In 1792, Percy Bysshe Shelley was born at Field Place, a broad-fronted country house set
on an estate/working farm in Sussex. As a child, Shelley freely roamed its several farms
and heavily wooded grounds. Although Field Place was "improved" by successive
owners over the years, the house has now been meticulously restored to its
eighteenth-century condition by Kenneth Prichard Jones, a past president of the
Keats-Shelley Memorial Association. The house is composed of several architectural
elements (for a thorough analysis of the architecture, see K. Prichard Jones, "The
Influence of Field Place and its Surroundings upon Percy Bysshe Shelley" in the Keats-Shelley
Review). The original thirteenth-century medieval section (to the upper left of the
house in this aerial view, courtesy of K. Prichard Jones) held the kitchen in
Shelleys time.
There is also a fourteenth-century central addition (seen here between the two chimneys in the ground view and at the end of the front walk in the aerial view, again courtesy of K. Prichard Jones),
and a late sixteenth/early seventeenth-century century brick wing which holds the room in which Shelley was born.
The views from the house are lovely and open, partly due to such eighteenth-century
landscape innovations as the haha fence.
Although we did not have access to the interior of the house, a watercolor of the drawing room done by Elizabeth Shelley in 1856 gives a good sense of its light and airy quality.
To the north of the house is a lovely walled garden,
and to the northwest is the stable area; here stands the tree under which young Master
Shelley pretended to play cards with the groom.
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Further on is the pond where the farm horses would stop for a drink after a long day's
work.