At the time of the
Roman conquest of Britain in the 1st century AD, the area around Singleton was inhabited by a
Celtic tribe called the
Setantii.
Singleton railway station once served the village as part of the
Preston and Wyre Joint Railway. The station was situated west of the village, on the road to
Blackpool. Singleton Hall is a Gothic-styled mansion on Lodge Lane, built in 1855 by Thomas Miller Jr (1811–1865), son of a prominent
Preston industrialist Thomas Miller Sr. The Hall was later used by
Lancashire County Council as a
special school for senior boys with disabilities, known as the Singleton Hall Residential Special School for Physically Handicapped Boys (Senior). The hall was largely untouched until 2004–2005, when it was extended and converted into private residences by
Crosby Homes. Public pathways outside the hall have been developed and maintained by the Richard Dumbreck Singleton Trust, endowed by Richard Dumbreck, a great-nephew of Thomas Horrocks Miller.
Pevsner's
The Buildings of England describes the hall as "large and unlovely, in brick and stone trim with an entrance tower and a taller stair-tower. The style is domestic Gothic," and says that "1871–73 is supposed to be the date, but this may refer to extensions." He mentions "unremarkable lodges and various estate buildings," and notes that the hall, and these further buildings, have been converted to flats. The Miller family also commissioned Singleton's
parish church,
St Anne's, designed by Lancaster architect
Edward Graham Paley and completed in 1861. in Singleton. ==Fracking==