(
Lord Albemarle, the British ambassador, stayed in Hyères during the winter 1767–1768, and Prince Augustus, sixth son of George III, stayed there in the winter of 1788 for health reasons. The English agronomist
Arthur Young visited Hyères on the advice of
Lady Craven on 10 September 1789. He mentioned the many British living there in his book
Travels in France. and in November 1880 Adolphe Smith first published
The Garden of Hyères, which is still in print, (see Hachette edition of 2012). In 1883,
Robert Louis Stevenson came to Hyères and for about two years lived first at the Grand Hotel (the building still stands in the Avenue des Iles d'Or), and then in a chalet called
Solitude in the present rue Victor-Basch. at the Albion Hotel. At that time, the British influence was so strong that shop signs were in both French and English. There was an English butcher, a chemist, two banks, and two golf courses. There were also two English churches (plus one at the Grand Hôtel in Costebelle), whose buildings still exist: All Saints' Church at Costebelle and Saint Paul's English Church, Avenue Beauregard. Some signs of this English presence have vanished, like the small dell in the cemetery where there were once some hundred graves. Some of these, such as those of
Lord Arthur Somerset or
Richard John Meade, bore testimony to the aristocratic nature of the community. Other vestiges remain, like the fountain near the new public library in a square shaded by a
plane tree. The inscription reads: "In loving memory of Marianne Stewart who died on 18 August 1900. She laboured many years in the cause of mercy to animals. Her last wish was that a drinking fountain should be set up for them in Hyères". Many wounded British soldiers were sent to the town to convalesce during
World War I. The American novelist
Edith Wharton wintered in Hyères annually from 1919 until her death in 1937. The garden of her villa,
Castel Sainte-Claire, is open to the public. The villa previously belonged to
Olivier Voutier, a French naval officer, whose grave is in the garden; it was Voutier who discovered the
Venus de Milo in 1820 on the
Aegean island of
Milos. ==Transportation==