Jacobs married Agnes Eleanor Williams in 1900 at West Ham, Essex. Agnes was later a noted
suffragette. The 1901 Census records their living with a first child, a three-month-old daughter, at Kings Place Road,
Buckhurst Hill, Essex. Also recorded in the household were his journalist sister Amy, his sister-in-law, Nancy Williams, a cook, and an additional domestic servant. Altogether the Jacobses had two sons and three daughters. Jacobs went on to set up home in
Loughton, Essex, first at the Outlook in Park Hill, and then at Feltham House in Goldings Hill, which bears a
blue plaque to him. Loughton is the "Claybury" of some of the stories; Jacobs's love for the local forest scenery features in "Land Of Cockaigne". Another blue plaque appears on Jacobs's central London residence at 15 Gloucester Gate, Regents Park (later held by the Prince of Wales's Institute of Architecture). Jacobs stated that after his youthful
left-wing opinions, his political position in later years was "
Conservative and
Individualistic". In 1928 he was involved in the creation of films of his works. The first film made was titled
The Bravo. Fifty actresses were auditioned and Jacob was said to be impressed by
Paddy Naismith who was chosen to play the lead role. Jacobs died on 1 September 1943 at Hornsey Lane, Islington, London, at the age of 79. An obituary in
The Times (2 September 1943) described him as "quiet, gentle and modest ... not fond of large functions and crowds."
Ian Hay remarked, "He invented an entirely new form of humorous narrative. Its outstanding characteristics were compression and understatement." ==Bibliography==