The Colonial Brontës

About

Our 2026 exhibition examines the period of exploration, conquest and intercultural encounters of the late 18th and early 19th centuries and shows the extent to which the Brontë siblings were fascinated by colonial military campaigns and British missionary activity.

The Brontë children invented their own colonies collectively called the Glass Town Federation. Using miniature handwriting - supposedly produced by their twelve toy soldiers – the siblings wrote poems, sagas and magazines which drew extensively from their colonial reading material, fictionalising real-life territorial battles, British military figures and Asante warriors. Their later novels were defined by the young Brontës’ exploration of missionary and racial themes.

Haworth was geographically remote from Britain’s colonies but Yorkshire had strong historical ties to Africa and the West Indies. A new film adaptation of Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights has resurrected longstanding debates about Heathcliff’s racial identity. This exhibition provides resonant historical details about people of African descent who worked in Yorkshire between 1771 – the date Emily’s story reaches back to - and the author’s death in 1848.   

The Colonial Brontës is co-curated by Professor Corinne Fowler, Honorary Professor of Colonialism and Heritage at University of Leicester and author of Our Island Stories: Country Walks Through Colonial Britain.

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*Free with entry to the Museum.

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The Colonial Brontës

Type:Exhibition

Bronte Parsonage Museum, Church Street, Haworth, BD22 8DR
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Tel01535 642323

Opening Times

Season (4 Feb 2026 - 31 Dec 2026)

What's Nearby

  1. The Brontës are the world's most famous literary family and Haworth Parsonage was their…

    0 miles away
  2. Gallery and gift shop on the historic cobbled Main Street of Haworth.

    0.1 miles away
  3. Haworth Parish Church, or the Church of St Michael and All Angels, is an Anglican church…

    0.13 miles away
  4. Do the ghosts of Branwell and Emily Brontë still walk the moors of Haworth? Do the…

    0.16 miles away
  1. Experience the beauty of Haworth's Central Park, where you can explore the vibrant flower…

    0.25 miles away
  2. The Keighley & Worth Valley Railway is a heritage railway that was reopened in 1968 and…

    0.36 miles away
  3. A beautiful country park outside Haworth

    0.55 miles away
  4. Holden Park (known locally as Oakworth Park) is absolutely unique, with grottoes and…

    1.19 miles away
  5. Haworth Moor is located just outside the picturesque village of Haworth.

    1.27 miles away
  6. Discover the inspiration for Wuthering Heights by taking a walk to Top Withens, where you…

    2.08 miles away
  7. Visit Rail Story to learn more about the railways and the people who worked on them.

    2.36 miles away
  8. Top Withens is a ruined farmhouse near Haworth, which is said to have been the…

    3.17 miles away
  9. A former mansion built 1875 - 1882, now the local museum in a park.

    3.51 miles away
  10. Visit Cliffe Castle Park for a great family day out. Not only can you visit Cliffe…

    3.58 miles away
  11. The Keighley Bus Museum Trust hosts a magnificent collection of vintage vehicles.

    3.7 miles away
  12. Take a walk through St Ives Estate and admire the picturesque lake, woodland and wildlife…

    4.06 miles away
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Brontë Parsonage Museum Garden (c) Bevan CockerillBronte Parsonage Museum, HaworthThe Brontës are the world's most famous literary family and Haworth Parsonage was their home from 1820 to 1861. Charlotte, Emily and Anne Brontë were the authors of some of the best loved books in the English language.

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