HEATON
Heaton was formerly a township in Leek parish
and later a civil parish 2,689 a. (1,088 ha.) in
area. (fn. 35) It is pasture, with a hamlet in the centre
and Swythamley Hall in parkland in the northeast part. The northern boundary with Cheshire
is formed by the river Dane. The boundary with
Leekfrith on the south-east runs over a hill called
Gun.
The hamlet of Heaton, an Old English name
meaning a high settlement, (fn. 36) stands at 800 ft.
(244 m.), and to the east the land on Gun rises
to 1,000 ft. (305 m.). Beside the Dane it lies at 503
ft. (153 m.) on the west side of the township and
617 ft. (188 m.) in the north-east at Danebridge.
There are two valleys, one in the north-east part
of the township and the other south of Heaton
hamlet; both are formed by streams which flow
into the Dane. The underlying rock is sandstone
of the Millstone Grit series. It is overlain by
Boulder Clay, and the soil is mostly fine loam
and clay. (fn. 37)
Ten people in Heaton were assessed for tax in
1327, (fn. 38) and forty-two were assessed for hearth
tax in 1666. (fn. 39) In 1751 there were 179 people
aged over 16 in the township. (fn. 40) In 1801 the
population was 343, rising to 391 by 1821 and 430
by 1841. It had fallen to 405 by 1851 and 361 by
1871, and in 1881 it was 328. An increase to 371
in 1891 was followed by a further decline, to 359
in 1901 and 349 in 1911. The population was
355 in 1921 and 345 in 1931. It was 307 in 1951,
295 in 1961, 297 in 1971, 285 in 1981, and 274 in
1991. (fn. 41)
Part of an Anglo-Saxon circular cross shaft
stands in a field north-east of Heaton hamlet. (fn. 42)
The hamlet itself lies where a road from Rushton
Spencer crossed a road which ran south to the
main area of common waste in the township and
north to the Dane. (fn. 43) Ivy Farm is of the 17th
century, but most other houses in the hamlet are
of the 19th century. By 1834 there was an inn,
the Black Horse, still recorded in 1871. (fn. 44) Heaton
Hall Farm, so called by 1851, stands west of the
hamlet on a site occupied by 1775 and was
rebuilt in the 1860s. (fn. 45) When the waste was
inclosed in 1820, a new road was laid out
bypassing the hamlet. (fn. 46) Heaton House Farm at
the west end of the inclosure road has a date
stone of 1824, retained when the house was
rebuilt in the 1840s, evidently for James Robins,
a surgeon, who was living there in 1851. (fn. 47)
The earliest settlements outside the hamlet
were mostly in the north part of the township.
Wormhough Farm and Wormhill Farm on the
north-western boundary stand in an area called
Wurnuldealth in the late 1240s. (fn. 48) There was a
house there by the earlier 16th century, (fn. 49) possibly
on the site of the present Wormhough Farm.
Wormhill Farm is of the 19th century but
probably replaced what was called the New
House in 1702. (fn. 50) Brandy Lee Farm to the east,
taking its name from words meaning a place in
woodland cleared by burning, was an occupied
site by the earlier 16th century. (fn. 51) At the same
date there was a house to the north at Flashcroft
beside the Dane. (fn. 52) East of Brandy Lee there were
houses on the sites of Heaton Lowe and Hollinhall Farm by the earlier 16th century. (fn. 53) Heaton
Lowe has a porch, ornamented with slender
pyramids, which carries the date 1651 and the
initials of William Nabs, joint lord of Heaton
manor in 1654. Hollinhall Farm was largely
rebuilt in 1896. (fn. 54)
There were houses in 1340 at a place called
Berdeholm in the valley north-east of Heaton
hamlet, where there was a mill possibly by
1327. (fn. 55) Bearda Farm on the north side of the
valley retains the parlour wing of a 17th-century
house, owned in 1666 by the Tunnicliffe family
and then assessed for tax on five hearths. (fn. 56) The
site of Hannel Farm on the south side of the
valley was occupied by 1617. (fn. 57)
Swythamley Hall in the north-east part of the
township derives its name from an Old Norse
word (svitha) meaning land cleared by burning
and another Old Norse word (holmr), or its
English equivalent, meaning raised ground in
marsh land. (fn. 58) The hall, which stands on or near
the site of a grange belonging to Dieulacres
abbey by 1291, dates mostly from the 18th and
19th centuries and stands in parkland. (fn. 59) Hillylees
Farm south of the hall was an occupied site by
the earlier 16th century, (fn. 60) and Hangingstone
Farm north of the hall, which takes its name
from a rock perched on the nearby hillside, is of
