According to a small history booklet written by local historian Christopher Jobson, published April 2007 entitled
"What was on in Welshampton", "a small mound in the field called 'Moat Meadow' was tentatively identified as the site of the house of a Saxon ealdorman or King's Thane by the Rev. Thomas Auden towards the end of the nineteenth century." According to an article by the same author, in the August 2008 edition of
"Mere News", the original village was known as 'Hampton' and had been in the
barony of le Strange from
Knockin since the 14th century. It came into the estates of the
Earls of Derby through the marriage of Elizabeth Stanley (the daughter of
Sir Thomas Stanley and
Joan Gousell) and Thomas Strange in the early 15th century. The
Stanley family is reputedly descended from Adam de Aldithley and the origin of the names may therefore be no mere coincidence. The original site of Hampton was a high and flat hill overlooking a lowland area known as Bradenheath. The oldest known reference with the 'Welsh' prefix is 1587 which mentions two members of local families, the Kynastons and Hanmers. An African prince, Jeremiah Libopuoa Moshueshue, who died in Welshampton in 1863, is buried at
St Michael and All Angels' Church. The church is reputedly designed by
George Gilbert Scott. On 11 June 1897 there was a
serious railway accident at Welshampton in which 11 people were killed following a derailment. The line was closed in 1965. In 1931 the parish of Welshampton had a population of 388. On 1 April 1988 the parish was abolished to form "Lyneal & Welshampton". == War Memorial and War Grave==