About Alresford
ALRESFORD CHAMBER OF COMMERCE
Discover Alresford
Alresford is the perfect place for strolling and there is plenty to please the eye
Alresford (pronounced Allsford) is a
beautiful Georgian Town which for many centuries was a prosperous wool town.
Old Alresford is mentioned in the Domesday Book but the present town of New
Alresford did not come into existence much before 1200 at the time when the
Great Weir was being built to create
Old Alresford Pond
as a reservoir for the Itchen Navigation.
The colour-washed Georgian houses you
see today rose from the ashes of great fires in the 17th Century.
Alresford is the perfect place for
strolling and there is plenty to please the eye - The Fulling Mill and
riverside walk, St. John's Parish Church, the
Millennium Trail and Old Alresford Pond, created by
Bishop de Lucy, Bishop of Winchester, in the 12th century.
Visit the specialist shops selling antiques, gifts, food, clothes for all
ages, antiquarian books, pictures, china and crafts. With
pubs,
hotels,
restaurants
and tea rooms,
your every need will be satisfied. And don't forget to visit the
Watercress Line
steam railway that runs from Alresford to Alton through 10 miles of
beautiful Hampshire countryside.
Historic Georgian Town
Specialist Shops &
Galleries
Cosy Country Pubs
Beautiful Countryside
Inviting Places to Stay
Gardens open to the Public
Alresford's Historic Streets
Broad Street is a contender for
the county's most beautiful street, tree-lined it combines a feast of Georgian colour-washed buildings with interesting shops
and hostelries, all based on Bishops de Lucy's medieval town plan.
Also visit
East Street
and
West Street
Fulling Mill & Riverside Walk
The riverside walk is a delight and, straddling the
River Arle or Alre, you will find the tnatched
timber-framed Fulling Mill, built in the 13th century. (Walk can be muddy in wet
weather.) The riverside walk follows the route of
the ford from which Alresford takes its name.
Old Alresford Pond
Old Alresford Pond was formed in the 12th century as part of a project to dam the
Arle or Alre stream, today it is home to wildfowl and otters. In
the Soke Gardens (down the lane to the right of the Globe on the Lake) is a
plaque honouring Captain Robert Cogswell, 303 Bomb Group, US 8th Air Force
whose conduct saved Alresford from a
potential disaster in 1943.

St. John's Parish Church
There has been a church on this site since the 12th
century. In 1400 a perpendicular church was built replacing the early
English one. Only the tower and the outer walls of the nave survived the
fire of 1689. The church was extensively rebuilt in 1898 around the old
walls and tower and is a Grade 2* listed building.
The French soldiers' graves
date back to the Napoleonic Wars.
MILLENNIUM TRAIL
Created in Millennium Year, the trail uses a series of existing paths round the town to provide a pleasant and informative walk of about one mile.
Detail of what can be seen during the walk is contained in a separate
leaflet (reproduced on the site),Alresford Millennium Trail, which is available from the Station
Information Office, the Library and many of the shops in the town.
MID-HANTS RAILWAY WATERCRESS LINE - Hampshire's Heritage Railway
Hampshire's only preserved steam railway the
Watercress Line
runs for 10 miles of steeply graded track. Powerful locomotives haul the
trains through beautiful Hampshire country scenery to the market town of
Alton. It passes through two intermediate stations - Ropley, which is the
railway's engineering base (visit the locomotive yard); and Medstead & Four
Marks, the highest station in southern England.

Old Alresford Church
St. Mary the Virgin Church is a pleasant walk of less than a
mile either across the weir past The Globe on the Lake or along the footpath
past the
watercress beds
at the bottom of Mill Hill. Old Alresford Church is the epitomy of a Hampshire Vilage Church where you will find the tombs of the
Rodney family who lived in the village adjacent to the church in the 18th and 19th Century. It is recommended that
you use the footpath as there is no pedestrian path across the weir.
Hinton Ampner House & Garden, Bramdean.
National Trust garden and house. Open summer only. Tel. 01962 771305.
Hinton Ampner Garden was designed and laid out in 1936 and is one of the best examples of a mid-twentieth century designed garden in the country.
The 12 acre formal garden, set in 80 acres of parkland, has now matured into a tranquil, colourful and scented paradise that you can visit through the seasons.
The one acre walled garden, previously the private reserve of the tenant, is planned for opening to the public in 2006.
Hinton Ampner - A Hampshire Manor - some history of the house.
Northington Grange, Northington.
Early 19th century neo-classical mansion. Exterior viewing
only, home to Grange Park Opera in high summer. There aare more pictures of Northington Grange in our
galleries.
Other attractions within a short drive of Alresford.
Tourist Information Centre, Guildhall, Broadway,
Winchester, SO23 9LJ
Tel: 01962 840500 Fax: 01962 850348 Email: