Where Agatha Christie Dreamed Up Murder
The birthplace of Poirot and Marple welcomes visitors looking for clues to the best-selling novelist of all time
- By Joshua Hammer
- Photographs by Michael Freeman
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2011, Subscribe
On a crisp winter morning in Devon, England, sunlight streams through the floor-to-ceiling French windows of the manor house called Greenway, the secluded estate where Agatha Christie spent nearly every summer from 1938 until her death in 1976—and which opened to the public in February 2009. Gazing beyond a verdant lawn through bare branches of magnolia and sweet-chestnut trees, I glimpse the River Dart, glinting silver as it courses past forested hills. Robyn Brown, the house’s manager, leads me into the library. Christie’s reading chair sits by the window; a butler’s tray holds bottles of spirits; and a frieze depicting World War II battle scenes—incongruous in this tranquil country retreat—embellishes the cream-colored walls. It was painted in 1944 by Lt. Marshall Lee, a U.S. Coast Guard war artist billeted here with dozens of troops after the British Admiralty requisitioned the house. “The Admiralty came back after the war and said, ‘Sorry about the frieze in the library. We’ll get rid of it,’” Brown tells me. “Agatha said, ‘No, it’s a piece of history. You can keep it, but please get rid of the [14] latrines.’”
Agatha Christie was 48 years old in 1938, gaining fame and fortune from her prolific output of short stories and novels, one series starring the dandified Belgian detective Hercule Poirot, another centered on the underestimated spinster-sleuth Jane Marple. Christie’s life had settled into a comfortable routine: part of the year was spent at her house in Wallingford, near Oxford, and part on excavations in the deserts of Iraq and Syria with her second husband, archaeologist Max Mallowan. But Christie longed for a vacation refuge. That summer, she heard of a handsome Georgian manor house, built around 1792, going up for sale; it was set on 33 acres, 15 miles from her birthplace, the village of Torquay. For Christie, Greenway—reachable only by boat or down a narrow country lane one and a half miles from the nearest village of Galmpton—represented, as she wrote in her autobiography, “the ideal house, a dream house.” The estate’s owner, financially strapped by the Great Depression, offered it for just £6,000—the equivalent of about $200,000 today. Christie snapped it up.
Here, the author and playwright could escape from her growing celebrity and enjoy the company of friends and family: her only child, Rosalind Hicks; son-in-law Anthony Hicks; and grandson Mathew Prichard, whose father, Rosalind’s first husband, Hubert Prichard, had been killed in the 1944 Allied invasion of France. Greenway served as the inspiration for several scenes in Christie’s murder mysteries, including the Poirot novels Five Little Pigs (1942) and Dead Man’s Folly (1956).
After Christie died, at age 85, the estate passed to Hicks and her husband. Shortly before their own deaths in 2004 and 2005, respectively, the couple donated the property to Britain’s National Trust, the foundation that grants protected status to historic houses, gardens and ancient monuments and opens the properties to the public.
Brown recalls several meetings with the frail but alert 85-year-old Rosalind, whose failing health required her to move around the house by mobility scooter. At one of them, Brown broached the subject of Greenway’s future. “The sticking point for Rosalind was that she didn’t want us to create a tacky enterprise—the ‘Agatha Christie Experience,’” Brown told me. Indeed, Hicks first demanded that the house be stripped bare before she would donate it. “If we show the rooms empty, the house will have no soul,” Brown recalled telling Rosalind. “If we bring things in from outside, it will be contrived.” Brown proposed that the house be left “as though you and Anthony just walked out the door.” Eventually, Rosalind agreed.
In 2009, after a two-year, $8.6 million renovation—“the house was in terrible shape,” says Brown—Greenway opened to the public. During the first eight-month season, it attracted 99,000 visitors, an average of 500 a day, nearly double expectations. Today, Greenway offers an opportunity to view the intimate world of a reclusive literary master, who rarely gave interviews and shunned public appearances. “She was hugely shy, and this was her place of solitude, comfort and quiet,” Brown says. Greenway “represents the informal, private side of Agatha Christie, and we have striven to retain that atmosphere.”
Greenway’s success is the latest, most visible sign of the extraordinary hold that Agatha Christie continues to exert nearly 35 years after her death. Her 80 detective novels and 18 short-story collections, plus the romances written under the pseudonym Mary Westmacott, have sold two billion copies in more than 50 languages—making her by far the most popular novelist of all time. Her books sell four million copies annually and earn millions of dollars a year for Agatha Christie Limited, a private company of which 36 percent is owned by Mathew Prichard and his three children, and for Chorion Limited, the media company that bought a majority stake in 1998. A stream of dramatized Poirot and Miss Marple whodunits continue to appear as televised series. A new version of Murder on the Orient Express, starring David Suchet, who plays Poirot on public television in the United States, aired in this country last year. Meanwhile, Christie’s Mousetrap—a thriller centered on guests snowed in at a country hotel—is still in production at the St. Martins Theatre in London’s West End; the evening I saw it marked performance number 23,774 for the longest-running play in history.
