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Haworth, Yorkshire: The Past Tourists Were Never Meant to See

Updated: Jun 6

By Eloise Ferguson


STEP BACK IN TIME WITH ONE CLICK! ENTER THE CHRONICLES!


Dark cinematic banner for The Rushworth Chronicles, featuring an antique leather-bound journal, candlelight, pocket watch, and aged historical papers spread across a wooden desk, with the tagline “The Past Never Stays Buried” and a call-to-action inviting readers to “Enter the Chronicles.”
WOULD YOU DARE TO STEP BACK IN TIME?



Split-image comparison of Haworth, Yorkshire, showing the modern village street with a traditional red British telephone box and tourists on one side, contrasted with a dramatic 17th-century recreation filled with villagers in period clothing, muddy roads, livestock, and historical atmosphere.
Haworth, Yorkshire — where the modern village still stands above the hidden realities of its past.

The Haworth the Tourists Never See


The tourist brochures talk about discovering Haworth the home of the famous Brontë sisters, the undisputed literary mecca, attracting visitors from all around the world. With its historic cobbled Main Street, iconic parsonage and rolling moors, they say that the picturesque proportions of this Airedale village exude a vintage charm that makes you feel you have stepped into another era. Although today Haworth is truly a wonderful place, the Haworth of 1850 was a far cry from the one described above and one which tourists would probably not want to visit.


A dark red wax seal-style button with weathered medieval texture and gold serif lettering reading “CONTINUE THE JOURNEY.” The seal has rough organic edges, subtle highlights, and an aged historical appearance designed to resemble an old archival stamp or manuscript seal, evoking mystery, immersion, and historical exploration.

In 1850 Benjamin Herschel Babbage, an English engineer, was commissioned to undertake an inspection of Haworth brought about by the high rate of infant mortality. Babbage was horrified by the unsanitary conditions in the village and surrounds and wrote a report for the General Board of Health.

The Babbage Report was an inquiry into the sewage, drainage and supply of water and the unsanitary condition of the inhabitants. Now, many know of this report , but few know of the specifics such as the mortality rate at the time being 30.6 per thousand indicating an extremely poor sanitary condition in the village. It was also estimated by Babbage that the average life expectancy of people living in the hamlet was 25, equal to some of the poorest parts of London. Even more astonishing was the fact that almost 47% of the population died before the age of six years and below are the reasons why:


Split-image of a narrow cobbled lane in Haworth, Yorkshire, comparing the modern flower-lined street with a darker 17th-century version featuring muddy roads, villagers in period clothing, smoke rising above stone cottages, and livestock wandering the lane.
The same Haworth lane imagined as it may have appeared in the seventeenth century, where mud, smoke, and survival shaped everyday life.

Of the 316 houses situated in the village, not one of them had a toilet and all occupants had to rely on the 69 outhouses or privies scattered throughout the village and surrounds. This number equated to 1 privy for every 5 houses; however, in some instances due to location there may have been up to 24 houses sharing one very public outhouse. There were no sewers in Haworth at the time and often the privy cesspit flowed out into the street and mixing with the rain surface water, flowed down Main Street. Beside each privy was an enclosure for night soil and household and slaughterhouse waste, which was rarely removed because of the fear of sickness from the ash which was also dropped there. As a result, the refuse which would normally be used by farmers for fertilizer would pile up and often foul the local drinking water.



The poor lived in cramped basement dwellings down Main Street and back to back houses with windows that did not open and floors that continually flooded. As many as six men and boys could live in one room where they would also comb wool for a living. These rooms would have been hot and cramped as fires would have been kept going to heat the combs. In another room, along with a hand loom 10 lodgers might sleep in damp and uncomfortable conditions. Privies were often attached to the back wall of buildings so toilet refuse seeped through walls and ran over the floor often made worse after rain.

Split-image comparison of Haworth Main Street, Yorkshire, showing the modern village overlooking the green moors on one side and a haunting 17th-century recreation on the other with carts, villagers, smoke-filled skies, and rough cobbled roads from The Thomas Rushworth Chronicles.
A modern Haworth street transformed into the harsh atmosphere of seventeenth-century Yorkshire from The Thomas Rushworth Chronicles.

In Main Street there was no sewer so the refuse from 44 houses was thrown into the street and could quite often mix with the water from underground springs making water undrinkable. Consequently, most would have to walk up to half a mile to fetch water for washing and cooking often lining up at all hours of the morning and night with buckets.


