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Heaton Mersey railway station

Disused railway stations in the Metropolitan Borough of StockportFormer Midland Railway stationsManchester South District LinePages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1961
Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1880Use British English from March 2015
BR 5MT 73000 Heaton Mersey 1951 edited 2
BR 5MT 73000 Heaton Mersey 1951 edited 2

Heaton Mersey railway station served the Heaton Mersey district of Stockport between 1880 and 1961.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Heaton Mersey railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Heaton Mersey railway station
Meltham Close,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Heaton Mersey railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.4107 ° E -2.2083 °
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Address

Meltham Close

Meltham Close
SK4 3BB , Heaton Mersey
England, United Kingdom
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BR 5MT 73000 Heaton Mersey 1951 edited 2
BR 5MT 73000 Heaton Mersey 1951 edited 2
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Nearby Places

Parrs Wood House
Parrs Wood House

Parrs Wood House is an 18th-century Georgian villa in the Parrs Wood area of Didsbury, Manchester, England. It was described by Pevsner as "a poorer man's Heaton Hall." It was designated a Grade II* listed building on 25 February 1952.The "white stucco mansion" consists of a "square main block with (two) unequal service wings on (the) north side. It is of two storeys and [three] bays [with] a three-window service range to the left." The architect of the house is unknown, but "it may have been designed by a member of the Wyatt family". Parrs Wood House was bought in 1795 by Richard Farrington, whose brother, the diarist and artist Joseph Farrington, died there after falling down the stairs of the Church of St James, Didsbury, in 1821. From 1825 Parrs Wood House was home to the Tory MP James Heald (1796–1873). Heald was a member of the Wesleyan Methodist Church and a prominent philanthropist, supporting a number of charitable causes. He was elected MP for Stockport in 1847 alongside Richard Cobden. Following his death, St Paul's Methodist Church, Didsbury was erected as a memorial to him. James Heald did not marry and had no children. The Parrs Wood estate passed to his nephew after his death, and remained in the family until in the 1920s, when it was sold to the Manchester Corporation, on the provision that it would be used for educational purposes. The estate later became the location of Parrs Wood High School and Parrs Wood Rural Studies Centre. The mansion was formerly the music building and is now the sixth-form centre of Parrs Wood High School. In 2000, much of the school land was sold to property developers who built a large entertainment complex, changing the area "from a semi-rural educational enclave into a leisure complex". During the redevelopment, Parrs Wood House suffered damage and theft, and the original stables burnt down.