Cheetham, Lancashire Family History Guide

Cheetham is an Ecclesiastical Parish in the county of Lancashire, created in 1839 from Manchester Our Lady, St George and St Denys Ancient Parish.

Alternative names: Cheetham Hill St Mark, St Mark Cheetham.

Other places in the parish include: Cheetham Hill St Luke, Crumpsall, and Cheetham St Luke.

Parish church:

Parish registers begin:

  • Cheetham Hill St Mark: 1878
  • Cheetham St Luke: 1839

Nonconformists include: Independent/Congregational, Plymouth Brethren, Presbyterian Church in England, Roman Catholic, Unitarian, Wesleyan Methodist, and Wesleyan Methodist Association.

Adjacent Parishes

Parish History

Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales Circa 1870

CHEETHAM, a village, a township, a sub-district, and two chapelries in Manchester parish, Lancashire.

The village bears the name of Cheetham Hill; stands within Manchester borough, 2 ½ miles NNW of the centre of Manchester; and has a post-office under Manchester.

The township includes the village; is all suburban to Manchester; contains numerous villas of Manchester merchants and manufacturers; and was long the residence of the ancient family of Chetham. Acres, 919. Real property, £77,917. Pop., 17,446. Houses, 3,168.

The sub-district contains also the township of Crumpsall. Acres, 1,652. Pop., 21,731. Houses, 3,882.

The chapelries are St. Luke-Cheetham and St. Mark-Cheetham; and were constituted in 1840 and 1846. Pop., 4,719 and 2,377. Houses, 843 and 478. The livings are rectories in the diocese of Manchester. Value of St. Luke, £258; of St. Mark, not reported. Patrons of St. Luke, Trustees; of St. Mark, the Dean and Chapter of Manchester. The churches of both are good;

There are two chapels for Independents and two for Wesleyans; and one of the latter, in Waterloo-road, is an edifice in the early English style, built in 1862.

Source: The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales [Wilson, John M]. A. Fullarton & Co. N. d. c. [1870-72].

A Topographical Dictionary of England 1848

CHEETHAM, a township, in the parish and union of Manchester, hundred of Salford, S. division of the county of Lancaster, 2 miles (N. by W.) from Manchester; containing 6082 inhabitants.

The township lies on the new and old roads to Bury; is beautifully situated on rising ground; and comprises 954 acres, all pasture land. It abounds with the private residences of Manchester merchants and others, among which is Green Hill, the seat of Edward Loyd, Esq., banker of that town. The views of the surrounding country are very extensive. The river Irwell separates the township from Salford. 

St. Mark’s church here was built in 1794, at the expense of the Rev. Charles Ethelston: the living is a perpetual curacy, patron and incumbent, the Rev. Hart Ethelston, M.A., grandson of the founder; net income, £350. An ecclesiastical district is assigned to the church, including portions of Crumpsall and Broughton. 

St. Luke’s church, built on land given by the Earl of Derby, was consecrated in October, 1839; it cost £15,000, and is an elegant structure in the decorated English style, with a tower surmounted by a graceful spire, forming a conspicuous object in the scenery: the interior is particularly neat. The living is a perpetual curacy, in the patronage of Mr. Loyd and four other Trustees; net income, £300, with a good glebe-house. 

St. Thomas’s church, at the corner of Derby-street, Redbank, was commenced in 1843, by the Manchester and Eccles Church Building Society. The living is a perpetual curacy, in the gift of the Bishop of Chester.

There are two meeting-houses for Wesleyans, with a burial-ground and a school attached to one of them; also a place of worship for Associated Methodists.

St. Chad’s Roman Catholic chapel, in York-street, was commenced in the spring of 1846, and completed in August 1847, at a cost of £8500: it is an elegant edifice of the 14th century, 134 feet long, and has a fine tower.

Connected with St. Mark’s church are good schools, towards the enlargement of which a government grant was made in 1844; they contain a useful village library. Excellent schools are also attached to St. Luke’s.

