Roman buildings and
tesselated pavements close to the quayside have led to suggestions that a small
Roman settlement and port existed on the site of the modern town, with a
road linking it to the nearby town of
Camulodunum (modern
Colchester). The nearby
burial mound to the north of the town is also Roman.
Edward the Confessor granted the island to the
abbey of St. Ouen in
Rouen,
France, in 1046, and the
Priory of West Mersea was established. West Mersea was recorded in the
Domesday Book in 1086, at which time it had a population of 84 households. The parish church, dedicated to St Peter and St Paul, dates back to the 11th century and is now a
Grade I listed building. In 1963, the lifeboat station was established next to the
West Mersea Yacht Club, one of the first ten
inshore lifeboat stations in the
British Isles. Originally served by a D class lifeboat, this was replaced by a B class, Atlantic 21, lifeboat in 1972. In 1992, a new boathouse and slipway were opened by the
Duke of Kent. In 2001, a B class Atlantic 75 lifeboat was stationed at West Mersea, and then in 2015 this was replaced with the current B class
Atlantic 85 named
Just George, funded by £210,000 of community donations. == West Mersea today ==