At the 2011 census, the village had a population of 3,586.[1]
History
The name of the village was recorded in the Domesday Book as Eltone,[2] derived from the words ēl and tūn, meaning "eel farm or settlement.[3]
Elton was a township within the Thornton parish of the Eddisbury Hundred. It became a civil parish in 1866. The population was recorded at 167 in 1801, 216 in 1851, 190 in 1901, 410 in 1951 and rising to 3,528 by 2001.[4]
The village was briefly in the media spotlight in 1997 when one of its residents, Louise Woodward, went on trial for murder in the USA.
The number X2 bus visits Elton hourly in each direction, which runs between Chester via Ellesmere Port to Runcorn Halton Lea bus station. This service is operated by Stagecoach Merseyside & South Lancashire. Elton also has a few morning and evening journeys on service DB8 to and from Chester Business Park.
Public transport in Elton is supported by the North Cheshire Rail User Group.[6] It campaigns for better rail services and improved public transport interchange.
The nearest motorways are the M56 and the M53, and the local road, the A5117, links Elton to North Wales.
Opening in 2005, 65 hectares (160 acres) of the former Ince Power Station site was redeveloped as part of a large glass bottle production factory operated by Encirc Ltd (formerly Quinn Glass until 2014).[8] The facility initially contained two glass melting furnaces and 13 bottle production lines. It was estimated that £250 million was invested into this project and the factory outputted 1.2 billion bottles per year.[9]
In 2020 Encirc opened the world's largest container glass furnace, capable of processing up to 900 tonnes per day.[8][10]
North east of the village, landowners The Peel Group are developing a 54 hectares (130 acres) industrial site on a former water meadow at Ince Park. The Protos "energy and resource hub"[11] houses a biomass power station, a timber recycling plant and designated "nature areas".[12][13]
The construction of a facility to recover energy from non-recyclable waste began in 2020.[14]