The earliest known human settlement in Merseyside has been found at Greasby, believed to date from approximately 7000
BC. A rectangular floor of
sandstone slabs and pebbles suggests regular use by the nomadic hunters of that period. The remains of burnt
hazelnut shells found at the site were used for
radiocarbon dating. The results specified a time period between 8300 BC and 8500 BC, even earlier than previously thought.
National Museums Liverpool archaeologists excavated the site between 1987 and 1990.
Gravesberie derives from the
Old English gräf (a grove) and
burh (a fortified place). This has been recorded as meaning "grove farm/settlement", or alternatively, a "stronghold or fortification by a grove, trench, canal or wood". The name was Scandinavianised to Greas
by, under the influence of
Old Norse speakers in Wirral (
gräf and
býr, with
býr meaning "settlement" or "farmstead"). The name of the village has been variously spelt over time, including:
Grauesberi,
Grauesbyri,
Grauisby (1093),
Grauesbi (c.1155),
Grauesby (c.1170),
Griseby (1280) and
Graysby (1610). Before the
Norman conquest of England in 1066, Greasby was owned by a man named Dunning, who may have been an official (bailiff or steward) for the earls of
Mercia. After the invasion, all land in the area passed to
Hugh d'Avranches. By the time of the Domesday Book (1086), Greasby was under the ownership of Nigel de Burcy and consisted of eight households. After the
Second World War the area expanded considerably, with significant residential development across previously agricultural land. This has resulted in Greasby becoming contiguous with the nearby settlements of
Moreton,
Upton and
Woodchurch.
Civic history Greasby was formerly a
township split between the parishes of
Thurstaston and
West Kirby, within the
Wirral Hundred. It held
civil parish status between 1866 and 1974. From 1866 Greasby was part of Wirral Rural Sanitary District, which was replaced in 1894 by
Wirral Rural District. In 1933 the village transferred to
Hoylake Urban District. On 1 April 1974 the parish was abolished and
local government reorganisation in England and Wales resulted in most of the Wirral Peninsula, including Greasby, transfer from the county of Cheshire to Merseyside. The population of the township/parish was 123 in 1801, rising to 177 in 1851, 290 in 1901 and significantly increasing to 4,367 in 1951. ==Geography==