Fanny’s Route in England

  • 1752 Chapel Street, Kings Lynn, Norfolk

    Fanny’s birthplace

  • 1752–1760 84 High Street, Kings Lynn, Houghton Hall, Norfolk

    Family home and home of Walpoles – 3rd Earl of Orford a particular friend of Charles Burney

  • 1760-1770 Poland Street, London

    Family moved here from Kings Lynn

  • 1770-1774 Queen Square, London

    The family rented this house until problems with the lease arose

  • 1774-1790 – 35 St. Martin’s Street, Leicester Square, London

    Fanny lived here with her family

  • 1773 August-Sept. Teignmouth, Devon

    Fanny visits her half-sister Maria (daughter of Mrs Allen) and her new husband Martin Rishton

  • 1777 Barborne Lodge, Worcester

    Fanny visits her Burney cousins

  • 1777 Chessington Hall near Epsom, Surrey

    Fanny visits Samuel “Daddy” Crisp

  • 1778-1782 Streatham Park, Surrey

    Home of Mr and Mrs Thrale – Fanny and her father were regular visitors

  • May 1779 West Street, Brighton, Brighthelmstone, Sussex

    Home of Mr and Mrs Thrale.

  • 1780 Bath, Somerset

    Fanny visits with the Thrales

  • 1785 St. Albans Street, Windsor Castle Wall

    Mrs Delany, close friend of King George and Queen Charlotte, was given a small house by the King. Fanny stays with her

  • 1786 Windsor Castle, Queen’s Lodge

    Fanny becomes 2nd Mistress of the Robes to Queen Charlotte

  • February 1788 Westminster Hall, Houses of Parliament

    The opening of the trial of Warren Hastings at Westminster Hall, Houses of Parliament, which Fanny attends. She is staying at the Palace at Kew/ Richon with the Royal Family.

  • 1793 Norbury Park, Surrey

    Fanny visited the home of friends William and Frederica Locke

  • 1793 - Mickleham Surrey

    Fanny visits her sister Susanna Phillips’s home

  • 1793 Juniper Hall, Mickleham

    A group of French Constitutionalists lived here, including the Comte de Narbonne, the French Minister of War until March 1792, his friend Alexandre Piochard d’Arblay (formerly Adjutant-General to the Marquis de Lafayette) and Mme de Stael.

  • 1793 St. Michael’s Church, Mickleham

    Fanny and Alexandre d’Arblay marry on 28 July 1793 ( there was a further Catholic ceremony at the chapel of the Sardinian Ambassador in London on 30 July)

  • 1793 – 1802 – Camilla Cottage, West Humble

    Land given to the d’Arblays by Mr Locke on which they built their cottage.

  • 1815 D'Arblays Return to England

    – 23 Great Stanhope St., Bath, Somerset – with husband

             – Walcot Churchyard, Bath – husband and later FB and son all buried here

             – 11 Bolton Street, Berkeley Square, London – after the death of her husband, Fanny returned to London

  • 1824 - 1827

    -Camden Town Chapel – son, Alexander the Perpetual Curate

             – Chapel of Ely, High Holborn – where her son, Alexander was minister

Fanny’s Route in France

  • 1802 - 1812 Joigny

    Paris, Joigny – husband’s family

  • 1815 19th March

    Fanny leaves Paris with Princess d’Henin to escape the arrival of Napoleon from Elba – le Bourget – Senlis – Roye – Amiens – Arras – Brussels 

  • 1815 18th June

    Battle of Waterloo

  • 1815 19th July

    Fanny leaves Brussels to go to her wounded husband in Trevès. After, Fanny and husband return to Paris.

  • 1815 18th October

    D’Arblays return to England