Anne Brontë Born: 17-Jan-1820 Birthplace: Thornton, Yorkshire, England Died: 28-May-1849 Location of death: Scarborough, Yorkshire, England Cause of death: Tuberculosis Remains: Buried, St. Mary's Churchyard, Scarborough, England
Gender: Female Race or Ethnicity: White Occupation: Novelist Nationality: England Executive summary: The Tenant of Wildfell Hall Anne Bront� was the youngest and least famous of the novelist Bront� sisters, and wrote under the pen name Acton Bell. She worked as a governess, abhorred the job, and used it as the basis for her poignant but humorous Agnes Grey. Her far more serious second novel, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, was considered scandalous for its effective dramatization of the problems caused by the denial of legal rights to married women. Bront� fell ill with tuberculosis mere months after her second book was published, and died the following spring at the age of 29. Father: Patrick Brontë (clergyman, b. 17-Mar-1777, d. 7-Jun-1861) Mother: Maria Branwell Brontë (b. 15-Apr-1783, m. 29-Dec-1812, d. 15-Sep-1821 uterine cancer) Sister: Maria Brontë (b. Apr-1814, d. 6-Jun-1825 tuberculosis) Sister: Elizabeth Brontë (b. 8-Feb-1815, d. 15-Jun-1825 tuberculosis) Sister: Charlotte Brontë (author, b. 21-Apr-1816, d. 31-Mar-1855) Brother: Branwell Brontë (poet-drunkard, b. 26-Jun-1817, d. 24-Sep-1848 bronchitis) Sister: Emily Brontë (author, b. 30-Jul-1818, d. 19-Dec-1848 tuberculosis)
High School: Roe Head School, Dewsbury, England (attended 1835-37)
Irish Ancestry
English Ancestry
Author of books:
Agnes Grey (1847) The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (1848)
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