Heaton Moor is a suburb of Stockport, Greater Manchester, England. It is one of the Four Heatons and borders Heaton Chapel, Heaton Norris and Heaton Mersey. Heaton Moor has Victorian housing, built between 1852 and 1892, along affluent tree-lined streets which follow the field patterns of a former agricultural economy.
In 1934, the area voted to leave Lancashire and join Cheshire.
The opening of Heaton Chapel railway station marked a turning point in development of the area; land was acquired and streets were planned. The houses and new buildings along Heaton Moor Road were of a grandiose scale with generous gardens. They are set back from the road, and have imposing stone gate posts. The new residential roads, such as Broomfield Road, Derby Road, and Peel Moat Road which were built when agricultural land was acquired, have the same characteristics. The building and infilling continued into the Edwardian era. There were a wide range of sporting facilities, such as crown green bowling, tennis and golf. A substantial terrace of shops was built on Heaton Moor Road, with glass and cast iron awnings. Intellectual life was provided for when the Reform Club was built in 1886 by Alfred Darbyshire.
The Savoy Cinema opened 1923, built in the Baroque style in red brick with white terracota dressings. When, in 2006, the cinema announced its closure due to low audiences, there was uproar amongst locals; it was announced that it could be replaced by a Varsity bar. A Save Our Savoy campaign was launched. Plans for the bar were rejected. It has new owners, has been refurbished and reopened in 2015.
A second hub was built around the former council offices in Thornfield Road, in the area known as Moor Top. The main thoroughfare is now home to a champagne bar, boutiques, florists and upmarket restaurants.
The original owner was obliged to sell the hall in the early 1840s and it was acquired by Edmund Wright (1781–1852) as his residence. It was then named Leegate Hall but Wright renamed it Heaton Hall; since there was also a Heaton Hall at Prestwich, he renamed it again as Mauldeth Hall. On the death of Edmund Wright in 1852, the hall was acquired by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners as the residence of the first Bishop of Manchester; James Prince Lee, in position since 1848, lived in the hall until his death in 1869. South Manchester Reporter; 28 February 2013, p. 19 In 1915 the Hospital for Incurables at Mauldeth Hall and Walmersley House had accommodation for 125 inpatients.McKechnie, H. M., ed. (1915) Manchester in Nineteen Hundred and Fifteen. Manchester University Press; p. 58
After its restoration in the 1990s, the hall became the residence of the Consul General of the China in Manchester.
The district had for many years a boys' boarding school called Heaton Moor College. Boys mainly from the Middle East stayed in the main school building, a large detached Victorian villa house, on Heaton Moor Road. Its large rear garden harboured other classroom buildings as well as a playground. It was at its height in the early to mid 1950s. In 1953 there were 202 pupils and a teaching staff of 12. A block of flats now stands on the site.
Heaton Moor is built along Heaton Moor Road, a road leading from Reddish to Heaton Mersey.
Bus services are operated by Stagecoach Manchester; key routes include:
Heaton Mersey lacrosse team has been based in Heaton Moor since 1879, playing on Green Lane at the Heatons Sports Club.
West Heaton Bowling, Tennis and Squash Club, established in 1873, has six all weather tennis courts, two squash courts and a bowling green.
Heaton Moor Golf Club, founded in 1892, is an 18-hole relatively flat, tree-lined course set in a conservation area.
Moor Road Runners, founded in 2022, is the main running club in Heaton Moor, with runs typically starting and finishing at one of the many pubs in the area.
Dominic Monaghan, who played Merry in the film trilogy of The Lord of the Rings and Charlie Pace the television actor in Lost, was born in Germany but raised here. The Stone Roses' bass guitarist Gary Mounfield (Mani) lives here.
Manchester-born musician Norman Beaker, the ninth British blues artist to be inducted as a legend in the Blues Hall of Fame, has lived in Heaton Moor since 1985.
Tennis siblings Liam Broady and Naomi Broady and
basketball player John Amaechi are Heaton Moor residents.
Kate Richardson-Walsh, captain of Great Britain's 2016 gold medal-winning hockey team, grew up in Heaton Moor, where she attended Tithe Barn School and Priestnall School.
The novelist, broadcaster and working Labour peer, Joan Bakewell.
The crime author Val McDermid and TV screenwriter Danny Brocklehurst (Shameless, Sorted, Clocking Off) and children's author Philip Caveney live (or have recently lived) here. Children's author Jo Welch grew up in Heaton Moor and set her first book, The Einstein Code, in the area.
The The Guardian journalist and feminist Mary Stott and her husband lived here after moving from Leicester.
Geography
History
Mauldeth Hall
Education
Religion
Transport
Economy
Sport
Personalities
Performing arts
Sport
Writers
Businessmen
See also
External links
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