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A train passing through Cheadle Hulme towards Handforth. The white building in the background is the original station house. The original Cheadle Hulme railway station on the Crewe line, about 0.3 miles (0.5 km) south-west of the current structure, was known simply as "Cheadle". It was in use from May 1842, following the opening of the viaduct.
By 2009 the only farm remaining was Leather's Farm on Ladybridge Road. [53] Cheadle Hulme is served by a fire station on Turves Road which opened in October 1960. Before this the area made use of a service in Cheadle. [54] An ambulance station is near the fire station, and the closest public hospital is Stepping Hill Hospital in Hazel Grove.
The Alexandra Hospital is a private hospital in Cheadle, Greater Manchester, operated by Circle Health. It is the largest private hospital in the UK outside London. [1]
Northern Trains operates services between Crewe, Alderley Edge and Manchester Piccadilly, via Stockport and the Styal line via Manchester Airport. A number of the Crewe / Alderley Edge – Piccadilly services also extend beyond Piccadilly to terminate at Liverpool Lime Street, Southport and Wigan North Western.
Cheadle (/ ˈ tʃ iː d əl /) is a village in the Metropolitan Borough of Stockport, in the county of Greater Manchester, England. Within the boundaries of the historic county of Cheshire, it borders Cheadle Hulme, Gatley, Heald Green and Cheadle Heath in Stockport, and East Didsbury in Manchester. In 2011, it had a population of 14,698.
The facility relocated to Cheadle, 10 miles (16 km) to the south, as the Manchester Royal Hospital for the Insane, in 1849. [2] Voluntary patients, known as boarders, were admitted from 1863. [2] The hospital expanded through the construction of villas on the Cheadle site in the 1860s and through the acquisition of houses in Colwyn Bay in the ...
Millington Hall is a historic Grade II listed building in Cheadle Hulme, Stockport, England, constructed in 1683. It is on Station Road next to the Methodist Church. The building became a restaurant in the 1960s, before being converted and reopened in 2004 as a public house called the John Millington. [1]
Its original terminus, Liverpool Road railway station, was closed to passengers in 1844, but still exists and is the oldest surviving passenger station in the world. [6] Since the Beeching cuts many of Greater Manchester's stations have closed and many station facilities have been removed.