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Wuthering Heights Group Tour

Wuthering Heights Group Tour

Wuthering Heights Group Tour

Starring Margot Robbie as Cathy and Jacob Elordi as Heathcliff, the new Wuthering Heights film brings Emily Brontë's legendary novel of doomed passion set against the stormy backdrop of the windswept Yorkshire Moors, to the big screen. Visit the atmospheric locations where scenes were filmed, from the wild landscapes of the moors and Dales and traditional stone-built villages, to the ruins of 19th century mills and looming Gothic mansions.

Extend your tour into Brontë Country and discover the places which inspired Brontë in her writing and where she lived with her family, including her sister Charlotte Brontë, author of the equally famous Jane Eyre. Explore Haworth, the pretty Yorkshire village where they lived near the moors, made up of quaint bookshops, tea rooms and the famous pub patronised by Emily's brother, as well as the Brontë Parsonage where the sisters wrote their stories. See the farmhouse which inspired Wuthering Heights farmhouse and the family vault at the local church. Take the opportunity to visit the Brontë Birthplace in Thornton, now open to the public for the first time in its 200-year history.

Tour Highlights

  • Arkengarthdale, the northernmost of the dales and rugged Booze Moor, where Heathcliff puts Cathy in a tree and the idyllic village of Langthwaite, where the cast and crew were based.
  • Stay at the same hotel used by the cast.
  • Low Row village, with traditional stone cottages and sweeping moorland views, where the cast were seen filming. Visit the cosy 17th-century coaching inn where Margot Robbie was spotted having lunch.
  • Swaledale, a beautiful limestone valley where much of the filming took place. Explore the pretty village of Reeth where the film's production team were based. Also, wild Melbecks Moor and its ruined old buildings.
  • Surrender Bridge, which appears in the opening scenes as Cathy heads home. 
  • The haunting ruins of Old Gang Smelting Mill, symbolic of Yorkshire’s 19th-century lead mining past. The ruins were used for exterior shots of the Wuthering Heights farm house and also for various backdrops, including at the beginning of the film when a horse-drawn carriage travels through the mist. See the nearby road location for the scene with Cathy in a wedding dress, set against a desolate background.
  • Explore the ancient sandstone stacks and massive rocks of Bridestones Moor, where Heathcliff discovers Cathy and where he grabs her by the corset.
  • Knole House (National Trust) in Kent, the location for Heathcliff’s hasty wedding to Isabella. Explore the magnificent 600-year-old estate with its courtyards, showrooms, Gatehouse Tower and acres of parkland.
  • Fitzwilliam Wentworth, with its 18th Century parkland and mining history. See where Cathy and Heathcliff go out in the rain as children and later confess their love as adults.
  • East Riddlesden Hall (National Trust) where several older Wuthering Heights adaptations were filmed. Discover how the hall’s dark stone walls, rose windows and 17th‑century architecture inspired filmmakers from 1920 to the present day.
  • Hardcastle Crags (National Trust), a wooded valley and 19th Century mill, that evokes the atmosphere of Wuthering Heights with its rugged and unspoiled landscape.
  • The Brontë Parsonage in Haworth, where the Brontë sisters lived and their father was Vicar. The rooms where they wrote their famous works are still filled with their furniture, clothes and possessions.
  • St Michael and All Angels Church, where all the Brontës apart from Anne are buried in the family vault.
  • Picturesque Haworth, with its cobbled streets and quirky vintage and gifts shops and The Black Bull pub, frequented by Bramwell Brontë.
  • The moorland farm of Top Withens, believed to be the site of Wuthering Heights house.
  • Ponden Hall, inspiration for Thrushcross Grange in Wuthering Heights.
  • Brontë Falls and Brontë Stone Chair on the moors, where the sisters sat writing.
  • The Brontë Birthplace in Thornton, where the Brontë children were born in front of the parlour fireplace. Now open to the public for the first time in its 200-year history.
  • Shibden Hall, which is believed to have influenced Emily Brontë when she created Thrushcross Grange.
  • Haddon Hall, which appeared as a location in 2 film adapations of Jane Eyre.
  • Ancient Bolton Abbey, visited by the Brontë family and where they took guests, with its Priory Church and ruins of an Augustinian Priory in a beautiful riverside setting.

What Our Clients Say

I was very fortunate to be on their 70th and 75th D-Day celebration tours. The service and attention to details was exceptional. It was very moving to go back.

As a Jane Austen enthusiast, this tour was perfect - and the Jane Austen Festival in Bath was just fabulous to see!

Words fail me...The Downton Abbey was a perfectly wonderful travel experience! We did not know we would be the ONLY guests at the Abbey. When we realised how truly exclusive our tour was we were speechless! Surreal being there and actually meeting Lady Carnarvon.

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