The name Lymm, of Celtic origins, means a "place of running water" and is likely derived from an ancient stream that ran through the village centre.[3][4] The village appears as "Limme" in the Domesday Book of 1086.[5]
In 2017, Lymm was voted as one of the 'Best Places to Live' according to The Times and The Sunday Times list.[7][8][9][10] In June 2023, the village was voted as one of Britain's 'Most Desirable Towns' according to The Daily Telegraph,[11][12][13] and in November 2023 it was voted as the third 'Most Desirable' place to live in the North of England according to the Telegraph.[14]
|thumb|The Official Seal of Lymm Urban District Council]]
There is also a 12-member Lymm Parish Council.[17] Following the 2024 elections, there are 11 Liberal Democrat and 1 independent councillor. The parish council is a successor parish council from the Lymm Urban District Council.[citation needed]
Lymm High School accepts students from Lymm and the surrounding villages and hamlets. It was judged as 'Good' in its 2024 Ofsted inspection with the sixth form provision being judged as ‘Outstanding’. In December 2023, The Sunday Times ranked the school as one of the top five secondary schools in the North West and the top secondary school in the Warrington area.[19][20]
The fourth primary school is Cherry Tree Primary School,[28] located in the southern part of Lymm, and was rated as 'Good' at its last Ofsted inspection in 2024.[29]
Lymm Heritage Centre,[31] which opened in June 2017, is in the centre of the village on Legh Street. It hosts exhibitions related to local history as well as activities for schools and visitors.[32]
Morris dancing was taking place in Lymm as early as 1817, often appearing in the village at Rushbearing time throughout the Victorian era.[33] Morris dancing[34] continues to feature within the village with Lymm Morris dancers frequently performing during Rushbearing[35] and at the various annual village festivals including the Lymm May Queen Festival,[36] Lymm Festival[37] and Lymm Dickensian Festival.[38]
Lymm village centre is a designated conservation area, notable for its historic buildings, both listed and unlisted including the French-style terracotta former town hall, St Peter's Church and Lymm Hall. Another is Oughtrington Hall and Lodge (formerly owned by a cadet branch of the Leigh family) this is now Lymm High School.[39] Foxley Hall, home to a cadet branch of the ancient Booth family before ownership passed to the Carlisle family,[40] is no longer standing, but fustian-cutting cottages on Church Road and Arley Grove do survive.
Lymm Cross, usually known simply as "the Cross", is a Grade I listed structure dating from the 17th century, restored in 1897.[44][45]
A “dinosaur” (reptile) footprint was discovered in the Victorian era, in one of Lymm's many quarries, which is thought to be from the Triassic period.[6] It is on display in the centre of the village.[34]
Spud Wood is a recreational area, located next to the Bridgewater Canal, managed by the Woodland Trust.[46] In 2014 the community was granted a licence to run a wood allotment scheme where local residents can coppice and fell wood.[47][48] There is also a community orchard located in grounds behind Oughtrington Community Centre – run by the same local group.[49]
Transport
The M56 (junctions 7, 8 and 9) and M6 (junction 19 and 20) motorways are both within 3 miles (4.8 km) of Lymm.[50] The conjunction of these motorways with the A50[51] is known as the Lymm Interchange, and hosts a service station known as the Poplar 2000 services, a well-used truck stop. The A56 also passes just south of the village, connecting the nearby towns of Warrington and Altrincham.[52] The CAT5/5A buses to Lymm from Warrington and Altrincham are frequent on weekdays and Saturdays.[53][54]
Lymm Historic Transport Day is an annual summer festival celebrating various modes of transport, from canal boats to vintage vehicles, which takes place in the village on the May Queen field.[55]
Waterways
The Bridgewater Canal passes through the centre of Lymm. The Manchester Ship Canal passes to the north, and beyond its route lies the River Mersey. To the east of Lymm the River Bollin flows along the village's border with Warburton and the borough of Trafford. A number of small brooks feed the popular tourist attraction of Lymm Dam,[56][57] built in 1824 to enable the construction of the Stockport–Warrington Road (now known as the A56).[58]
Railways
Lymm railway station was on Whitbarrow Road. It opened on 1 November 1853 as part of the Warrington and Altrincham Junction railway. There was a further station at Heatley, on Mill Lane, for salt and lead. To the east, the track ran via Dunham into Broadheath and the Manchester network. To the west, the track used to run into Warrington, via Latchford, and the tar processing on Loushers Lane, then into Bank Quay Low Level.
The line closed to passengers on 10 September 1962; it was officially closed to all types of traffic on 7 July 1985, but lasted a few months. Then it became financially unviable, and the tracks and sleepers were rapidly lifted. Lymm today has no railway station; the closest stations are at Glazebrook, Birchwood, Warrington, Knutsford and Altrincham.
Cycleways
Today the old Railway through Lymm forms a good stretch of the Trans Pennine Trail, with a ranger station at Statham, near the centre of the village. In 2022, upgrade work to certain sections of the trail commenced to provide updated all weather surfaces for users.
Demography
Note: statistics expressed as percentages may not add up to 100%. Census data is based on that of Lymm Ward from the 2011 censuses.[59]
2137 (Lymm) Squadron formed in 1964 as part of the programme to reestablish units that had been closed following the Second World War. They formed at Park Road in Broomedge with a wooden spooner hut. In 2015 this was demolished to make way for a new £300,000 facility which was opened in 2016.[60]
In April 2018 the Squadron lead the Royal Air Force Air Cadets action to commemorate the Royal Air Force centenary by travelling to the first RAF airfield at Saint-Omer in France and parading on behalf of the RAF and Ministry of Defence.[61]
There is angling at Lymm Dam and at several other fisheries including Heatley Mere and Meadow View. Angling is represented by the Lymm Angling Club.[63]
Lymm has a number of sports facilities, including:
Lymm Oughtrington Park Cricket Club[66] – whose home ground is in the former grounds of Oughtrington Hall, a former ancestral home of a cadet branch of the Leigh family
Lymm Leisure Centre,[67][68] which is next door to the cricket club at Lymm High School – has a swimming pool, badminton court and gym facilities
Crown green bowling takes place in Stage Lane, the Oughtrington Bowling Club[69] having been established for more than a century
Elizabeth Pulman (1836 in Lymm – 1900), British-born New Zealand photographer, the country's first female professional photographer, emigrated 1861
Gerard Dewhurst (1872–1956), English cotton merchant, banker and amateur footballer, earning one international cap for England in 1895; grew up at Oughtrington Hall in Lymm
Robert Westall (1929–1993), author, lived at 1 Woodland Avenue in Lymm until his death. He bought 107 Higher Lane in the village, close to Woodland Avenue, using royalties from his children's books and used it as his writing office.[73][74]
^"Contact Us." Manchester Japanese School. Retrieved on 15 February 2015. "Oughtrington Lane, Lymm, Cheshire, WA13 0RB, United Kingdom (Language Centre at Lymm High School)"
^"Home page". Lymm Heritage Centre. Retrieved 25 February 2023.