The name "Bache" comes from a large tidal lagoon that was once linked to the
River Dee at
Blacon. The area, which now lies under Liverpool Road and a supermarket car park, was slowly reclaimed and raised when the course of the river was diverted in the 1730s. The
Chester Canal also cut off the watercourse in the 1780s. Its course can be traced from Bache Brook which is now partially covered by the Deva Link, a highways relief road.
Bache Hall, a large 18th-century building, was once the main house of the Bache estate. It occupied the land now part of the
Countess of Chester Hospital. The building is currently used by the
University of Chester. In the early 1900s, Bache Golf Club occupied land to the west of the hall. Further details regarding the area's history can be found here. The settlement had previously been a
township in Chester St Oswald Parish, within the
Broxton Hundred. It became a civil parish in 1866. ==Demography==