Winscombe grew in the 19th century with the arrival of a branch of the
Great Western Railway, opened in 1869. This was the
Cheddar Valley line, also known as the Strawberry Line, which ran from
Yatton to
Wells via
Cheddar. The railway was closed in 1963, and today the route is a public footpath and cycle track; the site of the former
Winscombe railway station is now the Millennium Green. It is possible to walk, or cycle, from the railway station to the coast at
Clevedon via
Sandford,
Congresbury and
Yatton, and in the opposite direction through the railway tunnel at Shute Shelve Hill to
Axbridge and
Cheddar. The railway station was originally named Woodborough, that being the part of the parish of Winscombe where it was; Winscombe was originally the settlement up by the church. The railway station was soon renamed Winscombe to avoid confusion with another railway station in Wiltshire named Woodborough. The railway station was closed in 1963 as part of the
Beeching cuts to rail services. Part of the original track can still be seen from a platform by the Millennium Green. The village is on the
A371 and
A38 roads. ==Education==