Pub

Arkell's

The White Hart, Stratton St. Margaret

Stratton St Margaret

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An established part of the Swindon landscape, The White Hart sits just off the A419 Oxford Road roundabout on the old Roman Road.

Always a meeting point for people - and the biggest venue in Stratton St Margaret - the White Hart offers modern rooms in a seperate purpose-built annex, plus a mouth-watering selection of food incl. an excellent Sunday lunch carvery.

The Stratton Room function suite and a smaller function rooms also offers excellent entertaining facilities for larger groups and parties of upto 80 people.

- Modern accommodation rooms in seperate annex (incl. one disabled room)
- Food served everyday
- Sunday Lunch Carvery
- Stratton Room + smaller function room with own bar & entrance for functions
- Close to Jnt. 15 M4
- SKY Sports
- Fine Arkells Ales + excellent quality wines by the glass & bottle

Please see the White Hart's website for full details and menus.

A little bit of history...

While many pubs in the area have roots in Swindon's railway history, Stratton St Margaret's original White Hart owned its existence to the Wilts and Berks Canal which ran nearby.

Coal merchant William Seymour was the owner by 1841 and his family kept it for many years. In those days The White Hart stood on the other side of the current Oxford Road and sold beer produced in the brewhouse on the opposite side of the road.

Brewing naturally ceased when Arkell's bought the freehold of the pub (and an adjoining orchard) in 1878 for the princely sum of £925. The original building remained in use for another 59 years before it was demolished to make way for another pub with the same name.

Completed in 1938, the current pub is a much larger building than its predecessor and even after an extension in 1982 as part of a large modernisation, there was still room for a large car park and a small play area.

The main road which passes close to the White Hart means that passing motorists find it just as convenient to drop in to The White Hart today as Stratton folk have throughout the last century and a half.