Houldsworth School (now St Elisabeth's Primary School) is a building on Bedford Street in Reddish, an area within the Metropolitan Borough of Stockport, Greater Manchester, England. It is designated as a Grade II* listed building. The school was designed by the Victorian architect Alfred Waterhouse and completed in 1874. It is a representative example of 19thâÂÂcentury educational architecture in the region.
Houldsworth School was commissioned during the late Victorian era to serve the growing population of Reddish, which expanded rapidly due to industrialisation. The building was designed by Alfred Waterhouse, whose other works include the Natural History Museum in London and Manchester Town Hall. The school was named after Sir William Houldsworth, a local industrialist and philanthropist associated with the nearby Houldsworth Mill. It opened in 1874 and has operated as an educational institution for the area since that time.
On 30 October 1973, Houldsworth School was designated a Grade II* listed building. A wall to the west of the school is also Grade II* listed.
The present St Elisabeth's Primary School opened in November 2019 as a new provision and is now part of the Thrive Church of England Academy Trust. It occupies a site historically associated with the original Victorian school buildings. While the original school building is listed, the modern primary school operates within updated facilities designed to meet contemporary educational requirements.
In 2021 listed building consent was granted for refurbishment works, including repairs to flat roofs and stone window surrounds, to support the ongoing conservation of the historic structure. The school maintains links with St Elisabeth's Church and the surrounding community as part of its continuing role in the area.
Houldsworth School is designed in Waterhouse's characteristic Late Gothic Revival style. The building is single-storey, constructed in red brick with stone dressings and topped with a slate roof. Its principal elevation features two large gables facing the road, each containing a prominent mullioned and transomed window. A porch with a three-centred arch is positioned to the left of centre, while additional mullion-and-transom windows appear to the right. The roofline is punctuated by dormer windows, adding to the building's distinctive silhouette.
The school building forms part of an industrial community and is associated with nearby listed heritage structures, including St Elisabeth's Church, its rectory, and the Houldsworth Working Men's Club on Leamington Road. Together, these buildings form a group of late Victorian structures linked to the area's industrial development and associated social institutions.