Every year, tens of thousands of Christie’s admirers descend on Torquay, the Devon resort where the author spent her early years. They walk the seafront “Agatha Christie Mile” (“A Writer’s Formative Venue,”) that delineates landmarks of her life, from the Victorian pier, where the teenage Agatha roller-skated on summer weekends, to the Grand Hotel, where she spent her wedding night with her first husband, Royal Flying Corps aviator Archie Christie, on Christmas Eve 1914. The annual Christie Festival at Torquay draws thousands of devotees, who attend murder-mystery dinners, crime-writing workshops and movie screenings and have been known to dress as Hercule Poirot look-alikes.
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Comments (12)
I would love to have a place like this to hide away in and think up murder. She really was the all time Dame of crime.
Posted by cathy on June 26,2012 | 08:20 AM
I love good mystery writers and for me Agatha Christie is my favorite. Believe, I have read and seen all of her work. She has always captivated my sense of curiosity to the point where I would catalogue every word written and analyze them to the moment where I would say to myself this is whodunit. Sometimes, I would be right; however, most of the time I was wrong...she would throw me a curve. I have always enjoyed English mystery writers...now at my ripe age of 74 it still excites me when I can see something new on PBS. Thank you Smithsonian for this write up as I am one of your subscribers, who can literally say your magazine brings me much joy and keeps my curiosity alive to searching for something new to discover and learn.
Posted by Jeannine Forgues-Setterlund on August 22,2011 | 08:16 PM
The subtitle to this article would have us believe that both characters - Poirot and Marple - originated at Greenway. However, A. Christie used earnings from books written about those two characters to buy Greenway. Her original book - a Poirot - was written to prove to her sister that she could write a mystery her sister could not solve. And she did that while she was recovering from a "bad cold" (probably the flu).
Much time, lots of heartache, and financial woes spurred her writing on and that resulted in Greenway - not the other way around!
Her stories are timeless and I would rather watch one of her stories than anyother on TV today. And do.
Posted by J. White on July 2,2011 | 10:44 AM
Yes, it was a disappointment that the murderer in "The Murder of Roger Ackryod" was released. Spoiler.
But, otherwise the article was interesting.
Posted by Betty Norton on June 17,2011 | 09:26 AM
Your headline is slightly misleading. AC never wrote at Greenways. She went there to get away from writing
Posted by ian on June 6,2011 | 08:54 AM
Mr. Hammer (and Smithsonian webmaster),
Thank you for an engaging, informative article but I agree with other posters that the spoiler is problematic. Could you add a spoiler tag before it and put the text in white so it has to be highlighted to be viewed? I expect that doesn't conform to the Smithsonian's style guide but it is better than having people stumble across the surprise on accident. This is an article on Agatha Christie after all; it only makes sense that readers are sensitive to spoilers. It's the principal of it as much as anything else.
Thank you.
Posted by Mike Cherry on June 3,2011 | 10:20 AM
I greatly enjoyed this article, but I was sorry to see that you gave away _The Murder of Roger Ackroyd_. Fortunately, I have already read it.
Posted by Rebecca Wall on June 2,2011 | 04:28 PM
Why report the snooty opinions of Barry Forshaw? Christie was as good a prose stylist as Conan Doyle and created many more convincing characters than he did. Holmes is grotesque; Watson, indeed, an fine character. Poirot is intentionally ridiculous, except for his little gray cells; Miss Marple is a truly excellent sleuth, a quiet, elderly lady, whom nobody notices but who is smarter than them all! Concerning detection, Conan Doyle, for the most part, wrote farfetched short stories; Christie wrote a shelf full of novels, short stories, and plays. In much of the snooty criticism of Christie, I sense resentment on the part of the old boys' network because women were taking over the genre.
Posted by Jim Lacey on June 2,2011 | 03:56 PM
Interesting article. she created her own real life mystery by disappearing..i wonder where she went...and why was there no spoiler alert?!?!?!
Posted by Billybobjofredroidnithersmithersonknerfulbmer on May 30,2011 | 01:50 PM
Gorgeous description of Agatha's house and haven of privacy. Though fantastic and riveting as her stories may be, her life itself is so much more interesting and full of mystery. However, because I have not yet read "The Murder of Roger Ackroyd" (or maybe I have as a child, but can't remember it), I was slightly irritated at having been told who the murderer was. How could you do that to this loyal reader, Smithsonian? Anyway, lovely article. I bet my students will enjoy it, though many may not appreciate the spoiler either.
Posted by Grazia on May 25,2011 | 04:31 PM
An Unfortunate Revelation
May Dame Agatha Christie's spirit haunt author Joshua Hammer (A Setting for Murder) for giving away the ending of The Murder of Roger Ackroyd.
Posted by Donald Fitzpatrick on May 24,2011 | 06:45 PM