News

A house museum since 1928, owned and run by the Brontë Society, the Haworth Parsonage has been through a number of presentations, of which the latest, completed in 2013, was the result of a two-year ...
The newly renovated Brontë Birthplace in Bradford, England, was the three sisters' home until 1820, when the family moved to ...
What inspired not one, not two, but a total of three young women in the Bronte family to write literary masterpieces? If the ...
Yorkshire's most-famous writing family, the Brontës, lived in Haworth Parsonage from 1820 until Patrick's death in 1861. Owned by the Brontë Society, many of the rooms there have now been ...
At a time when hope for the future is sorely needed, it seems apt to be turning to Britain’s best-loved literary family for some inspiration. Did you know with a Digital subscription to ...
The Brontë Parsonage Museum in Haworth - home of writers Anne, Charlotte and Emily Brontë - is hosting the Haworth to Eternity exhibition. The display charts how the Pennine village became a ...
The only-known surviving portrait of Charlotte, Emily and Anne Bronte together has returned to the literary's family's home in Haworth ... It is at the Bronte Parsonage Museum for the first ...
Rebecca Yorke, director of Bronte Parsonage, said: “The Bronte’s were a family of six children and they grew up here in Haworth at the parsonage having moved from Thornton in Bradford where ...
The Brontë Parsonage Museum, located in the Brontë family home in Haworth, Yorkshire, recently placed the winning bid on the watercolor painting known as The North Wind (1842). Following ...
It’s playtime at the Bronte Parsonage Museum on Monday to start ... and guided walks focusing on the Brontes and the history of Haworth on the Wednesday. Children under 16 can enter the museum ...
The Bronte sisters’ servant Tabby Aykroyd has returned to Haworth this weekend. She is at the Bronte Parsonage Museum to tell visitors stories about the four famous siblings and 19th-century ...
Jane Austen’s bit of England is the “green and pleasant land” of the old Anglican hymn. The tears, aching hearts and (for the most part) happy endings were based on the author’s ...