Prenton appears as
Prestune in the
Domesday Book of 1086, with the name
Pren-ton persisting despite the
Norman-French accented spelling. Domesday records the presence of a water mill at Prenton, - which is , if the
league is taken in its old English measurement of . The size and importance of the wood may reflect the name of the settlement.
Pren is
Welsh (British) for the material 'wood' and in the name Prenton there is the
Saxon suffix
tún for a settlement, which suggests a settlement in a wood. The Welsh/British name for Prenton would thus be
Prentre which could easily have changed into Prenton following
Anglian penetration of the area in the early seventh century. Note that
Landican (one mile distant from Prenton) retained its Welsh/British name even through Anglian and subsequent
Norse occupation. Another explanation for the origins of the name is
Praen is an Old English personal noun, with
Praen-tún meaning "Praen's farm/settlement". The name has been variously spelt over time as
Prenton (1260),
Prempton (1620) and
Printon (1642). Until significant residential development from the beginning of the twentieth century, Prenton remained a rural
hamlet centred around Prenton Hall, in the south west of the current suburban area. In August 1940, during the
Second World War, a house maid working in Prenton became the first fatality of a
bombing raid on the Merseyside area.
Civic history Previously a township in
Woodchurch parish,
Wirral Hundred, Prenton was a
civil parish from 1866 to 1 April 1933 when it was added to Birkenhead civil parish. The population was recorded at 81 in 1801, 99 in 1851, 412 in 1901 and 2032 in 1931. By 1928 local government responsibility for Prenton changed from
Wirral Rural District to the
County Borough of Birkenhead. On 1 April 1974,
local government reorganisation in England and Wales resulted in most of the Wirral Peninsula, including Prenton, transfer from
Cheshire to the nascent county of Merseyside. ==Geography==