Winnersh was largely developed during the railway age. The
South Eastern Railway built the
North Downs Line in 1849, but the station now known as was not opened until 1910, and was originally named "Sindlesham and Hurst Halt". The station was renamed Winnersh Halt in 1930. Housing and light industry followed the railway, and now Winnersh has two stations, Winnersh and
Winnersh Triangle, opened on 12 May 1986, the latter named after the industrial estate that it serves. Modern Winnersh exists mostly as a
dormitory town and forms part of the seven mile long urban corridor along the
A329 between Wokingham and Reading. Much of modern Winnersh includes areas that were formerly parts of the villages of
Sindlesham and Merryhill Green. Most of Merryhill Green was destroyed by the construction of the A329(M).
Winnersh Crossroads One of the main focal points of Winnersh is the Winnersh Crossroads where the Reading Road crosses King Street Lane and Robin Hood Lane. In 1840 it was a farm, known as King Street Farm by 1899. The area was known as Winnersh Corner in the 1920s and 1930s. In 1935 the farm name was changed to Allnatt Farm, and between 1939 and the early 1950s, Sale Tilney, a company importing and selling tractors from America, occupied the site. Following this was the Crimpy Crisps factory, which was on the site for around 20 years. Between 1975 and the early 1990s the site housed the United Kingdom headquarters of
Hewlett-Packard. In 1997, a
Sainsbury's supermarket was built on the site. This store was subsequently extended in phases over the adjacent Ruralcrafts Garden Centre. ==Transport==