Percy
Bronte was born at Hartshead in 1814, the first legitimate son
of Patrick and Maria. A sickly child, he nevertheless persevered
at his studies, showing great interest in politics and geography.
His formative years were chiefly memorable for the way that he
managed to set brother against sister in constant squabbles without
ever getting involved himself. This led to considerable unrest
and bloodshed at the Parsonage in later years.
In 1828 he left Haworth and began studying politics and strategy
at Cambridge University. Within two years he had been offered,
and accepted, a post with the Diplomatic Service. We have no record
of his career, the official documents relating to Percival Bronte
still being classified under the Official Secrets Act. What we
do have however, is his passport, showing when and where he travelled
in his lifetime. All we can do is relate this to world events
which, although we can establish no direct link with Percival,
seem to be in some way connected with his travels.
Two weeks after he began work at the Foreign Office, he travelled
to Brussels and Rotterdam. A week after his return, the union
of Belgium and Holland split. In 1839 he went to India, and shortly
after his departure for home again the disastrous North-West frontier
campaign began, culminating in the retreat from Kabul in which
Britain lost an entire army. In 1853 he visited Moscow, Istanbul
and Paris, returning to London in 1854, the day before the Crimean
War began.
Early in 1857, Percival Bronte was again in India. He travelled
extensively, returning to London in May of that year. The day
he left his hotel in Meerut to travel home, the Indian Mutiny
began in the barracks next door. In 1859 he visited both Berlin
and Paris and probably started the Franco-Prussian War. As he
was knighted by Queen Victoria that year, it seems likely.
In 1860 he visited America, and travelled throughout the North
and South alike on behalf of Her Majesty. As he boarded the steamer
for Liverpool in 1861, news came of the outbreak of the Civil
War.
Percival Bronte liked to relax at his country home in Skelmersdale
in between assignments, spending the time playing his banjo and
making models of farm animals out of cotton wool. He used to hold
informal soirees at weekends, when all the servants would gather
round in the Turquoise Drawing Room and listen enthralled as he
told them of sights seen and deeds done in far-off lands.
Possibly because of the limitations of his working garb, i.e.
wing collars, frock coats, etc, he was never a snappy dresser
whilst on leave, preferring instead to sport a strange assortment
of cast-off items purchased from the local workhouse. This could
often result in confusion and he was frequently mistaken for a
vagrant by the villagers as he strolled around the area strumming
his banjo.
Percival Bronte's passport reveals that his next trip abroad was
to the Middle East in 1885. He passed through Khartoum, where,
just six days after his visit, General Gordon and his army were
massacred by the warriors loyal to the Mahdi.
He retired the following year, at the age of 71. In 1899 at the
ripe old age of eighty-five, he had a holiday in South Africa,
renewing friendships within diplomatic circles at the same time.
He was, tragically, killed as the second Boer War broke out, and
his remains still lie in South Africa.
He never married.