The word 'Beaumont' means 'beautiful hill/mountain'. The area before the 1970s was mainly farmland and a sewage system, however started to be invested in by the council and local private housing companies. The area was largely developed from the 1970s onwards, and continues to expand into the surrounding countryside. It includes several large housing estates, industrial areas (including the main factory for
Walkers) and a large area of modern housing, with large parts divided up into smaller estates such as Anstey Heights, Thurcaston Park, Ashton Green and Verdant Rise. Newer areas of Beaumont Leys include the Anstey Heights, towards Castle Hill Park and the village of
Anstey, as well as the Thurcaston Park housing developments on the North side of Beaumont Leys and Bradgate Heights on the land surrounded by
Glenfield, Anstey and Beaumont Leys. The Thurcaston Park development is expected to have 2000 homes once the estate is finished.
Civil parish Beaumont Leys was formerly an extra-parochial tract, from 1858 Beaumont Leys was a civil parish in its own right until it was abolished on 1 April 1935 and merged with Leicester, parts also went to Anstey and
Thurcaston. In 1931 the parish had a population of 169. ==Amenities and facilities==