While it may have begun as a small farming community, Upton experienced a booming economy and was one of the Wirral’s major villages until the industrialisation of the northwest and the subsequent development of Birkenhead in the mid-19th Century. Historian William Williams Mortimer had this to say in his 1847 work ‘History of the Hundred of Wirral’:
“…though now only a small village, Upton was formerly considered the metropolis of the lower mediety of Wirral, and had two annual fairs of considerable importance, and also a weekly market that was discontinued in 1620, the village having been recently almost entirely rebuilt, contains several good houses, among which may be particularly mentioned Upton Hall…”
There is also evidence that the village goes back much further than its confirmed thousand years, however, and when the original church at Overchurch was demolished in 1813, a runestone thought to date to the 7th or 8th Century was discovered in the ruins.