English Place-name Society

Survey of English Place-Names

A county-by-county guide to the linguistic origins of England’s place-names – a project of the English Place-Name Society, founded 1923.

Scunthorpe

Early-attested site in the Parish of Frodingham

Historical Forms

  • Escumetorp 1086 DB
  • Scumetorp 1196 ChancR
  • Scumthorp' 1273–74 RA 1300 Ipm 1307 KR 1329 Ass
  • Scumptorp 1245 FF
  • Scumpthorp 1309,1311 KR
  • Scompthorp' 1327,1332 SR
  • Scunthorp' 1301,1306 KR
  • Scunthorp 1382 Misc
  • Scunthorpe 1557 KR 1660 Foster
  • Skunthorpe 1402 FA
  • Scomthorp 1450,1451 Cl

Etymology

'Skúma's secondary settlement, outlying dependent farmstead or hamlet', v. þorp . The first el. is the ON  pers.n. Skúma . Scunthorpe was no doubt secondary to Frodingham, in which parish it was originally situated. Prosthetic e has been added before s + k in the DB forms due to AN influence.

In the Middle Ages Scunthorpe was in the parish of Frodingham. Iron ore was discovered in the area in 1859. As a result of the discovery of ironstone and subsequent smelting, what were five separate settlements, Ashby, Brumby, Crosby, Frodingham and Scunthorpe, became one large town. Scunthorpe had developed as the largest of the five, and so it became an Urban District in 1894 and in 1919 was united with the other four to become the Scunthorpe, Brumby and Frodingham Urban District (sic), and in 1936 the whole of the new Municipal Borough was called after Scunthorpe.