Gunstone was first recorded in 1186 as
Gonestona. Toponymists think that the name comes from a combination of an
Old Norse personal name,
Gunni or
Gunnr, along with the
Old English word
tūn, giving the enclosure or farmstead of Gunni. In
early English times, Gunstone sat just a few miles south of border of the
Danelaw at
Watling Street - the area of England under Danish control. The settlement is based around Whitehouse Lane, with
Pendeford in
Wolverhampton to the east and
Codsall Wood to the west. The Moat Brook, a tributary of the
River Penk, passes through Gunstone, occasionally flooding sections of Whitehouse Lane after a period of sustained rain. A
Roman road ran south through this area from
Pennocrucium in the direction of
Greensforge. == Today ==