Facial reconstruction portrait of Thomas Rushworth, ancestor of author Paul Rushworth-Brown, depicting a weathered seventeenth-century Yorkshire man standing on the moors in rough wool clothing with a dagger at his side beneath stormy skies
Facial reconstruction interpretation of Thomas Rushworth, ancestor of Paul Rushworth-Brown, inspired by generational family features and the harsh realities of seventeenth-century Yorkshire life.

The cemetery of Michael of All Angels Church sits at the hilltop of Main Street and has been the site of a chapel since 1317. At the time of Babbage’s report, church records indicated that 1344 burials had taken place in the past 10 years; however, some indicate that there may have been as many as 40,000 people buried there prior to church records. Due to poor drainage, insufficient burial depths and overcrowding, surface water runoff from the cemetery would rush down the hill and often enter the basement dwellings of poor folk. Babbage reported that the smell from the open ditch used to carry this water was ‘one of the most nauseous and fetid nature’ and ‘left a sickness and faintness which lasted hours’.


Haworth is truly a wonderful place but the Haworth of 1850 was a far cry from the one described in tourist brochures and one which tourists would probably not want to visit.








STEP BACK IN TIME WITH ONE CLICK!


Dark historical promotional image for The Thomas Rushworth Chronicles: Chronicle V – The Pillory, showing two battered men locked in a wooden pillory in a muddy Yorkshire village square surrounded by grim-faced townspeople beneath stormy skies, capturing the brutality, public humiliation, and harsh justice of seventeenth-century England.



Best selling author Paul Rushworth-Brown. His family have been living in Haworth since 1590
Best selling author Paul Rushworth-Brown. His family have been living in Haworth since 1590

Paul Rushworth-Brown is the author of tfive novels set in and around Haworth. A must read for anybody visiting!




The Thomas Rushworth Chronicles banner featuring Thomas Rushworth and key characters from 1590–1603 England against a dramatic backdrop of Yorkshire villages, taverns, ships, executions, and survival during turbulent historical times.

The rain falls hard across the moors. Rumours move faster than truth. And beneath the authority of Haworth Manor, ordinary lives begin to disappear into silence.

The Thomas Rushworth Chronicles is a dark historical mystery series set in the dangerous world of early seventeenth-century Yorkshire — a land of torchlit roads, hidden loyalties, manor intrigue, recusant secrets, and violence waiting beneath everyday life.

At the centre stands Thomas Rushworth, a young man drawn into events far larger than himself after whispers of treason, disappearances, and forbidden alliances begin spreading through the villages surrounding Haworth. What begins as survival soon becomes something far more dangerous as the lines between loyalty, fear, and betrayal begin to collapse.

Here, history is not a backdrop.

It is a force pressing down on every decision.

As riders arrive in the night and suspicion spreads from taverns to manor halls, families are forced to choose between obedience and survival. Every secret carries a cost. Every silence hides a danger. And every road across the Yorkshire moors leads deeper into a world where ordinary people are trapped inside history.

For readers of gritty historical suspense, atmospheric mystery, and immersive historical noir, The Thomas Rushworth Chronicles delivers a serialized world of mud, firelight, deception, and human consequence — where the past feels disturbingly alive.



Promotional banner for The Lost Voices by Paul Rushworth-Brown featuring men and women of 17th-century England and the Hull docks, highlighting forgotten lives, hardship, survival, and historical realism.

Some lives disappear from history.

Others refuse to stay buried.

Set against the harsh realities of eighteenth-century Yorkshire, The Lost Voices follows ordinary people struggling to survive in a world shaped by poverty, silence, power, and consequence. Far from the grand figures recorded in history books, these are the forgotten lives history rarely preserved — labourers, families, drifters, and souls carrying secrets too dangerous to speak aloud.

As brothers John and Robert Rushworth leave the moors behind in search of opportunity, they are drawn into a dangerous world of ambition, betrayal, hidden violence, and survival. Beneath the growing towns and promises of progress lies a darker reality where every decision carries a cost.

Rich in atmosphere and historical detail, The Lost Voices is a haunting story about endurance, fear, hope, and the lives history tried to erase.



Promotional banner for Outback Odyssey by Paul Rushworth-Brown showing a Yorkshire migrant arriving in Australia alongside an Indigenous Elder and settlers, exploring migration, identity, survival, and the Australian outback.

