Haworth
About:
Haworth is a compact village with an outsized sense of atmosphere, best known for its deep connection to the Brontë family and its dramatic moorland setting. The heart of the village is the steep, cobbled Main Street, lined with independent shops, bakeries, pubs and tearooms. It’s the kind of place where you’re encouraged to wander slowly, dipping into bookshops, antique stores and small galleries as you go.
At the top of the hill sits the Brontë Parsonage Museum, the former home of Charlotte, Emily and Anne Brontë. Visiting gives you a grounded, intimate sense of how the sisters lived and worked, with original manuscripts, letters and personal objects displayed in the rooms where they were written. Even for non-literary fans, it offers a powerful insight into how creativity thrived in such a remote and harsh landscape.
Step beyond the village and Haworth opens out into wide, windswept moorland. Well-marked walking routes lead straight from the parsonage into the countryside, including paths associated with Wuthering Heights. The moors are stark, quiet and expansive, offering views that feel almost unchanged since the 19th century. Short walks are manageable for most visitors, while longer routes reward you with real solitude and scale.
Back in the village, historic pubs such as The Black Bull and The Old White Lion offer a warm place to rest, often with open fires and local ales. Seasonal events, vintage weekends and literary festivals add extra life throughout the year, making Haworth feel lived-in rather than preserved.