[2] In 1613, the will of Lambert Tyldesley revealed that the former manor house contained "a kitchen, backhouse, dayhouse, mealhouse, larder, buttery, parlour and hall.
There were two looms in the kitchen and Withington kept five horses and a colt, cattle, sheep and two pigs.
[4] In 1716 the hall, its water mill for grinding corn and kiln were let.
[1] The estate remained with the Stanleys until it was sold to Thomas Clowes of Manchester in 1732.
[6] The present landowners, Peel Holdings, have proposed building 600 houses on farmland between the cemetery and Mosley Common.