Bardsley was ordained deacon in 1833, by
Edward Venables-Vernon-Harcourt, the
Archbishop of York.
Patrick Brontë hoped in 1833 to have him as curate assisting at
Haworth, but the Archbishop's permission was refused. Records show another candidate, John Butterfield, ordained deacon at the same time, who nominally was to be the assistant. Green conjectures, in any case, that the issue for Harcourt may have been financial: whether Brontë could fund the post. Brontë had a curate from the end of 1835. Bardsley became a family friend, regularly bringing his wife Sarah to Haworth Parsonage for tea on Saturday afternoons. Bardsley instead became a curate in
Keighley. He was living at Bank Place in 1834, in which year he was ordained priest by the Archbishop. The rector of Keighley, from 1825 to 1840, was Theodore Dury (1788–1850). Dury and Bardsley came to Haworth to address a temperance meeting in 1834, at Brontë's invitation. In 1835 Bardsley spoke at the Temperance Festival in Wilsden. Later in the 1830s Bardsley became curate at
Bierley Chapel, then just outside
Bradford. There he was from 1837 assistant to George Stringer Bull, and had the whole chapel salary; Bull may have relied on support from
John Wood. Caught up in a ramifying dispute involving
William Scoresby, the vicar of Bradford, Bardsley resigned. ==Burnley and Manchester==