The name Ince, first recorded in the Domesday Book as Inise,[3] is from the Primitive Welshïnïs, meaning "island". The name refers to the village's position on a low ridge in the marshlands around the rivers Gowy and Mersey.[4][5]
Ince was a township split between the ancient parishes of both Ince and Stoak, within the Eddisbury Hundred. It existed as a civil parish between 1866 and 1950, when it was absorbed into Ellesmere Port civil parish. The population stood at 443 in 1801, 422 in 1851 and 290 in 1901.[6]
The present civil parish was separated from Ellesmere Port in 1987, with smaller boundaries.[6]
The X2 bus visits Ince hourly in each direction and operates from Chester bus station with a destination of Runcorn. The service is operated by Stagecoach Merseyside & South Lancashire. Ince also has a few morning and evening journeys on service DB8 to Chester Business Park.
Public transport in Ince is supported by the North Cheshire Rail User Group.[9] It campaigns for better rail services and improved public transport interchange.
Economy and industry
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"[10] houses a biomass power station, a timber recycling plant and designated "nature areas".[11][12]
The construction of a facility to recover energy from non-recyclable waste began in 2020.[13]