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West Street, Rye was home to several notable
 Rye Castle Museum  Art and Literature      writers over the years. American-born Henry
 Rye Castle Museum                          James, author of literary classics The Portrait of
                                            a Lady and Turn of the Screw, lived in the house
 The Ypres Tower  Rye and Winchelsea both have long  for 18 years and entertained many eminent
     associations with art and literature, inspiring  figures of the day including Rudyard Kipling
 The Ypres Tower                            and Ford Maddox Ford.
     the many great artists and writers that either
     lived or spent time in the towns. One of the  After James’ death in 1916, the house became
     most celebrated was Flemish Baroque artist Sir  the home of brothers A.C. and E.F. Benson, the
     Anthony van Dyck, who made several detailed  latter achieving fame for his series of Mapp and
     drawings of Rye and became the leading court  Lucia novels. More recently, Rumer Godden, the
     painter in England.                    Indian-born novelist and biographer, author of
     J.M.W. Turner, one of the greatest masters of  Black Narcissus, A Kindle of Kittens and The
     British watercolour landscape painting, took  Diddakoi lived at Lamb House between 1967
     inspiration from the area’s land and seascapes,  and 1974.
     as did the influential American-born artist  Between 1923 and 1939, Jeake’s House on
     James Whistler.                        Mermaid Street was home to Conrad Aiken,
     Also the renowned Edward Burra not only lived  an American Pulitzer Prize-winning poet. Aiken’s
     in Rye but was given his early art classes in Rye  daughter, Joan, was born in the house and went
     by Miss Bradley in 1921 when he was just 16.  on to become the celebrated children’s author
     His good friend the Surrealist Painter and War  of The Wolves of Willoughby Chase and other
     Artist Paul Nash also lived in and around Rye,  popular stories.
     Iden and Dymchurch.                    John Fletcher, the noted Jacobean playwright
 John Breeds’ gibbet                        was born in Fletcher’s House in front of
     An artists’ colony was established towards the
     end of the 19th century and Lamb House in  St. Mary’s Church. A contemporary of William
                                            Shakespeare, Fletcher succeeded the Bard as
 The Ypres Tower was built about 1249 to  across the Marsh and view what was once one  house playwright for the King’s men. Between
 defend Rye against attacks from across the  of the most important harbours in the country,  1928 and 1943, the poet and writer Radclyffe
 Channel and is the oldest secular building open  so important that Elizabeth I visited the town  Hall lived in several houses around town
 to the public in Rye. It is one of the highlights  in 1573 and called it Rye Royale. The Women’s  including the Grade 1 Listed King Charles in
 of this beautiful East Sussex Cinque Ports town  Tower is also open and you can see and hear  the High St. where in 1928 she published her
 with its enchanting cobbled streets, medieval  how Victorian women prisoners were kept.  best known work “The Well of Loneliness”.
 church and beautifully preserved historic  Rye Harbour, home of children’s writer Monica
 houses from medieval, Tudor and Georgian  The Tower is open daily (except Christmas Day),  Edwards, was fictionalised as Westling in her
 times. Rye is almost suspended in time and  April to October 10.30am to 5.00pm and  series of fifteen Romney Marsh novels and
 has a uniquely unhurried atmosphere.  November to March (weather permitting)  many of the Lone Pine stories created by the
 10.30am to 3.30pm. In all cases last entry is  children’s adventure writer Malcolm Saville
 The Ypres Tower has served the town as a  30 minutes before closing. A virtual tour  were set in Rye. Romney Marsh itself was the
 castle, private dwelling, Court Hall, gaol and  is available.  inspirational location for Doctor Syn, the
 finally now as a Museum. Inside you can see  smuggler hero of novels by Russell Thorndike.
 where murderer John Breeds was held prisoner,  Please see the website at
 and what happened to him, where prisoners  www.ryemuseum.co.uk for further details
 were chained and the cells in which they were  or email info@ryemuseum.co.uk
 incarcerated. You can see a smugglers’ lantern
 and a relief model that shows the changes to
 the Romney Marsh coastline and the defences
 against Napoleon.  A smugglers’
 lantern
 Visitors can try on medieval helmets, feel
 the weight of medieval weapons and see the
 uniforms of the Cinque Ports Volunteers.
 From the Tower balcony you can look out
 photos: Rye Castle Museum
 10 | DISCOVER RYE BAY 2021                               facebook.com/visitryebay | 11
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