the 17th century. Part of Snipe Cottage, on the
west side of Swythamley park and called Snipe
Hall in 1756, (fn. 61) is possibly also of the 17th
century. There was a house at the river crossing
at Danebridge by 1708. (fn. 62) A hamlet which developed there in the late 18th and early 19th century
in association with a cotton mill had a population
of just over 50 in 1841. (fn. 63)
Hawksley Farm east of Heaton hamlet retains
some fabric from a 17th-century house, as does
the nearby Tofthall Farm. The latter was the
home in 1741 of William Armett, sheriff of
Staffordshire in 1764; he improved the house
and laid out a walled garden. Known as Toft
Hall in 1775, the house was remodelled and
extended to the south in the mid 19th century. (fn. 64)
Overhouses Farm south of Tofthall Farm is
dated 1853 and stands west of a house of the
same name in existence by 1656. (fn. 65) By 1291
Dieulacres abbey had a grange at Fairboroughs in
the south part of the township. (fn. 66) The name
means 'fair hills' and was perhaps coined by the
monks. (fn. 67)
A medieval route between Leek and Macclesfield
ran through the east side of the township over
Gun, crossing the Dane into Cheshire at
Danebridge. The crossing was recorded c. 1190
as Scliderford, meaning 'slippery ford'. (fn. 68) There
was a bridge by 1357, known as Sliderford
bridge in 1545. Rebuilt as a stone bridge of two
arches in the early 17th century, it was washed
away by a flood in 1631 and replaced the next
year by a single-arch bridge. (fn. 69) The present
bridge is dated 1869. The road formerly ran past
Snipe Cottage and there was a steep descent to
the river crossing. The present, more gentle
route to the west existed by 1831 and may have
been laid out primarily to serve traffic from the
cotton mill at Danebridge. (fn. 70) In 1611 there was
a ford on the west side of the township at
Barleigh ford. There was a bridge there by
1752. (fn. 71)
A feeder for Rudyard Lake was constructed
c. 1811, leaving the Dane half-way along its
course in Heaton. It ran through Rushton
Spencer and entered the lake at its north end in
Rushton James. (fn. 72)
Heaton association for the prosecution of felons
was formed in 1801. (fn. 73) The village hall on the
east side of the township was converted from a
school in 1982, and a post office was opened in
an extension in 1985. (fn. 74) Heaton was connected to
a mains water supply in the earlier 1970s. (fn. 75)
MANOR AND OTHER ESTATES.
What became the manor of HEATON was probably
included in the grant of Leek manor by Ranulph,
earl of Chester, to Dieulacres abbey in 1232. (fn. 76)
The abbey had granges at Fairboroughs and
Swythamley by 1291, and in 1535 it held what
was called the manor of Heaton. (fn. 77) After the
Dissolution the Crown retained the manor until
1614 when it was sold to William Tunnicliffe of
Bearda Farm and William Plant, also of Heaton.
They sold it in 1629 to George Thorley of
Heaton, from whom it was bought in 1631 by
Francis Gibson of Wormhough. In 1654 Gibson
sold the manor to William Trafford of Swythamley
and William Nabs of Heaton Lowe. (fn. 78) One moiety
then descended with the Swythamley estate.
The other, still held by a member of the Nabs
family in 1704, was later held by George Hunt
(d. 1762), whose executors sold it to George
Smith of Kingsley. In 1794 Smith sold his
moiety to Edward Nicholls of Swythamley, and
the reunited manor then descended with the
Swythamley estate. (fn. 79)
Dieulacres abbey had a grange at FAIRBOROUGHS by 1291. (fn. 80) In 1546 the Crown sold the
estate to William Fynney, who was succeeded in
1584 or 1585 by his son, also William. The
younger William was succeeded in 1595 by his
daughter Ann, widow of William Colmore of
Birmingham, and Ann in 1598 by her son William. (fn. 81)
In 1618 William Colmore sold the estate to
George Thorley. (fn. 82) In the 1640s the house was
occupied by John Pott. A man of the same name
was living there in 1666, and his initials appear
on a stone dated 1673, which survives on the
front of the present house. (fn. 83) Another John Pott
died at Fairboroughs in 1748. (fn. 84) John Potts of
Fairboroughs (d. 1798) sold part of his estate to
the earl of Macclesfield in 1757, (fn. 85) and in the later
1860s a 159-a. farm at Fairboroughs was held as
part of the earl of Macclesfield's Rudyard estate. (fn. 86) That estate was broken up in 1919, and
after passing through various hands Fairboroughs farm was bought in 1966 by W. J. Lowe.
