This past summer I was fortunate enough to visit Bath for three days to do some sight seeing and soak up the local color for the Regency historicals I am writing. At the time I was actually finishing up a story for the Yuletide Happily Ever After II anthology called It Happened at Christmas. And where do you think the story is set?
Bath!
So I walked all over the town. I got to walk to the Royal Crescent, (and take a picture of No. 12 where the hero of my story lived), I visited the Jane Austen Center and spent a lovely afternoon there (writing with quill and ink, no less!), but my biggest thrill was visiting the Upper Assembly Rooms and especially the ballroom! As I walked in I was aware as never before how close in time we are to the past. I was looking at the same walls, the same chandeliers, the same alcoves as Jane Austen did two centuries ago. The same room I wrote about and mycharacters danced in two nights ago. I must admit I had a bit of a fan-girl moment—for a room!
The Upper Assembly Rooms began to be a “thing” in Georgian England. They were completed by John Wood in 1771 with the building shaped like a huge U, the ball room on one side, connected by an octagonal room, with the tea room opposite and an octagonal room connecting them on one end. Unfortunately, the Upper Assembly Rooms were pretty much passe by the time the Regency came into bloom, although a lot of very fashionable folk still came to take the waters and see and be seen.
These rooms were the express domain the Master of Ceremonies, beginning with Mr. Richard “Beau” Nash. The Master of Ceremonies was in charge of running the balls each week, of which there were two, one on Tuesday (Dress Ball) and one on Thursday (Fancy Ball), and overseeing the card games several night each week. The Master of Ceremonies would also introduce young gentlemen to young ladies for the purposes of facilitating their dancing together.
The Tea Room was used as a refreshment room, where the most popular beverage was, in fact, tea. Concerts were held there on Wednesdays. The Octagonal Room was for cards and gambling.
The Bath Season ran from October through early June, at which point everyone who had a country estate retired to it to escape the heat.
I hope you’ve enjoyed my little tour down memory lane, walking through Bath an soaking up the history.
Showing posts with label Bath. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bath. Show all posts
Wednesday, November 6, 2019
Thursday, December 24, 2015
Using Stately Homes for Book Settings
©By Cheryl Bolen
Yes, many of the British stately homes run to more than 200
rooms and some to over 300 rooms. And because I write a lot of novels about the
English aristocracy (both historical and contemporary), I have made it a point
to tour as many of these aristocratic homes as possible on my frequent travels
to England.
One of my favorite of these stately homes is Chatsworth
House, family seat of the Dukes of Devonshire, nestled in the foothills of
Derbyshire's Peak District. The "house" has 297 rooms! It's the one I
use in the banner on my blog, Cheryl's Regency Ramblings, www.cherylsregencyramblings.wordpress.com.
Chatsworth House |
Knole, in Kent, is home to the Sackvilles, cousins of the
first Queen Elizabeth, and was once home tothe Dukes of Dorset. This rambling
"house" has 356 rooms, 52 sets of stairs, and seven courtyards!
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Knole |
I have toured more than 30 of these homes, and I add new
ones each trip my husband and I take to England. They make good fodder for the
fictional homes in my 20-plus books. While none of these homes is exactly
replicated in any of my novels, I do borrow from different houses I've had the
pleasure of touring.
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Hever Castle |
My book which can most be identified with a particular
property is probably My Lord Wicked.
The abbey in which my not-so-wicked lord lived was somewhat modeled on Hever
Castle, the girlhood home of Anne Boleyn. Instead of the drawbridge at Hever,
my fictional abbey has a clock tower which was supposedly built to disguise the
abbey's former bell tower.
In my book Love in the Library (Brides of Bath#5) my heroine lives at Number 17 Royal Crescent in Bath. Here's a picture of me in front of one of the magnificent townhouses on Bath's Royal Cresent in June of 2013.
Cheryl Bolen in front of Bath's Royal Crescent |
If you'd like to see what a Georgian townhouse (of the
wealthy) looked like, you can tour Number 1 Royal Crescent in Bath. Or you can
see the photos of Number 1 here: https://plus.google.com/115605333815650580996/photos?hl=en
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