Bath and Jane Austen
Bath & Jane Austen
Has the ghost of Jane Austen has ever been spotted in Bath?
Born on this day, 16th December 1775
When Jane Austen made Bath her home, from 1801 to 1806, the city was a thriving spa resort, popular with fashionable society.
The city provided inspiration for two of her six published novels, Northanger Abbey and Persuasion
There are four houses in Bath that Jane Austen lived in during her active association with the city—an association that lasted approximately six years.
In the summer of 1799 she stayed with her mother at 13 Queen Square for a month.
A year later her father, the Rev. George Austen, gave up his living at Steventon in Hampshire, and decided to retire to Bath.
A suitable house was found at 4 Sydney Place, and the family stayed there until the expiry of the lease three years later; a bronze tablet on the wall of the house identifies it as Miss Austen’s main home in the city.
A short lease was then taken on 27 Green Park Buildings, where Jane’s father died in January, 1805; and afterwards Mrs Austen and her daughters moved to 25 Gay Street.
Little more than a year later, in the summer of 1806, they left Bath permanently moving first to Clifton and Southampton, and finally, in 1809, to the little village of Chawton in Hampshire, where Jane spent eight happy and productive years before her death in 1817.
She never liked Bath.
Some time after leaving the city, she wrote to her sister Cassandra: ‘It will be two years tomorrow since we left Bath for Clifton, with what happy feelings of escape’.
Perhaps she was mirroring her own feelings when, in Northanger Abbey, she has Isabella Thorpe confiding to Catherine Morland: ‘I get so immoderately sick of Bath; your brother and I were agreeing this morning that though it is vastly well to be here for a few weeks, we would not live here for millions’.
Yet, in spite of her obvious dislike of the city, the major parts of two of her novels—Northanger Abbey and Persuasion—are set in Bath, and the life she herself led there is perfectly reflected in the pages of both of them.
She died on 18 July 1817 (aged 41) and is buried at Winchester Cathedral.
Thoughts-
But did she ever return to Bath and has her ghost ever been spotted in any of these houses ? maybe, maybe not...
It would be interesting to know if any of the four addresses above have any paranormal activity, as she may not have liked the City very much, but she had a strong connection to it.
I have just noticed as I was looking for photos for this post, that I have actually been in no 13 Queen Square, as it was/ still is a solicitors office, and has been since 1833
None of the above houses have an entry on the Bath Historical directories, as they must have missed the census dates at the time they were there.
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Sources - Bath .co uk
Image - Istock - GeorgiosArt & Bath in Time
Grave - Lionel Bird - Pictures of England