His son Robert owned it in 1991. (fn. 87) The present
house, which possibly contains part of a 16thcentury house, was extended in 1673 and
refronted in the mid 19th century.

HEATON 1991
Dieulacres abbey had a grange at SWYTHAMLEY possibly by 1246 (fn. 88) and certainly by 1291. (fn. 89)
In 1540 the Crown granted the estate to William
Trafford of Wilmslow (Ches.), who was succeeded in or shortly before 1559 by his son
Christopher. (fn. 90) Christopher was succeeded in
1572 by his brother Philip, Philip in 1621 by his
son William, and William in 1627 by his son,
also William. (fn. 91) The younger William, who was
sheriff of Staffordshire in 1694, was succeeded
in 1697 by his son William, sheriff in 1706. (fn. 92) His
son, another William, succeeded in 1726 and
died in 1762, leaving as his heir a daughter
Sarah, widow of William Nicholls. She was
succeeded in 1785 by her son Edward, sheriff in
1818. (fn. 93) By 1828 Edward had taken the surname
Trafford. (fn. 94)
In 1832 Trafford sold what was by then
called Swythamley Hall to John Brocklehurst
of Macclesfield, in Prestbury (Ches.). (fn. 95) John was
succeeded in 1839 by his son William, who died
childless in 1859 and was succeeded by his
nephew Philip Lancaster Brocklehurst. (fn. 96) Created
a baronet in 1903, Philip was succeeded in 1904
by his son, also Philip. The latter was succeeded
in 1975 by his sister's grandson, John van
Haeften, who broke up the estate in 1977. (fn. 97) The
hall, with its parkland, was bought by the World
Government for the Age of Enlightenment,
followers of an Indian mystic, Maharishi Mahesh
Yogi, and was opened as a training centre for
teachers of Transcendental Meditation. It was
sold in 1987 to Mr. R. M. Naylor. (fn. 98)
Assessed for tax on eight hearths in 1666, the
house at Swythamley was possibly remodelled
in the 1690s. (fn. 99) A section of wall incorporated in
the present west front is probably from the
17th-century house, and it appears to have
formed the south-west corner of what by the late
18th century was an irregular double-pile house.
The 17th-century part of the house was damaged
by fire in 1813, but a part recently added by
Edward Nicholls survived. (fn. 1) The house was later
enlarged by the Brocklehursts, and by 1862 a
canted bay had been added to the room at the
south-west corner and there was a billiard room
at the north end. (fn. 2) The billiard room stood on
the west side of what had been an open courtyard, on whose other sides were service quarters.
The courtyard was covered over by Philip
Brocklehurst c. 1860 for use as a dining room
and ballroom by the tenantry at the twice-yearly
estate audit. (fn. 3) The service quarters were removed in the early 20th century, when a large
two-storeyed porch was added to the west front. (fn. 4)
The outbuildings north-east of the house include
a late 18th-century stable block, enlarged in 1860
to enclose a yard, and a tenants' hall of 1888. (fn. 5)
After its purchase by Mr. Naylor in 1987, the
house and outbuildings were divided into a
number of separate residential units.
The house stands in parkland, which covered
80 a. in 1831 and was then stocked with deer. (fn. 6)
In the later 18th century the approach was from
the south, along a road which ran in front of the
house and then along the north side of the park
to Snipe Cottage. By 1831 there was also a road
along the south side of the park. (fn. 7) The present
drive across the park existed by the later 19th
century. (fn. 8) West Lodge at the west end of the
drive is dated 1892, and the smaller South Lodge
on the east side of the park was built probably
c. 1905 in connexion with the nearby church. (fn. 9)
An Anglo-Saxon circular cross shaft north-west
of the house was brought from Wincle, in Prestbury
(Ches.), c. 1874. (fn. 10)
Besides its granges at Fairboroughs and
Swythamley, Dieulacres abbey owned other
land in the township. Henry of Ford, son of
Ligulf of Heaton, gave it 2½ bovates in the 1240s
and Henry son of Adam of Tittesworth gave land
at Wurnuldehalth (later Wormhough) in the late
1240s; (fn. 11) Robert of Heaton gave land in or before
1315. (fn. 12) At the Dissolution the abbey's property
in Heaton included farms attached to houses at
Bearda, Brandy Lee, Flashcroft, Heaton Lowe,
Hillylees, and Hollinhall. (fn. 13)
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
Agriculture.
