Origins The
Belgae tribe inhabited the Hedge End area prior to the
Roman conquest. A
Roman road from
Clausentum (a fortified harbour in what is now Bitterne, Southampton) passed through the area on route to
Portus Adurni (Portchester Castle) and
Noviomagus Reginorum (Chichester). The crossing of the
River Itchen at Mansbridge and the crossing of the
River Hamble at
Botley date to AD932. The road that linked those two river crossings would have followed the approximate route of the modern Grange Road. on land that was formerly part of the Manor of Shamblehurst. In February 1876, St. John's, Hedge End was constituted as a separate parish for ecclesiastical purposes. A sub-post office was established on 2 August 1894. St. John's Rooms was built in 1907, which was the church hall until the Underhill Centre (named after the Reverend Mervyn Spenser Underhill, Vicar of St John's Church 1961–1994) was opened in 2002. St. John's Rooms now serves as a day nursery for small children.
Wartime history To avoid the air-raids, some of Southampton's citizens rented accommodation or otherwise sought shelter in Hedge End during
World War II. In 1943 and 1944, during the build-up to
D-Day and the invasion of Europe, Hedge End was on the outermost edge of a huge marshalling site set up in Hampshire by the military, known as Area C with the nearest camp, camp C3, located at Netley Common. Hedge End was actually part of sub-area Z within Area C.
Becoming a town Development of another new road, the
M27 motorway enabled Hedge End to expand further in the final two decades of the 20th century, although as a Southampton suburb, rapid development had commenced in the two decades before the arrival of the motorway. Hedge End is situated near Junctions 7 and 8 of the motorway. With access to the new infrastructure, there was rapid expansion of the village with office parks, out-of-town superstores and new residential areas. The most recent major development in Hedge End has been that of Grange Park, situated to the north and east of the village centre. It has continued to grow extensively for several years, and now includes a public park at Dowd's Farm. In the early 1990s the village gained
Hedge End railway station opened by
British Rail, a stop on the
Eastleigh to Fareham line. The parish council resolved to give the village the status of a town in 1992, and the council was renamed Hedge End Town Council. Hedge End is twinned with
Comines-Warneton, in
Belgium. The twinning charter was signed in 1994, but very little twinning activity takes place. On 21 May 2011
Marwell Wildlife was called in by
Hampshire Constabulary to advise how to tranquillise a
white tiger lurking in grass in the village. The tiger turned out to be a life-size cuddly toy. == Demography ==