Nearby lands were settled in prehistoric times, evidenced within this civil parish, with a megalithic barrow on Westend Common. West End may have obtained its name because it was the west of
Chobham,
ENE. The 1845 map reproduced by EJ Willson provides boundaries at that date. Its direct predecessor named
Westend was in 1870–72 described by
John Marius Wilson as "a tything in
Worplesdon parish, Surrey; 3¼ miles NW of
Guildford. Pop., 341." A dependency on Worplesdon church, as its
tything, is attested in the medieval period until the late 19th century, after which the area formed part of the parish of Chobham. The
parish church, the church of the Holy Trinity, serves a similar area
ecclesiastical parish and is a small building consisting of a chancel consecrated in 1890, nave consecrated in 1842, and a vestry built in 1906. The material is stone and the style is 13th century. Over the west end is a small bell-turret with a square spire above the entrance. In the 20th century many houses were added to the village, and it became a significant centre of nursery gardening. The civil parish was created in 1968. ==Facilities==