Before 1758, Heaton Chapel did not exist but was simply part of the Lancashire parish of Heaton Norris. The need for a chapel was identified in the Parliamentary Commission's
Lancashire and Cheshire church surveys 1649–1655, but it was a further hundred years before Mr A. Colier raised money by public subscription and Mr Sidebotham petitioned the bishop of
Chester for a licence to worship in 1758; it was dedicated 28 October 1758. It is speculated that the need for the chapel was stimulated by the preaching of
Anglican cleric
Charles Wesley who visited
Stockport in 1745. The Church was built on a field known as Yarn Croft of 1,712 square yards. The building was plain brick, with three rounded windows on the North side and three on the South side. There was a small projecting chancel which served as a place for the communion table, lit by means of a long round-headed window, with two long rectangular windows on each side. The church is 'miswent'; that is not built on a true east–west axis. In 2015, the
Diocese of Manchester changed the official address of the church from Heaton Norris to Heaton Chapel – 250 years after its establishment.
Transport history The principal road from
Manchester to Stockport and the south ran through Heaton Chapel along the line of the present Manchester Road. It was turnpiked in 1724. There was a toll gate opposite the church. It entered Stockport down Lancashire Hill. In 1826 a new turnpike was built. In 1837, Parliamentary approval was given for the railway to be built by the
Manchester and Birmingham Railway (M&BR), and the first section from Heaton Norris to Manchester Travis Street opened in 1841, but a viaduct needed to be built at Stockport. The
London and North Western Railway (LNWR) completed the
Crewe–Manchester line; the rector, Mr Jackson, used personal influence to have a station built in 1851 close to the rectory in Heaton Moor Road. The station was built in a cutting. There was already a Heaton Norris station, on Georges Road, so the new station was named
Heaton Chapel. The subsequent growth of the Heaton Moor area led to a temporary change of the railway station name:
Heaton Chapel for Heaton Moor, then
Heaton Chapel and Heaton Moor; it has since returned to
Heaton Chapel. The Heatons appeared as one of
The Times best places to live in the region in 2023. Heaton Chapel was specifically named as forming one of the top 10 places to live in the UK by 2024. Heaton Chapel returned to being in the region's best places to live in 2025. == Local economy ==