Dieulacres abbey's grange at Swythamley comprised 2 carucates of land with meadow and its
grange at Fairboroughs 1 carucate in 1291. (fn. 14) By
the 1490s the abbey's cattle were managed from
Swythamley, using land there and in the 'forest'
in Leekfrith as pasture. In 1490 the herd consisted of 17 cows and a bull, 118 steers, heifers,
and stirks, and 72 oxen and cows. The abbey
also kept 10 draught oxen at Swythamley in the
1490s. (fn. 15) Payments and services owed to the
abbey by free tenants in Heaton in the earlier
16th century comprised a money rent, the payment
of two capons worth 6d., one day's ploughing
worth 3d., and one day's reaping worth 3d. (fn. 16) The
abbey probably had a tithe barn in the township:
one mentioned in the sale of Heaton manor in
1614 probably stood on the road west of Heaton
hamlet, where there was a house called Tithe
Barn in 1820. (fn. 17)
The common waste lay south and east of
Heaton hamlet. (fn. 18) Although parts had been inclosed by the earlier 17th century, (fn. 19) 476 a. of
waste remained in 1820, when it was inclosed
under an Act of 1816. (fn. 20)
Of the 706 ha. of farmland returned for the
civil parish in 1988, grassland covered 601.4 ha.
and there were 44.3 ha. of rough grazing. The
farming was dairy and sheep, with 1,040 head of
cattle and 1,304 sheep and lambs. There were
also 10,550 hens. Of the 27 farms returned, 25
were under 50 ha. in size and 2 were between 50
and 99 ha. Woodland covered 39.8 ha. (fn. 21)
Mills.
A miller recorded at Heaton in 1327 (fn. 22)
may have held a mill on the stream which runs
into the Dane near Bearda Farm: Dieulacres
abbey had a mill at Bearda in the earlier 16th
century. (fn. 23) Bearda mill ceased working apparently
in the mid 1890s. (fn. 24)
There was a corn mill at Danebridge by 1652.
It became a cotton mill evidently in or soon after
1783. (fn. 25)
Trade and Industry.
A tanhouse was recorded
at Heaton in 1640. It probably stood on the
north-western boundary, where a tanyard was
recorded in the earlier 19th century. (fn. 26)
By 1652 there was a paper mill on the Dane at
Danebridge. It still existed in 1729 and apparently in 1742. It had ceased to operate by 1754,
possibly having been replaced by the paper mill
which by 1775 stood further downstream in
Wincle on the Cheshire side of the river. (fn. 27) In
1671 there was also a fulling mill at Danebridge.
It still existed in 1715 but not in 1742. (fn. 28)
The corn mill at Danebridge was let in 1783
to John Routh, a cotton manufacturer. It was
presumably converted into a cotton mill, which
existed there by 1829. (fn. 29) John and James Berresford were listed as cotton spinners at Danebridge
in 1834, and in 1841 nine cotton workers were
living near the mill. (fn. 30) By 1849 the mill had been
closed, (fn. 31) but it was open again in 1851, when
John Bennett, a pattern designer, lived at
Danebridge cotton mill. The mill appears to
have been closed again by 1861. (fn. 32) It was reopened in the 1870s by John Birch, the owner
of a dyeworks at Froghall, in Ipstones, and of a
carpet manufactory at Wildboarclough, in Prestbury (Ches.). In 1876 his son Joseph used the
Danebridge mill to make colours for the silk
trade. The business was already in decline by
the time of Joseph's death in 1898, and the mill
was later used as a smithy. The building fell into
disrepair and was demolished in 1976. (fn. 33)
Grindstone was quarried at Heaton c. 1680. (fn. 34)
In 1820 there were several stone pits in the
township, notably on the west side of Gun where
a quarry was still worked in 1919. (fn. 35)
A brick and tile maker employing three men
lived in Heaton hamlet in 1851. (fn. 36) His works may
have been at the brick and tile yard recorded in
1866 south-east of Tofthall Farm. (fn. 37)
LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
By the earlier 14th
century Heaton was a tithing of Leek manor and
sent a frankpledge to the twice-yearly view. It
was still part of the manor in 1820, when the
court appointed a headborough for the township. (fn. 38)
There was a view of frankpledge for Heaton in
1797, when it was stated that court records
existed from 1697. (fn. 39) A court held in the mid 19th
century by the owner of the Swythamley estate
as lord of Heaton had been discontinued by 1874. (fn. 40)
By the late 1870s a pinfold stood on the west
side of Heaton hamlet, (fn. 41) where it survived in 1991.
