zaterdag 31 augustus 2013

Walking with the taxidriver.


Great walk through Bronte Country
 
It is like you are walking there yourself
 You will see the Parsonage, Black Bull, the Bronte waterfall and Bronte Bridge, great views on Top Withens

This is the website of “JR Hackney” otherwise known as “The Taxi Driver”.

The purpose of this website is to provide you with FREE information on a whole host of walks that we have undertaken and that we recommend to you to also undertake and enjoy.
If you take a look at our walks and click through to the walks that you are interested in you will find narrative, photographs and video clips for the walk you have selected.
 


Flossy and Keeper’s Collars

 
From the Treasure Trove: Flossy and Keeper’s Collars. Flossy was Anne’s dog, said to have been given to her by her pupils, the Robinsons of Thorp Green, and brought to Haworth in 1843. Keeper was the family dog, most commonly associated with Emily. His reputation for ferocity was legendary in Haworth, and his collar gives some indication of his size and power. facebook/Bronte-Parsonage-Museum/



 

vrijdag 30 augustus 2013

Patrick’s Notebook

From the Treasure Trove: Patrick’s Notebook. This small leather notebook containing details of financial transactions was kept by Mr Bronte. He writes that he should ‘Keep every page of this book for the sake of reference’, and ‘Always when necessary, get receipts’.

A big-budget movie about Haworth’s legendary literary sisters is in the pipeline

A big-budget movie about Haworth’s legendary literary sisters is in the pipeline, it has been revealed.
Yorkshire-based Clothworkers Films has announced it is planning a blockbuster biopic about the Bronte siblings – Charlotte, Emily and Anne.
The cinema production company, which specialises in period drama, said the film would be the world’s first English-language project of its kind.
More information, including details of an A-list cast and crew, will be unveiled on April 21, 2016 – the 200th anniversary of Charlotte’s birth date. Read more: thetelegraphandargus

woensdag 28 augustus 2013

Baby’s Bonnet

 

From the Treasure Trove: Baby’s Bonnet. It is believed that Charlotte was in the early stages of pregnancy at the time of her death. This baby bonnet was made for her by her friend Margaret Wooler.


dinsdag 27 augustus 2013

Hair bracelet, made from Anne’s hair

From the Treasure Trove: Hair bracelet. In Victorian England, it was customary to make jewellery out of the hair of loved ones. Charlotte gave this bracelet, made from Anne’s hair, to her friend Ellen Nussey.

In artofmourning You can read more about this habbit of using hair for jewelry.

"Hair  Jewelry" was  made as  mourning  jewelry,  remembrance jewelry and as a gift of  love during Victorian times and before, when there were no pictures to  look  upon and  remember a loved one  with.   Hair jewelry makes a unique and  beautiful gift  to a loved one for a  special occasion even today.  Hair jewelry is made and given with love. victorianhairjewelry
 

Charlotte's Wedding Bonnet

VIDEO! - "Charlotte's Wedding Bonnet" talk by Barbara.
16.4 minutes talk at the Bronte parsonage
Interesting!!!

facebook/ Wedding bonnet
 
 
 
 

zondag 25 augustus 2013

""At home with the Brontes"" from Ann Dinsdale


With a lot of interest I am reading
""At home with the Brontes"" from Ann Dinsdale
I never realized that other families were living in the Parsonage
I knew about Rev. Wade, but
that children were born and people died in the Parsonage
is what I realise while reading this book
It is nice to read the history of these people
 and to read how they experienced the Parsonage
 
 John Wade 1861-1898
Thomas William Story 1898-1919
George Alfred Elson 1919-1925
John Crosland Hirst 1925-1928
 
 
 There was no official parsonage at Haworth until the arrival of Grimshaw’s successor, the Reverend John Richardson. The Parsonage, or Glebe House as it was known, was built of millstone grit, quarried from nearby moors.
 
After Richardson came Reverend James Charnock, and following his death, Henry Heap, Vicar of Bradford, nominated Patrick Bronte, Perpetual Curate of Thornton, as his successor.
Patrick moved in with his family in April, 1820, and the following year, his wife Maria died of cancer. In later years, Charlotte remembers her mother “in the evening light, playing with her young son Branwell in the Parsonage dining room”. Ann describes in detail the layout of the Brontes’ home, drawing on Charlotte and Patrick’s accounts of domestic life.
 
Patrick was succeeded by rectors John Wade, Thomas Story, George Elson – who was there when the first film of Wuthering Heights was shot in Haworth, drawing great crowds – and John Crosland Hirst. When the Bronte Society acquired the Parsonage in 1927, the Hirst family reluctantly left their home for a new rectory.
 
 
Harold Mitchell
 
Harold Mitchell, a 32-year-old ex-serviceman, was appointed first custodian for the museum, which was drawing around 4,000 annual visitors. Harold sold postcards and souvenirs in the old kitchen and his younger sons Trevor and Eric were born in the Mitchells’ living accommodation, separated by a glass-panelled door.
“Bringing up three boys in a literary shrine must have been difficult,” writes Ann. “Noisy games had to be curtailed and, from an early age, the boys were very conscious of what they called ‘the family next door’.” The family kept a pet owl in the kitchen, and Eric recalls meeting famous visitors at the museum, including Charlie Chaplin, Orson Welles and Daphne du Maurier. One of his earliest memories was being photographed on the Parsonage steps with James Roosevelt, son of the American president. During the war, the Parsonage remained open – films such as the 1939 Wuthering Heights adaptation starring Laurence Olivier fuelled Brontemania – and troops stationed at Haworth Sunday school would use the Parsonage bathroom. In 1961, Harold Mitchell retired and new curator Geoffrey Beard moved into a flat behind the Parsonage with his young family. They lasted just 18 months, leaving the Bronte Society facing a security crisis.

Enter 30-year-old Joanna Hutton, who first visited the Parsonage as a child. Born into an acting family – her father, Arthur Brough, was Mr Grainger in Are You Being Served?
Living on the premises, Joanna was never off duty and visitors regularly turned up out of hours.
In 1968, Joanna left the Parsonage and set up the museum bookshop on Main Street. Her successor was Norman Raistrick whose appointment coincided with the busiest period in the museum’s history, thanks partly to 1970s TV programmes, including Blue Peter, filmed there. The house also appeared in 1970 film The Railway Children. thetelegraphandargus

news.google.com/dispute Johanna Hutton

 
Bronte Society Members outside the Parsonage in 1899
 
 
Raymond Mitchell pictured with animals at the back of the parsonage
 
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In 1874 Wade added a new gabled North and West wing to the Parsonage including new fireplaces and removal of the old kitchen range. The back kitchen was demolished to make was for a large kitchen extension. The ground floor level was raised by several inches by laying a wooden floor over the existing flags in the study and dining room in an effort to make the house warmer. Wade put in new fireplaces and mantle pieces. The wainscot was removed and replaced by skirting boards. The whole staircase has probably been replaced at some point and the banisters have certainly been replaced.  brontesremembered