WEDDINGTON CASTLE - An Online History
Other Halls and Castles Around Nuneaton -
Griff House Click on thumbnail for larger image. Scroll
down for more images and the history of this building.
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Watercolour of Griff House
Patty Townsend 1893 (from "George Eliot: her early home"') |
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Griff House c.1908
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Colour postcard of Griff House, dated 1911
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Exterior of Griff House 1900s*
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Colour postcard of Griff House
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Colour postcard of Griff House
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Griff House in the 1960s*
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Griff House in the 1960s*
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Front door of Griff house*
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Interior of Griff House*
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Back door of Griff House*
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Postcard of Griff House
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Griff House in 1905
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Griff House, as featured in The Graphic Illustrated in 1881
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Griff House in 1906
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Group of ladies outside Griff House, 1907
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Grounds of Griff House 1900s*
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Griff House as a pub restaurant in the present day
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Authoress George Eliot (born: Mary Ann Evans), who lived at Griff House 1820-41
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The statue of George Eliot in Nuneaton's town centre
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A painting of the statue of George Eliot in Nuneaton's town centre
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Griff Hollows
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Griff Hollows, near Nuneaton
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Griff House - early colour postcard
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Griff House - early colour postcard
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Pencil Drawing by Cicely Pickering
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The history of Griff House and the surrounding
hamlet of Griff are inextricably linked in with that of their most famous
resident, authoress George Eliot (born Mary Ann Evans). Born in 1819 at South Farm, Mary Ann Evans
grew up at Griff House, near Nuneaton in Warwickshire, where she lived from
1820-41. The family moved here when she was 4 or 5 months old. She referred to
it as "..my old, old home" (Gordon Haight's George Eliot's Letters, Volume 3,
p.224).
The property itself remained in the Evans family for the rest of
the century and is still there, now the Griff House Hotel, a comfortable Travel
Inn
Her father Robert worked for the wealthy Newdigate family at nearby Arbury Hall.
Now a restaurant and pub, Griff is very accessible for the interested visitor.
The Patty Townsend watercolour above (from ‘George Eliot: her early home’,
1893) shows a largely unchanged view despite the considerable extensions. The
childhood of Maggie and Tom Tulliver of Dorlcote Mill in "The Mill on the
Floss" is largely an autobiographical account of incidents in the early
lives of Mary Ann and Isaac Evans, and was partly set in the ‘trimly-kept,
comfortable dwelling house as old as the elms and chestnuts that shelter
it’...with its ‘great attic that ran under the old high-pitched roof’ of Griff
House. The attic was ‘Maggie’s favourite retreat on a wet day, when the weather
was not too cold; here she fretted out all her ill-humours, and talked aloud to
the worm-eaten floors and the worm-eaten shelves, and the dark rafters festooned
with cobwebs’.
The round pond, between the car park and the A444, was the original Round
Pool of "The Mill on the Floss" where Maggie and Tom used to fish. ‘No
one knew how deep it was; and it was mysterious, too, that it should be almost a
perfect round’. The phrase ‘George Eliot Country’ assumes a rural setting.
But Griff, though surrounded by farms and countryside, also had thriving
industries on its doorstep. Across the fields at Collycroft was a worsted mill
employing several hundred workers. On the fields where the imposing Bermuda
Industrial Estate has been built were numerous old and new mines, and the nearby
canal carried boats full of coal and stone. In many ways the area was in at the
birth of the Industrial Revolution.
To the excitement of Mary Ann and Isaac two stage coaches passed Griff House
daily, on the route from Birmingham to Stamford, possibly recalled by George
Eliot in her description in "Felix Holt, the Radical" of ‘the unfailing
yet otherwise meteoric apparition of the pea-green Tally-ho or the yellow
Independent’.
To
access a "Self-Guided Tour of
George Eliot Country" click here. You will need Adobe Acrobat* to access
this file.
*If you do not have this
you can download the software for free by clicking the image below (you must be
connected to the Internet to access this site and download the software). When
you have downloaded the software you can return to this page by clicking the
'back' button on your browser.

Photos marked * are © Warwickshire County
Council, 2003


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