Sunday, June 29, 2025

Jane Austen Festival moves to Cincinnatti: Location changes but traditions remain with hot temps, hot tea and a sizzling Mr. Darcy!

Jane Austen Festival moves from Louisville to Cincinnatti in 2025



Despite a new location, a new host and a few year's hiatus, the Jane Austen Festival traditions continued this weekend with hot temps, hot tea and a sizzling Mr. Darcy - and just in time for the 250th anniversary of the celebrated author's birth.


Rachel, Barb & Cara sharing old and new Austen traditions at Heritage Musuem



My daughter, Rachel, and I began attending the Jane Austen Festival, originally hosted by the JASNA (Jane Austen Society of North America) Louisville Chapter in 2009 - it was their second and our first - and we watched as the weekend event grew and prospered.  


Afternoon tea in Louisville, Festival 2010

                  
                     Tea set up at Heritage Village 2025



Rachel and I made it our own tradition for a decade, traveling south to Louisville every July to enjoy the events the Louisville Chapter assembled at the historic Locust Grove estate. We reserved our afternoon tea, shopped the stores in "Meryton" and took our seat under the big tent for featured speakers and, what came to be one of our favorite features, "Dressing Mr. Darcy".


Welcome Reception, 2025. Prior to 2019, Barb & Rachel missed only one festival in 2011 (but "improvised" in England).

(The only Louisville festival we skipped was 2011, when I joined Rachel in England that same summer for a week during her study abroad and we conducted our own Jane Austen excursion in Chawton and Winchester. With a bit of a twist, we still kept the JA July tradition.)

Over the years, we met up with some impressive guest speakers, including authors, John Mullans and Jo Baker, as well as Patrick Stokes, a direct descendant of Jane Austen's youngest brother, Charles.

So, we were eagerly awaiting the revived Jane Austen Festival for 2025, not exactly sure what awaited us at Heritage Village in Sharonville, a suburb of Cincinnati.   We were keenly aware, however, of  the delightfully personal advantages for us at this new venue. Not only did this location reduce our travel time by two hours, but it is a most  convenient ten minute drive from the home of our dear sister/aunt, Cara, who was both our host and our guest for the weekend.

Together, we journeyed to Friday night's "Welcome Reception".  An earlier post on the event's website stated that many tickets sent after registration were not downloadable and, in lieu of a paper receipt,  a list of names would be used for checking in guests. That was a tip off that the entry process may be a bit slow. And, predictably, it was. 


Rachel and Cara sampling Austen blends from Churchill's fine teas.

But once past the contained chaos, we helped ourselves to a charcuterie cup, a sweet treat and a beverage of choice and found our way outside to Meryton.  Here we were given an advanced, exclusive opportunity to meet with the Austen-themed vendors. We sampled and purchased the Jane Austen collection of teas from Churchill's (a future blog story!) while "window-shopping" through a sea of white-tented storefronts. 


Brian Cushing, aka "Mr. Darcy", was a highlight (as always) of the Austen Festival.



Saturday, we returned for the full-on Jane Austen Festival and, after a few misguided directions and another slightly confusing check-in process, we were at last within the Historic Village and thrilled to see our Mr. Darcy was the first presenter at the Somerset Church, a small, but (bonus!) air-conditioned building at the end of the tiny town.

Brian Cushing, who we've followed throughout the JA Festivals, has been demonstrating the art of dressing and undressing Mr. Darcy for almost twenty years. His talks never disappoint, but this weekend's address hit it out of the park - or should I say, a hearty thwack of the mallet through a Pall Mall wicket? Cushing's dissertation was as layered as his gentleman's attire which included hat, jacket, waistcoat, breeches, stockings, boots and a cravat tied to the neck of the shirt.


Mr. Darcy 2009
Miss G. and Mr. D, 2009












And, of that last item it was the women who made the many shirts of the gentleman's wardrobe - which prompted a question from an astute participant in the back. She asked if this person would be a "gentlelady" or a house servant.

Cushing noted the shirts were typically made by the ladies of the house (although staff could certainly be given the task). He continued to explain that sewing was a skill and an occupation of accomplished ladies, adding that after King Henry VIII removed his first wife, Catherine from his palace, she continued to make shirts in exile. (That's a following a thread of thought, literally.)



Jane Austen Festival guests at Heritage Village


Back in the Village, we toured a number of homes with varying degrees of Austen connections and insight and took in one more presentation at the church where the air conditioning was the true star. Though the Festival moved to another state, weatherwise, southern Ohio has much in common with Louisville and we were once again reacquainted with the region's toasty temps of the season. 

But, as mentioned above, it's part of the traditional trio: hot temps, hot tea and, oh, so sizzling, Mr. Darcy. 


Jane Austen Festival in Cincinnatti:  We'll be back in 2026 with fan!


And, as for a few bumps in the country roads of this year's Jane Austen Festival, we attribute those to "growing pains" for a new venue, a new host and an extended break. We look forward to Heritage Village's Jane Austen Festival, 2026 and we'll remember to pack a fan in our reticule to keep cool from all the Festival's essential elements!




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