Trim Street, Bath

[12] Number 5, which is also known as General Wolfe's house, is a two-storey building with a parapet and rusticated quoins, built by Thomas Greenway.

General James Wolfe was staying in the house when William Pitt, the elder commanded him to lead an expedition to Quebec.

Jane Austen also lived in Trim Street, although her house is no longer there.

This was the Austen family's fourth address in Bath, each progressively cheaper and less desirable than the last.

[18] In 1809 the antiquarian Joseph Hunter, took up the post of Minister at the Chapel,[19] there he met and married Mary Hayward,[20] with whom he would have six children.