I am just a little concerned you are following the right Henry for a couple of reasons.
It seems odd that Henry would have been baptised in Heptonstall if he lived in Hebden Brodge
You say they were living in Silk Street Manchester in 1841 and that record says they were both born in Lancashire (which could be Wadsworth but not Hebden Bridge)
How did you decide your Henry was from Hebden Bridge please
All their children until the last one were baptised at Heptonstall St Thomas. Thomas Greenwood was their first child, baptised 20th July 1817 in Heptonstall, father Henry mother Fanny. Then Hiram was baptised at Heptonstall St Thomas 2nd August 1820. Then Stephen baptised 1822 and buried 1822, then Sally (Sarah) baptised 1824, then Jane baptised 1827, then finally Mary is baptised in Manchester in 1830. The whole family are on the 1841 census living in Manchester, and Henry died on March 10th 1847 in Henry Street, Manchester, informant Fanny Greenwood.
Henry and Fanny were married on 24th November 1816 at Heptonstall St Thomas,and had marriage banns on 17th November. The banns say "Henry Greenwood of Wadsworth Weaver and Frances Greenwood of same."
Surely St Thomas' Heptonstall was the only church for the whole area?
As they were living in Manchester for the 1841 census, this was in Lancashire and the officials would assume most people were born there, I think it was only a tick to say if you were born in Lancashire or not, and easy to get wrong. The officials are constantly writing Hebden Bridge wrongly, such as Ebding. Maybe they had good reason to claim that they were born in Lancashire, or maybe the boundaries were different, after all this area was close to the Lancashire border.
On the 1871 census, Thomas' birthplace is written as Hepdon Bridge. On the 1851 census it looks like Elden Bridge. I can't find any of this family other than Fanny and Mary on the 1861 census.
It would be interesting to find the 1851 census for Thomas' brother Hiram, who was living in Manchester, married 27th October 1850 at St Mary, St Denys and St George, what later became Manchester Cathedral, to Mary Stanfield. His son Henry Greenwood was born 1854 Manchester, and Hiram died 18th March 1855 at 145 Jersey Street, Ancoats, Manchester, with his wife Mary present at the death, and the Informant. Hiram would probably be shown also as born in Hebden Bridge, probably misspelt, even though his baptism was at Heptonstall St Thomas.