South Hinksey was first recorded as a settlement in the late 7th century when
King Cædwalla of Wessex granted the land to Abingdon Abbey (c. 685–688).It has always been difficult to get between
North Hinksey to the north-west and South Hinksey. In the 19th century
John Ruskin tried to organize the making of a road between the two villages, as the ground between them was very boggy. Since the 1930s they have been connected by the Southern By-Pass Road. Until the middle of the 18th century South Hinksey was in the parish of
Cumnor. When it was first created, the parish extended to the River Thames, but in 1889 the new suburb of
New Hinksey, between the Thames and Hinksey Stream, was transferred to the
City of Oxford. However, the
ecclesiastical parish continues to include New Hinksey. South Hinksey had two pubs, the Cross Keys which closed in 1993, and the General Elliot, which finally closed in 2016. == St Laurence's Church ==