63 Portland Place

What did Frances Hodgson Burnett do at 63 Portland Place?

By Legacy Team·

Hodgson Burnett at 63 Portland Place Standing before this elegant Georgian townhouse on one of Westminster's most prestigious addresses, you're looking at the London home where Frances Hodgson Burnett experienced the height of her literary fame and social influence during the Edwardian era. It was here, in this substantial Portland Place residence, that the writer—already celebrated for her phenomenal success with *A Little Princess* and preparing to create *The Secret Garden*—entertained London's most prominent figures while managing her transatlantic life between England and America.

The drawing rooms of number 63 became a salon of sorts, where Burnett held court as one of the most celebrated women writers of her time, her reputation as a brilliant storyteller drawing artists, intellectuals, and society's elite through its doors. This address represents the pinnacle of her British establishment, a physical anchor to her years of triumph when she was not merely a writer but a cultural force whose imaginative tales had captivated millions—and from this very house, she would continue to craft the magical worlds that still enchant readers today.

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The commemorative plaque at 63 Portland Place