The campaign to save Keats’s house began in
1903 when the Keats-Shelley Memorial Association was formed. The house
was bought in 1906, the collections were amassed, mostly through gift,
between then and April 1909 when it was opened to the public. Given
spontaneously in the spirit of good-will and enthusiasm that the
project engendered, the collections would be impossible to bring
together today. They include paintings, sculpture, relics, manuscripts
and a substantial reference library, one of the finest
of Romantic
literature in Europe.
Visitor numbers have grown steadily, from a
few hundred each
year to more than 25,000. Our visitors are of all
ages, all nationalities and all walks of life. They love this museum,
which
is also a memorial to the other young Romantic poets who spent
time in Italy, Shelley, Byron and Leigh Hunt. As our visitors’ books
record, for many it is the fulfilment of a lifetime’s dream; for others
it is a serendipitous discovery. We also host hundreds of school groups
each year, most of them Italian.
Historic houses need a lot of
upkeep. Over the last few years we have carried through a
programme of essential maintenance to the House, including structural
work, a new roof and repainting of the façade. As a British museum
overseas we are not eligible for UK public funding, and we are almost
entirely dependent on our own entrance fees and on the generosity of
individuals.
We celebrated our centenary year in 2009 and we now
turn our thoughts to the future. Our plan is to safeguard the House and
its unique collections, for a further hundred years, and
to adapt
it sensitively to the needs of the twenty-first century. We
aim to double the museum’s floor-space to create an exhibition area,
shop, ticket office, bathroom and tea-room. We also plan to turn our
large and unused 18th century basement into archive storage.
The
history of our House in Rome is extraordinary; the life of this place
of pilgrimage and learning has always been in the hands of people like
you and me. They came together at its inception, and
at times of
difficulty, during its first one hundred years; they guaranteed its
survival and made it what it is today. We now hope, with your help, to
build on the successes of our first one hundred years and to secure the
place of John Keats’s last months for the next.
The estimated cost of our building projects is £237,000 (at current exchange rates €265,000/$384,000). If you would like to see the Keats-Shelley House safely into its next one hundred years please visit our donation page. All donations, large or small, are greatly appreciated as we continue in our commitment to protect this beautiful and tranquil corner of Rome.

