Winnersh (/ˈwɪnərʃ/)[2] is a large suburban village and civil parish in the borough of Wokingham in Berkshire, England.
This implies that Winnersh consisted of cultivated areas of land centuries ago.
The South Eastern Railway built the North Downs Line in 1849, but the station now known as Winnersh was not opened until 1910, and was originally named "Sindlesham and Hurst Halt".
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.
[5] There is also a regular bus service that runs through the centre of the village between Reading and Bracknell via Wokingham.
It is built on a flood plain of the River Loddon], but the building is raised to a sufficient level as to be unaffected.
In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, a local resident, Karen Vass, created a 'Spoonyville' exhibition of homemade spoons where local residents, especially children, could leave their own creations at the corner of Robin Hood Lane and Robin Hood Way.