Brimstage

Brimstage (locally /ˈbrɪmstɪdʒ/) is a village and former civil parish in the Wirral district, in the county of Merseyside, England.

[4][5][6] Over time, the name has been spelt as Brunestathe (1260), Brimstache (1275), Brunstach (1326), Bronstathe (1348) and Brynstat (1387).

[7] In 1288, Sir Roger de Domville is said to have 'listened for the word Brunstath' (an old name for Brimstage, which he held as lord) during proceedings at Chester.

Historically within the county of Cheshire, it was part of the Wirral Rural District between 1894 and 1933, subsequently moving within the boundaries of a jurisdiction that would become the Municipal Borough of Bebington.

The building's first known occupants were Sir Hugh Hulse and his wife, who were granted the right to construct a private chapel in 1398.

Bus services operating along Brimstage Road and Talbot Avenue to the west of the village, as of 2015:

Brimstage village green