The original hall dates to the time of Henry VIII [500 years old] but over the years other sections were added to it.
Located in the district of Moston, which is 3 miles from central Manchester..It has already been partly demolished, and I would recommend you take a last look if you have the opportunity. The issue is not who owns it now, but why it has been allowed to deteriorate to such a condition.
The Brinksway Caves take their name from Brinksway, a nearby road that stretches a small portion of the A560 to Cheadle Hulme. The road took the name from the Middle English brink, an edge or bank, and the Old English weg, a path; hence, a road at a brink.
‘New arrivals to Angel Meadow were forced to sleep naked with strangers in dingy lodging houses, cockroaches were welcomed because they ate the bed bugs and skulls were kicked around during games of football in a graveyard packed with the bodies of 40,000 paupers’[1]Angel Meadow: Victorian Britain’s Most Savage Slum, author Dean Kirby ...This site was excavated in 2012, by Oxford Archaeology, prior to building the new Co-Op building...
Radcliffe Tower is the only surviving part of a manor house in Radcliffe, Greater Manchester (historically in Lancashire). It is a Grade I listed building and a Scheduled Monument. James de Radcliffe, who was lord of the manor of Radcliffe, and consisted of a stone-built hall and one or two towers, probably built with ashlar blocks, rebuilt the house in 1403
Uniquely, Heptonstall has two churches within one graveyard. At the centre of the village are the ruins of the Church of St Thomas a' Becket built between 1256 and 1260. Later adaptations gave the Church two naves, two aisles and two chantry chapels as well as a tower. www.derelictmanchester.com
EXTWISTLE HALL, now a farm-house, stands on a high ridge of land between the valleys of the Don and Swinden Water in a bleak and commanding situation, and is a lofty three-story building with end gables and mullioned windows, said to have been erected by John Parker in the latter half of the 16th century.
Round Barn Quarry, is another example of one of the many stone mines located around east Lancashire.https://www.derelictmanchester.com/2021/12/round-barn-quarry-entwistle-lancashire.html