Everything about Kings Worthy totally explained
Kings Worthy is a village and
civil parish in
Hampshire,
England, approximately 2 miles North East of
Winchester. Kings Worthy was a
Tithing of
Barton Stacey when the
Domesday Book was written.
It now has a convenience store, a newsagent/Post Office, a kitchen display shop, a hair dresser, a fishing store and a surgery. The church is St Mary's. The village drama group,
the Worthy Players
, perform three shows a year in the Jubilee Hall. The primary school is King's Worthy Primary. Eversley Park is the local recreation ground, with playground/fitness equipment and football pitches and a basketball/football court. The Worthys YFC is an active youth football club for all ages both boys and girls and operates from Eversley Park. The main road (Springvale Road) is fairly busy, and is served by regular buses to Winchester city centre.
There are two public houses in the village -
The Cart and Horses
(with a
skittle alley) and
The King Charles
.
Worthys Conservation Volunteers
is the local group of practical conservationists working to care for the wildlife and natural environment in and around the village and The Worthys.
The parish is crossed by the
A33, which merges with the
A34 immediately to the south. Kings Worthy formerly had a station on the
Didcot, Newbury and Southampton Railway. It was by-passed to the west by the
London and South Western Railway (the surviving main line) and to the north by the Alton, Alresford and Winchester Railway, part of which survives to the east as the
Watercress Line).
Further Information
Get more info on 'Kings Worthy'.
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