L&T Archive 1998-2003

George Austen's finances
In Response To: Gloomy financial propects ()

] After George Austen died in 1804, Mrs. Austen and her two daughters suffered privation.

Jane Austen's family seems to have been plagued by financial difficulties during her father's lifetime as well as after his death. Here are some telling figures from the Park Honan biography I'm reading:

'A study of his [George Austen's] accounts at Hoare's Bank shows that he had to borrow a large sum of £865 from his brother-in-law James Leigh Perrot in 1768, and could pay back only £20, partly because his sister needed money. Leigh Perrot must have cancelled the debt in 1772, when George asked for another loan of £300 [Although I'm not sure why the new loan means the earlier unpaid loan was cancelled?]... [H]e paid only £12 in 1777, £12 again in each of the years 1780 and 1782, and just before facing fees for his daughters' schooling and Frank's outfitting at naval school, paid off his £300 loan.'

Messages In This Thread

M.T. The Marriage of George and Cassandra Austen
What she saw in him...
Wit
And easygoing
Resilient
Chemistry can be pretty powerful...
Quite possible
Grand life, married life...
That's interesting, Barbara
Providing a happy childhood?
Am I Understanding?
Not exactly
handsome
A silhouette...
So
Age Difference
Boldness
Not at all
Marrying down
Gloomy financial propects
George Austen's finances