Shaw and Charlotte had separate bedrooms: her room has now been made into a Museum Room.
In Shaw's room there are pictures of Gandhi and, at the foot of his bed, a picture of a portable altar. Other things to note are Shaw's Arts and Crafts bedstead from Heal's and his wardrobe, in which are many of his suits and his brogue shoes.
The layout of Shaw's bedroom is as it was when he was alive, with a screen to protect against nocturnal draughts, since Shaw slept with the window open.
The wardrobe and the chest of drawers contain his clothes - his tweed suits, plus-fours, thick underwear and long woollen stockings, hand-knitted by devotees so that there was a left foot and a right foot. By the window are volumes of Shakespeare and the Bible.
The Museum Room has exhibitions about the house, and albums giving information on aspects of Shaw's life
The Shaw's first flat in Adelphi Terrace in the Aldwych had neither bathroom nor hot running water, so the large bath at Shaw's Corner must have been a luxury.
Shaw bathed himself daily until his last illness, except during the Second World War, when he bathed weekly to save water. Mrs Shaw continued to use a hip-bath kept under her bed, and a commode, with jugs of hot water and slop pails carried up by her maid.
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