Source: A Topographical Dictionary of England by Samuel Lewis 1848

Parish Records

FamilySearch

England, Lancashire, Cheetham – Cemeteries ( 3 )
Cheetham and Blackley monumental inscriptions, about 1500-1800
Author: Owen, John

Monumental inscriptions, St. Marks, Cheetham Hill, Manchester, Lancashire, England
Author: Norman, Bertram William Tuff, 1880-1959

St. Mark’s C of E churchyard, Cheetham Hill, gravestone inscriptions, 1794-1854
Author: Church of England. St. Mark’s Church (Cheetham, Lancashire)

England, Lancashire, Cheetham – Census ( 1 )
Census returns for Cheetham, 1841-1891
Author: Great Britain. Census Office

England, Lancashire, Cheetham – Church history ( 1 )
Cheetham Hill Wesleyan circuit jubliee : an illustrated historical souvenir, 1863-1913
Author: Webster, John

England, Lancashire, Cheetham – Church records ( 12 )
Bishop’s transcripts for St. Mark’s and St. Luke’s Churches, and Redbank Chapelry, Cheetham, 1806-1870
Author: Church of England. St. Mark’s Church (Cheetham, Lancashire); Church of England. St. Luke’s Church (Cheetham, Lancashire); Church of England. Chapelry of Redbank (Lancashire)

Church records for Cheetham Hill Congregational Church, Manchester, 1852-1929
Author: Cheetham Hill Chapel (Cheetham, Lancashire : Congregational)

Church records for Cheetham Hill Primitive Methodist Chapel, Cheetham, 1903-1930
Author: Cheetham Hill Chapel (Cheetham, Lancashire : Primitive Methodist)

Church records for Cheetham Hill Road Wesleyan Methodist Chapel, Cheetham, 1816-1967
Author: Cheetham Hill Road Chapel (Cheetham, Lancashire : Wesleyan Methodist)

Church records for Rydal Mount, Waterloo Road Wesleyan Methodist Chapel, Cheetham, 1864-1933
Author: Rydal Mount, Waterloo Road Chapel (Cheetham, Lancashire : Wesleyan Methodist)

Church records for Victoria Queen’s Road, Wesleyan Methodist Chapel, Cheetham, 1873-1957
Author: Victoria Queen’s Road Chapel (Cheetham, Lancashire : Wesleyan Methodist)

Church records for York Street United Methodist Free Chapel, Cheetham, 1864-1909
Author: York Street Chapel (Cheetham, Lancashire : United Methodist Free)

England, Lancashire, Cheetham, St. Luke, parish registers, 1839-1932
Author: Church of England. St. Luke’s Church (Cheetham, Lancashire); Manchester Archives Central Library

England, Lancashire, Cheetham, St. Mark, parish registers, 1794-1930
Author: Church of England. St. Mark’s Church (Cheetham, Lancashire); Manchester Archives Central Library

Parish register transcript christenings and burials, St. Marks, Cheetham Hill, Manchester, Lancashire, England
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Cheetham; Norman, Bertram William Tuff, 1880-1959

Parish registers for St. Luke’s Church, Cheetham, 1839-1981
Author: Church of England. St. Luke’s Church (Cheetham, Lancashire)

Parish registers for St. Mark’s Church, Cheetham, 1794-1982
Author: Church of England. St. Mark’s Church (Cheetham, Lancashire)

England, Lancashire, Cheetham – Church records – Indexes ( 1 )
Computer printout of Manchester, St. Marks Cheetham Hill, Lancs., Eng

England, Lancashire, Cheetham – History ( 1 )
Broughton and Cheetham Hill
Author: Dobkin, Monty

England, Lancashire, Cheetham – Land and property ( 1 )
Poor law records for Cheetham township, 1795-1895
Author: Cheetham (Lancashire : township)

England, Lancashire, Cheetham – Poorhouses, poor law, etc. ( 1 )
Poor law records for Cheetham township, 1795-1895
Author: Cheetham (Lancashire : township)

England, Lancashire, Cheetham – Schools ( 2 )
School records for Heath Street School, Cheetham, 1906-1926
Author: Heath Street School (Cheetham, Lancashire)

School records for Waterloo Road School, Cheetham, 1913-1928
Author: Waterloo Road School (Cheetham, Lancashire)

England, Lancashire, Cheetham – Taxation ( 1 )
Poor law records for Cheetham township, 1795-1895
Author: Cheetham (Lancashire : township)

Administration

  • County: Lancashire
  • Civil Registration District: Manchester
  • Probate Court: Court of the Bishop of Chester (Episcopal Consistory)
  • Diocese: Manchester
  • Rural Deanery: Manchester
  • Poor Law Union: Manchester
  • Hundred: Salford
  • Province: York