He came to Australia with hope.

The land had other plans.

Set in the harsh Australian outback of the 1950s, Outback Odyssey follows Jimmy, a young English migrant searching for belonging, purpose, and a future beyond the life he left behind. But the Australia he encounters is far removed from the promises he was sold.

Sent to a remote sheep station ruled by isolation, silence, and unspoken power, Jimmy is drawn into a world where survival depends not only on endurance, but on understanding the people, cultures, and tensions that shape the land around him. As friendships deepen and loyalties are tested, he must confront prejudice, identity, love, and the difficult realities of a country struggling with its own past.

Outback Odyssey is a powerful historical novel about ordinary people trying to survive forces far greater than themselves — and the human cost of the world they inherit.



Promotional banner for Skulduggery by Paul Rushworth-Brown featuring a young Yorkshire villager in 1590 England surrounded by mystery, deception, manor intrigue, and hidden secrets in a windswept village.

Skulduggery- A family of copyholders, live each day in isolation from the village, but an attack on one of their own puts them all in grave danger.

This story carefully navigates the backdrop of the English Reformation, populating it with likable and despicable characters, and casting them in a fully realised historical mystery setting. It's a slice of history that's totally, utterly believable, and unbelievable. The twists will surprise and the ending is totally unexpected even for the most astute of readers.



Promotional banner for Red Winter Journey by Paul Rushworth-Brown showing an English family struggling through the harsh winter of the Civil War, facing loyalty, betrayal, survival, and the human cost of conflict.

Red Winter Journey- England, 1642. When bloody civil war breaks out between the King and Parliament, families and communities are driven by different allegiances. Red Winter Journey is a sweeping tale of adventure and loss, sacrifice and love, with a unique and unforgettable story of a boy becoming a man at its heart.



Promotional banner for Dream of Courage by Paul Rushworth-Brown featuring survivors of the English Civil War, pirates, and coastal England in 1649, exploring courage, danger, survival, and new beginnings.


"Dream of Courage-

The Rushworths are poor, hungry tenants of the Puritan Jasper Calamy, of Haworth manor, and scratch out a living tending a few sheep, spinning and weaving wool on put out from passing clothiers. Young Robert Rushworth and John Rushworth leave home and stumble across a way to make their fortune, in the Briggate in Leeds. Pursued by John Wilding, a brogger and brute of a man, with no manners or decorum, typical of the ‘lower sort’ of the time. Smythe, the local tavern keeper, has many secrets and with a hidden past, sends Robert to The Haven, to Captain Girlington of 'The Pearl'. Will Robert escape before it's too late? Will he hang? Will Robert and Ursula ever be together?







Continue Exploring the Human Cost of History


Some stories challenge the way nations remember themselves.


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Others force us to confront the voices history tried to leave outside the room.


Watch more long-form author conversations exploring history, memory, power, and the lives often overlooked by official narratives.



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3 Comments

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Guest
May 16
Rated 5 out of 5 stars.

If you enjoy conversations about history, storytelling, survival, and the human cost behind historical events, explore Down Under Interviews on YouTube. The stories continue long after the interview ends.

YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/@DownUnderInterviews

The Thomas Rushworth Chronicles:https://www.paulrushworthbrown.com/chronicles

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Guest
May 16
Rated 5 out of 5 stars.

History remembered the powerful. But ordinary people carried the consequences.

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Guest
Jun 11, 2023
Rated 5 out of 5 stars.

Great article.

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Power protects itself. Truth pays the price.

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History is written by the powerful. Lived by everyone else.

Ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances.

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One migrant's search for belonging in a country built on silence.

One Yorkshire family struggles to survive in an age of fear, faith, and authority.

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Author Identity

Paul Rushworth-Brown
Internationally acclaimed historical fiction author

Outback Odyssey · Red Winter Journey · Dream of Courage · Skulduggery

Stories of grit, land, and belonging.


 

What History Does to Ordinary People.

IMAGE OF AUTHOR PAUL RUSHWORTH BROWN AND RON FROM THE ITS A WRAP WITH RON INTERVIEW ABOUT NOVEL RED WINTER JOURNEY

A  Father’s Fight to Save his Son— in a War he Wanted no Part of.

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As seen on PSI TV, Paul Rushworth-Brown is the host of:
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