The name of "Munchespathe" was first recorded in 1153, when Roger de Ulehale of
Tanworth was granted the manor and the adjoining lands by William de Beaumont, the third Earl of Warwick. Monkspath is built on the former hamlet of Shelly. During the 13th and 14th centuries Shelly was a thriving settlement that connected
Solihull and
Henley-in-Arden by way of the Kings Highway (now Shelly Lane). The first modern housing development was constructed between 1981 and 1986, in proximity to the landfill site known as Hay Lane, which served the area until the 1970s. The actual site of the landfill is now a park and amenity area. During preparations for this work,
Monkspath Hall, built circa 1775, was illegally demolished, despite being
Grade II listed. A court subsequently ordered its rebuilding. The district expanded again in the mid-1990s and smaller-scale developments on newly-available land continue to be constructed well into the 2000s. Since 2000, the area has become increasingly commercialised with the expansion of the Monkspath Business Park, Solar Park and Fore Business Park. Shelley Farm, one of the only surviving 19th-century buildings in the area has now been converted into a public house. Sydenhams Moat, a moated site just south of Monkspath Bridge has been identified as the home of Simon De Mancetter. "The manor of Little Monkspath is associated with Simon de Mancetter, who, in the 13th century, settled himself within the Lordship of Tanworth, where a certain large moated place (though the buildings be gone) beareth yet the name of his habitation" ==Transport==