The name has been interpreted to mean "Aelf(a)'s Western Woodland Clearing", and be
Old English in origin; there is evidence of human activity in the area from the
Mesolithic period, and later during the
Iron Age and
Roman Britain periods. Of four references to "Ella" in the
Domesday Book it is thought that one refers to West Ella, either as a village of 20 or 5 persons. Writers in the 19th century speculated that the names of nearby features,
Kerry Pits (south-east of the village) and
The Lunds (north-east, now a golf course) were etymological evidence of
druidic activities in the area; "Kerry" being postulated to derive from "cyric" (place of worship); "lund" meaning grove, a reference to a (druidic) grove. The fields around Kirk Ella, West Ella and Willerby were
enclosed in by acts of 1796 and 1824. Unlike its eastern neighbour
Kirk Ella no movement of Hull merchants to, or pattern of construction of large houses took place in West Ella during the 18th and 19th century – in 1801 the villages population of 79; in 1851 the population was 1851. The only large house in the village was, and is West Ella Hall, built ; the house became the property of Joseph Sykes (see
Sykes family of Sledmere) in 1756 who improved the place, enclosing the grounds. The original two storey four bay house was extended on each side in the 1770s, with further extensions in 1800, early 1800s and 1884. A Wesleyan Methodist church was built 1895, in other respects development of the village was unchanged at the beginning of the 20th century. During the first half of the 20th century there was little building growth in the village. By the end of the 1930s the urban spread of Kirk Ella had begun to expand westwards along West Ella Road. By the end of the 1940s this growth had reached West Ella, with substantial garden houses all along the south side of West Ella Road between the two villages; new housing had been developed in West Ella at the west and east ends, also of a substantial nature of detached houses with large gardens. By the 1960s a new road and housing estate had been built north of the original village :
Elveley Drive and
The Fairway, in the area of plantation known as Long Drive Wood; by the beginning of the 1970s this had been extended connecting northwards to Riplingham Road. This extent of development remained mostly unchanged to the present (2006). in 1866 West Ella became a separate
civil parish, on 1 April 1935 the parish was abolished and merged with
Haltemprice. In 1931 the parish had a population of 122. ==Notable people==