catching our breath outside, we decided to channel Jane Austen and have tea in The Pump Room. While we waited for a table, we observed a group of Anonymous-styled vegan protesters outside the restaurant. Who knew Bath was a hotbed of protesting?

We enjoyed a lovely Beau Nash-style cream tea. It included some of the best salmon we’ve ever had and of course, scones with clotted cream and jam.

The Pump Room, Jane Austen, Bath, England
The Pump Room

We especially enjoyed the pianist playing a mix of classics and modern pop. It became an impromptu game of Name That Tune. We recognized Abba, Andrew Lloyd Weber, and Disney songs. I wasn’t the only one singing along. After a while, a violinist and cellist joined the pianist for more delightful and surprising tunes. We can’t recommend The Pump Room highly enough for a meal or afternoon tea. Everything about our experience was excellent, even if it didn’t exactly feel like Jane Austen’s Bath.

Bath Buns

After tea, we headed to Sally Lunn’s for one of those famous Bath buns (who doesn’t need a snack right after tea?). If you haven’t heard, Sally Lunn’s is where Huguenot Sally Lunn created the first Bath Bun in Georgian Bath. It’s in one of the oldest houses in Bath. We shared an amazing lemon curd bun and coffee in the cozy ground floor dining room.

Admiral Lord Nelson's Bath home

We had a little time left before our return train, so we walked to the bridge below Pulteney and took photos of the city in the fading light. Then, the short walk to the train station gave us an unexpected treat when we came upon Admiral Lord Nelson’s former home.

Unfortunately, our train ride back did not go as smoothly as the trip out. Our train was delayed by a signal failure and the same failure caused our connecting train to be canceled. We had an impromptu dinner at Reading Station before another train was put into service, and we were home before eight that evening.

Pulteney Bridge and River Avon

It was a full day and although we did everything we planned and a little more, we still haven’t seen everything there is to see. It’s a wonderful day trip that we’ll be making again, and we recommend it. We will definitely make another visit to Jane Austen’s Bath.

If you’re visiting London, the high-speed train to Bath departs frequently from Paddington Station, doesn’t require a change in Reading and still takes only 90 minutes. It’s worth the trip.

Visit Bath Online or Plan a Trip: