Patrick Brontë


Patrick Brontë was an Irish Anglican priest and author who spent most of his adult life in England. He was the father of the writers Charlotte, Emily, and Anne Brontë, and of Branwell Brontë, his only son. Patrick outlived his wife, the former Maria Branwell, by forty years, by which time all of their children had died as well.

Origins

Patrick Brontë was born at Drumballyroney, near Rathfriland, County Down, the eldest of the ten children of "farmhand, fence-fixer and road-builder" Hugh Brunty and Elinor Alice. The family was "large and very poor", owning four books and subsisting on "porridge, potatoes, buttermilk and bread" which "gave Patrick a lifetime of indigestion".
In adult life, Patrick Brunty formally changed the spelling of his name to Brontë.
He had several apprenticeships until he became a teacher in 1798. He moved to England in 1802 to study theology at St John's College, Cambridge, and received his BA degree in 1806. He was then appointed curate at Wethersfield, near Braintree in Essex, where he was ordained a deacon of the Church of England in 1806, and into the priesthood in 1807.

Curate

Brontë's first post as curate was at , Wethersfield, Essex with the vicar being Joseph Jowett, Regius Professor of Law at Cambridge. Here in 1807 he met and fell in love with Mary Burder. After a disagreement and an undisclosed insult, with Burder's father's brother, her legal guardian, Mary was shipped out of town and Patrick decided it was best to take a new curacy. It was shortly after this period his first poetry was published.
In 1809, he became assistant curate at Wellington, Shropshire, and in 1810 his first published poem, the 256 line Winter Evening Thoughts, appeared in a local newspaper, followed in 1811 by a collection of moral verses, Cottage Poems. He moved to the West Riding of Yorkshire in 1809 as a curate at All Saints, Dewsbury in December 1809. The area was undergoing an evangelical revival under the incumbent vicar John Buckworth. Brontë taught reading and writing at Dewsbury's Sunday School. Brontë was deputised by Buckworth to attend twice weekly meetings of the Church Mission Society on his behalf. A memorial plaque to Brontë on the South Aisle of Dewsbury Minster.
Buckworth appointed Brontë as an assistant curate to the Church of St Peter, Hartshead, a daughter church of Dewsbury in 1811. He served at Hartshead until 1815. In the meantime he was appointed a school examiner at a Wesleyan academy, Woodhouse Grove School, near Guiseley. In 1815 he moved again on becoming perpetual curate of Thornton.

Family

At Guiseley, Brontë met Maria Branwell, whom he married on 29 December 1812. They moved into a house on Halifax Road, Liversedge where their first two children, Maria and Elizabeth were born. Their remaining children Charlotte, Patrick Branwell, Emily and Anne were born after they moved to Thornton.
Brontë was offered the perpetual curacy of St Michael and All Angels' Church, Haworth in June 1819, and he took the family there in April 1820. His sister-in-law Elizabeth Branwell, who had lived with the family at Thornton in 1815, joined the household in 1821 to help to look after the children and to care for Maria Brontë, who was suffering the final stages of uterine cancer. Elizabeth decided to move permanently to Haworth to act as housekeeper.
At this life juncture Brontë sought out Mary Burder, his first love, and inquired after her hand in marriage; Burder declined. After several attempts to seek a new spouse, Patrick came to terms with widowhood at the age of 47, and spent his time visiting the sick and the poor, giving sermons, communion, and extreme unction, leaving the three sisters Emily, Charlotte, Anne, and their brother Branwell alone with their aunt and a maid, Tabitha Aykroyd, who tirelessly recounted local legends in her Yorkshire dialect while preparing the meals.
Brontë was responsible for the building of a Sunday school in Haworth, which he opened in 1832. He remained active in local causes into his old age, and between 1849 and 1850 organised action to procure a clean water supply for the village, which was eventually achieved in 1856.
In August 1846, Brontë travelled to Manchester, accompanied by Charlotte, to undergo surgery on his eyes. On 28 August he was operated upon, without anaesthetic, to remove cataracts. Surgeons did not yet know how to use stitches to hold the incision in the eye together and as a consequence the patient was required to lie quietly in a darkened room, for weeks after the operation. Charlotte used her time in Manchester to begin writing Jane Eyre, the book which was to make her famous.
After the death of his last surviving child, Charlotte, nine months after her marriage, he co-operated with Elizabeth Gaskell on the biography of his daughter. He was also responsible for the posthumous publication of Charlotte's first novel, The Professor, in 1857. Charlotte's husband, Arthur Bell Nicholls, who had been Brontë's curate, stayed in the household until he returned to Ireland after Brontë's death, at the age of 84, in 1861. Brontë outlived not only his wife but all six of his children.

Publications

Winter Evening Thoughts,. Cottage Poems,. The Rural Minstrel: A Miscellany of Descriptive Poems,. The Cottage In The Wood,. The Maid Of Killarney,. The Signs Of The Times,

Portrayals

portrayed Patrick Brontë in Devotion
Alfred Burke portrayed Patrick Brontë in The Brontës of Haworth
Patrick Magee portrayed Patrick Brontë in The Brontë Sisters
Jonathan Pryce portrayed Patrick Brontë in To Walk Invisible