The township was part of the Leekfrith quarter
of Leek parish, and in the 1660s its poor were
relieved by the quarter's overseer. The township
had its own overseer by 1713. (fn. 42) A workhouse was
built by the township at Danebridge in 1829.
The intention may have been to accommodate
unemployed workers from the cotton mill there.
The upkeep of the workhouse was soon found
to be too expensive, and in 1833 the township
sold it to John Brocklehurst of Swythamley. (fn. 43)
Heaton became part of Leek poor-law union in
1837. (fn. 44)
CHURCH.
From the 18th century and presumably
earlier people from Heaton attended St.
Lawrence's church in Rushton Spencer. (fn. 45)
A plan by Philip Brocklehurst in the late 1870s
to build a chapel near Swythamley Hall was
abortive. Revived shortly before his death in
1904, the project was continued by his widow
Annie and a memorial church licensed for services
was completed in 1905. It was closed in 1977
and later converted into a house. (fn. 46) The church
had a carillon worked by water power. (fn. 47)
NONCONFORMITY.
A Methodist service
held at Danebridge on alternate Sundays in 1798
took place in the cotton mill in 1806. (fn. 48) A
Wesleyan Methodist chapel was opened at
Danebridge in 1834, and on Census Sunday
1851 the attendance was 80 in the afternoon,
besides Sunday school children, and 120 in the
evening. (fn. 49) The chapel was known as Danebridge
Methodist church in 1991. A Wesleyan chapel
opened in 1816 on the township's western
boundary was replaced by one in Rushton
Spencer in 1899 and was later converted into a
house. (fn. 50)
A Primitive Methodist chapel was built on the
east side of the township in 1864. (fn. 51) It was closed
in the late 1960s and was converted in 1985 into
a private residence called Gun End House. (fn. 52)
EDUCATION.
William Trafford (d. 1762) of
Swythamley asked in his will that a school
should be built on common land in Heaton. (fn. 53)
There is no evidence that his request was fulfilled.
In the earlier 1830s there were two schools in
the township, one with 21 boys and the other
with 25 girls. (fn. 54) A schoolmaster living at Heaton
Lowe in 1851 may have taught in the township, (fn. 55)
as may a schoolmistress who lived near Gun in
1871. (fn. 56) The Wesleyan Methodist Sunday school
had an attendance of 45 on Census Sunday 1851. (fn. 57)
In 1902 a school was opened on the east side
of the township to commemorate Edward VII's
coronation. The site was given by Philip Brocklehurst of Swythamley, and the building was
erected and furnished by Brocklehurst and his
wife. (fn. 58) It was a Church of England elementary
school until 1921, when it became Swythamley
council school. (fn. 59) From 1931 it was a junior
school, senior children going to Rushton Spencer
until 1940 and thereafter to Leek. (fn. 60) The school,
which was rebuilt in 1960-1, was closed in 1981,
and the building was converted into a village hall. (fn. 61)
CHARITIES FOR THE POOR.
Sarah
Nicholls (d. 1785) of Swythamley left the interest on £200 for distribution in woollen cloth,
half to the poor of Heaton and half to the poor
of Leekfrith. The recipients were to be chosen
by Sarah's daughters, and after their deaths by
the owner of the Swythamley estate. In 1788 the
annual income was £10. By the earlier 1820s
distributions each of 12 gowns and 12 coats for
Heaton and Leekfrith were made once every
three years. (fn. 62) The distribution ceased in 1940
but was revived in 1974. The charity was amalgamated that year with one established by Sir
Philip Brocklehurst (d. 1904), who left the interest on £300 to be distributed in blankets and
woollen clothing to needy tenants on the
Swythamley estate. (fn. 63) A Scheme of 1981 provided for the income of what was then called the
Nicholls and Brocklehurst charity to be distributed either in kind or in money equally among
beneficiaries in Heaton and Leekfrith. In 1991
there was a cash distribution of £140. (fn. 64)