Tyldesley is a town in the Metropolitan Borough of Wigan, in Greater Manchester, England. It contains 15 listed buildings designated by English Heritage and included in the National Heritage List for England. Of these, one is listed at Grade II*, the middle of the three grades, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade.
The town's listed buildings reflect its history. Three ancient halls in the south and east, Damhouse, Chaddock and Garrett, remain from when Tyldesley was a scattered rural settlement before it developed into an industrial town after 1800. Two places of worship, Top Chapel and the parish church were built as the town's population began to increase as was the former St. George's School, built as a national school in the 1820s of which only its stone-built façade remains. Nikolaus Pevsner describes Tyldesley as "a small industrial town of parallel brick streets"[1] and considers its best building is the "handsome former Union Bank of Manchester" on Elliott Street.[2]
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