The Wagon Works

3.3
(229 reviews)
28 Southampton Road, SO50 9FJ
+44 23 8062 2670Official website
Bar
Breakfast
British
Brunch
Cheap Eats
Dinner
Drinks
Free Wifi
Full Bar
Gluten free options
Highchairs Available
Late Night
Lunch
Pub
Quick Bites
Seating
Serves Alcohol
Table Service
Television
Vegetarian friendly
Wheelchair Accessible
Restaurant

About

Opened: 3rd April 2009 as a JD Wtherspoons pub The name of this pub reflects Eastleigh's connection with England's railways. Eastleigh became a railway town in 1891, when the London & South Western Railway opened its carriage and wagon works, next to the station. The town grew rapidly. Expansion accelerated, after repair shops were added in 1903 and the locomotive works opened in 1910. The Eastleigh Works constructed the King Arthur 4-6-0 classes and all 16 Lord Nelson locomotives. The first of the series is now in the National Railway Museum, in York. When Eastleigh Station was built, in the early 1840s, modern Eastleigh did not exist. It was then the small rural hamlet of Barton. In 1839, the combined population of Barton and nearby Eastley was fewer than 80 people. The new station at Barton was named Bishopstoke, after the nearest village, and eventually renamed 'Eastleigh', in 1923. For more than 160 years, the pub on this site (formerly The Home Tavern) has been the first building seen by anyone arriving in Eastleigh.

At a glance

  • Verified listing
  • Typical visit: about 1 hour
The Wagon Works | Southampton | United Kingdom | TripAligner