The name Childer Thornton means "children's thorn-tree farm/settlement" and likely derives from the Old English words cild (children), þorn (hawthorn tree) and tūn (a farmstead or settlement).[1]
Thornton-Childer was formerly a township in the parish of Eastham,[2] in the Wirral Hundred, in 1866 Childer Thornton became a separate civil parish. It was administered as part of Wirral Rural District until 1933 when it was transferred to Ellesmere Port Urban District. On 1 April 1950 the parish was abolished and merged with Ellesmere Port.[3][4]
The population was 112 in 1801, 319 in 1851 and rising to 685 by 1901.[3] In 1931 the parish had a population of 792.[5] From 1974 to 2009 it was in Ellesmere Port and Neston district.
Geography
Childer Thornton is in the southern part of the Wirral Peninsula, near to the town of Ellesmere Port.
The village has one school, three pubs, a hotel and a garden centre. Childer Thornton is exactly halfway in distance between Birkenhead and Chester and one of the pubs is named 'The Halfway House', which was a stagecoach stop between Chester and New Ferry in the 1770s.[6] Childer Thornton's other pubs are 'The Burleydam' and 'The White Lion'. The Village Petrol Station is equipped with a charging station for electric vehicles.
Religion
Childer Thornton is in the Anglicanparish of Hooton, with an attractive parish church made of local sandstone, situated just outside the village itself. St Paul's Church was built between 1858 and 1862, at a cost of £5,000.[7] It was designated a Grade II* listed building in 1985.[8]
Transport
The busy A41 road between Birkenhead and Chester runs through the middle of Childer Thornton. Despite this, the area is relatively unspoilt, with the M53 motorway effectively diverting away from the bulk of through traffic. To the north of the village, the A550 road diverges from the A41, heading towards North Wales.