The Kilns

The Kilns is the residence that CS Lewis called home for several years. The estate once included a private park and pond. It’s located on the SE side of Oxford.

The Kilns, also known as C. S. Lewis House, is the house in RisinghurstOxford, England, where the author C. S. Lewis wrote all of his Narnia books and other classics. The house itself was featured in the Narnia books.[3] Lewis’s gardener at The Kilns, Fred Paxford, is said to have inspired the character of Puddleglum the Marsh-wiggle in The Silver Chair.

The Kilns was built in 1922 on the site of a former brickworks. The lake in the garden is a flooded clay pit. In 1930, The Kilns was bought by C. S. Lewis, his brother Warren Lewis, and Janie Moore. Maureen Dunbar, Janie Moore’s daughter, also lived there. C. S. Lewis wrote of the house: “I never hoped for the like”. Janie Moore was the mother of Lewis’s university friend Paddy Moore, who had been killed in the First World War.