The name appears to come from the
Old English (
Anglo-Saxon)
Hringhæg meaning "circular or enclosing hedged enclosure".
Ringway Chapel is on Wilmslow Old Road near the south edge of
Manchester Airport. • 1173: First mention of
Ullerwood Castle, which is now in Ringway parish. It is a
shell keep; at that time it was owned by
Hamon de Massey. • 1515: First mention of 'Ringey Chapel', a
chapel of ease in
Bowdon parish. •
English Civil War (1642–1651):
Dissenters started using the Ringway Chapel. • 1721 or shortly before: John Crewe of
Crewe Hall inherited the Lordship of Ringway. • 1721
Dissenters were ejected from the chapel, and moved to a barn, and in 1723 re-established themselves at
Hale. • About 1736: Ringway Chapel was demolished, and replaced by a new plain red brick building. According to the St Wilfrid's Mobberley Christening Records Abraham Johnson was baptised on 24 October 1736 "the first Sunday after it was finished by me, Faithful Meaykin (curate of St Wilfrid's) who preached the first sermon" • 1741: The chapel's bell was recast or replaced. • 1751: Record of
baptisms began. • 1821: Record of burials began: previous burials were at Bowdon. • 1863: Ringway parish (including all or part of what is now
Halebarns) was split off
Bowdon parish. within the city boundaries. The parish had previously been in the
Bucklow Rural District of
Cheshire. • 1997: Ringway Chapel was restored and converted for use as a design studio. • 2001: According to
a census Ringway civil parish had a population of 106. • 2011: Ringway chapel started to be used by the
Seventh-day Adventist Church. ==Governance==