Patrick Brontë
Patrick Brontë (17 March 1777 – 7 June 1861) was an Irish-born Anglican clergyman and writer who spent most of his adult life in England, serving as perpetual curate of Haworth, Yorkshire, from 1820 until his death.[1][2]
Born Hugh Brunty (anglicised to Brontë around 1802) in Drumballyroney, County Down, as the eldest of ten children in a farming family, he worked initially as a blacksmith and weaver before pursuing higher education at the University of Glasgow and St John's College, Cambridge, where he earned a BA in 1806.[1] Ordained deacon in 1806 and priest in 1807, Brontë held curacies in Essex and Yorkshire parishes before his appointment at Haworth, a remote moorland village whose isolated setting influenced his family's creative output.[1][3]
In 1812, he married Maria Branwell, with whom he had six children: Maria and Elizabeth (who died young in 1825), Charlotte (1816–1855), Branwell (1817–1848), Emily (1818–1848), and Anne (1820–1849), the last three achieving literary fame as novelists.[1] Following Maria's death from cancer in 1821, Brontë raised the children with assistance from Maria's sister Elizabeth Branwell, fostering an environment of rigorous education and imaginative play that shaped their talents, while he himself published poetry collections like Cottage Poems (1811) and contributed sermons and essays to periodicals.[1][4] Known for eccentricity—such as firing pistols from the parsonage window for exercise—and conservative political stances, including opposition to the 1832 Reform Act, Brontë outlived his wife and five of his children, dying at age 84 after witnessing Charlotte's brief marriage and continued literary success.[1][5]