Brontë Way

The Brontë Way is a waymarked long-distance footpath in the northern counties of West Yorkshire and Lancashire, England.[1] The route has been designed to link places that have strong associations with the writings of the Brontë family, incorporating places that feature in their work, such as Oakwell Hall, Charlotte Brontë's inspiration for Fieldhead in her 1849 novel, Shirley.[2] Literary tourists often join the Way at Haworth, passing through Penistone Hill Country Park and open moorland to see the Brontë Waterfall and Top Withens, Emily Brontë's possible inspiration for the home in her 1847 novel Wuthering Heights.As well as its literary associations, the Way passes through areas of industrial heritage interest.You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This British trail or long-distance path-related article is a stub.
West YorkshireLancashireTrailheadsBirstallPadihamBrontëlong-distance footpathOakwell HallBirstall, West YorkshireGawthorpe HallBrontë familyCharlotte BrontëShirleyThorntonHaworthHaworth ParsonageLiterary touristsPenistone Hill Country ParkmoorlandBrontë WaterfallTop WithensEmily BrontëWuthering Heightsindustrial heritageBrontë sistersCharlotteJane EyreVilletteThe ProfessorTo a Wreath of SnowF. De Samara to A. G. A.Come hither childA Death-SceneLines Composed in a Wood on a Windy DayAgnes GreyThe Tenant of Wildfell HallPoems by Currer, Ellis, and Acton BellList of Brontë poemsJuveniliaA Book of RyhmesGlass TownThe Young Men's MagazineGondalFamilyPatrick BrontëMaria BranwellBranwell BrontëMaria BrontëElizabeth BrontëElizabeth BranwellArthur Bell NichollsJohn KingstonWilliam MorganvillageBrontë BirthplaceHartsheadBrontë CountryBrontë Parsonage MuseummuseumCowan Bridge SchoolSt Michael and All Angels' ChurchchurchpastorEllen NusseyElizabeth GaskellbiographerMary TaylorConstantin HégerteacherGeorge SmithpublisherDevotion (1946 film)Les Sœurs Brontë (1979 film)Brontë (2005 play)To Walk Invisible (2016 film)Emily (2022 film)Victorian literature