Heywood was from 1818 a partner in Heywood's Bank, called the Manchester Bank and, from 1795, Heywood Brothers & Co., with his father's surviving brother Benjamin Arthur Heywood (died 1828), Benjamin, and (from 1820) Richard Heywood, another brother.[5] He served the office of boroughreeve of Salford in 1826.[3] In 1828 Thomas and Richard Heywood left the family business, which was carried on by Benjamin.[5]
Heywood died at Hope End on 20 November 1866. Before leaving Manchester Heywood collected a library of local books, which was dispersed in a sale in 1835. His general library was sold at Manchester in 1868.[3] The house at Hope End was sold in 1867 to C. A. Hewitt. It was demolished in the 1870s; its stable block eventually became a hotel.[8][9]
Works
Heywood was an early member of the council of the Chetham Society, and edited the following of its publications:[3]
The Norris Papers, 1846.
The Moore Rental, 1847. This work relates to the rented property of the Moore family of Liverpool, and was compiled by Edward Moore, son of John Moore the regicide.[10]
Cardinal Allen's Defence of Sir William Stanley's Surrender of Deventer, 1851.
On the South Lancashire Dialect, 1862.
Letter from Sir John Seton, dated 1643, 1862.
For the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire he wrote a notice of the family of Percival of Allerton, Lancashire (Trans. vol. i.), and a description of an old Chester document (vol. v.).[3]
In 1826 Heywood printed a pamphlet on The Earls of Derby and the Verse Writers of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, Manchester; it was reprinted in 1853 by the Chetham Society. In 1829 he annotated and printed The most Pleasant Song of Lady Bessy, the eldest Daughter of King Edward the Fourth.[3]