vrijdag 21 januari 2011

21-01-1821 Maria Bronte wife of Patrick Bronte was diagnosed with cancer.

Maria was petite, plain, pious, intelligent and well read with a ready wit. She made friends easily, and the friends that the Brontë's made in Thornton remained life-long friends to Patrick and his children. Her only extant written work, apart from letters, is the tract, The Advantages of Poverty, In Religious Concerns, but it was never published. The essay can be found in the book Life and Letters by Clement Shorter.

Maria Branwell was the eighth child of twelve born to Thomas Branwell and Anne Carne in Penzance, Cornwall, though only five daughters and one son grew to adulthood. Thomas Branwell was a successful merchant and owned many properties throughout the town. The Branwell family was involved with local politics, several serving as Mayor in the 19th century and other civic offices. The family were prominent Methodists,Thomas's sister and two of his daughters marrying clergymen of Wesleyan leanings. With the Carne family and others, they initiated and developed the first Wesleyan Methodist Chapel in Penzance.
 
Maria had an annuity of £50 a year, which would have been a great help to Patrick Brontë who had nothing but his stipend. Their first home was Clough House, Hightown, near Hartshead, and their first two children, Maria and Elizabeth were born there in 1814 and 1815.
Clough House, which is in Halifax Road just above Quaker Lane. This is also a 17th century house.


The Peters Church, Heartshead, near Brighouse
See also: hartshead
 
 
Thornbush Farm, known in those days as Lousy Thorn Farm, at Windybank Hightown
 
Patrick Bronte was the minister at St Peter’s from 1811 to 1815 and had lodged at Thornbush Farm near the end of Miry Lane before this.

















Clough House, Hightown, near Hartshead 
 
Maria and Elizabeth were born here
 
He moved to Clough House, Halifax Road, Hightown (pictured above), on his marriage to Maria Branwell in 1812.

He was at Clough House when the croppers banded together to try to destroy the cropping machines being installed in the large mills. They called themselves Luddites, and met at the Shears inn in Halifax Road to plan the attack. The Shears inn was built in 1773.

Thornbush Farm (Hightown)

The village of Hartshead was the model for Nunneley in “Shirley” by Charlotte (1849).

Left: Market Street, Thornton
In 1815 Mr. Brontë moved to a larger living at Thornton, three miles north of Bradford, where, in a house in Market Street, the other four children were born, Charlotte (1816), Patrick Branwell (1817), Emily Jane (1818) and Anne (1820).
 


In 1820 the family moved to Haworth. Soon after the move to Haworth, Maria Branwell Brontë, exhausted from bearing six children in seven years, died of cancer after a long illness. A servant heard her cry, "Oh God, my poor children!" Charlotte was only five years old. The youngest, Anne, was less than a year old.

3 opmerkingen:

  1. Maria's story is so sad...I love that Charlotte eventually got to see her letters...I wish the other's had as well, it would have been a nice connection for Branwell, Emily and Anne to have with her, to know her just a little bit.

    Once again, I learned new information...thank you!
    xo J~

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  2. Maria's portrait would fit nicely into the famous column painting of the Bronte sisters by their brother, Branwell. Maria looks like Emily in that picture imo .

    Maria's portrait was painted when she was 15 and so it would fit in Branwell's painting of his sisters age wise as well .

    I wonder if he was trying to repeat the positions of the earlier paintings of his mother and Aunt when painting his sisters ?....and make a statement about continuance

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  3. Does anyone think that Bronte sister'site really died from TB?

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