Lymm is a large village and civil parish in Warrington, Cheshire in England. Lymm was an urban district of Cheshire from 1894 to 1974. The civil parish of Lymm integrates the hamlets of Booths Hill, Broomedge, Church Green, Deansgreen, Heatley, Heatley Heath, Little Heatley, Oughtrington, Reddish, Rushgreen and Statham. According to the 2011 Census, the village has a permanent population of roughly 12350 people. Within this population, 49.1 per cent are male and 50.9 percent are female. Lymm village centre is a designated preservation region, significant for its historic buildings, both listed and unlisted. These consist of the French-style terracotta one-time town hall, which is at present unlisted, St. Peter's Church, Oughtrington Hall and Lodge, previously owned by a cadet branch of the Leigh family and now Lymm High School, and Lymm Hall, an one-time Domville family residence. Foxley Hall, home to a cadet branch of the ancient Booth family, before ownership passed to the Carlisle family, is no longer remaining, but fustian cutting cottages on Church Road and Arley Grove do live on. The Parish Church of St. Peter, Oughtrington is an example of Gothic Revival architecture. St. Mary's Church, Lymm, nearby Lymm Dam was in a state of disrepair by the middle of the 1800s so the Leigh family commissioned the noted Newcastle architect John Dobson to restore it. The 1521 tower was kept and raised, but the need for further stonework rendered the tower being rebuilt in 1887. Lymm Cross, typically identified just as 'the Cross', is a Grade I listed structure. A 24-hour cam watches over the landmark. Additional web cams are tactically located around. For all of your home developments, make sure to find credible professionals in Lymm to make certain of quality.