The Lefroys lived for a time in London, then moved to Basingstoke, where their first child, Jemima Lucy (always known as Lucy) was christened in December 1779. Two children died in infancy (John Henry George, Julia Elizabeth), and a son Anthony Brydges was born in the early 1780s. In 1783 George and Anne moved into the Rectory at
Ashe, Hampshire, which George Lefroy's maternal uncle,
Benjamin Langlois, had purchased some years prior. Anne took part in a range of activities in the local community. In 1787, she was invited to take part in family theatricals, a performance of the play
The Tragedy of Jane Shore by Nicholas Rowe, by her friend Katherine Powlett, Duchess of Bolton, of
Hackwood Park. Anne declined the invitation via a poem: The lead role in the Hackwood play was performed by
Richard Barry, seventh Earl of Barrymore (1769–1793), not quite seventeen. His sister Lady Caroline Barry played the part of Jane Shore. Lady Bolton was a patron of the young earl, sharing his passion for horse-racing and the theatre. Despite declining the invitation to perform, Anne remained friends with the Boltons, and with their successors at Hackwood Park. Anne's letters, written mostly to her son Christopher Edward (1785–1856) in the period 1800–1804, depict a lively social life with many engagements. The family of Jane Austen lived in the neighbouring parish of Steventon, and the Lefroy and Austen families were close. Anne continued to write occasional verse and prose. At least two of her prose articles appear to have been published anonymously in the ''Gentleman's Magazine''. One, with a natural history focus, described a cross-species relationship between a maternal cat and a juvenile squirrel. The other offered an interpretation of a contested passage in the
Book of Daniel (Daniel 7:8), with reference to current events in Europe. == Children ==