All jobs are 100% guaranteed (Parts & labour), we operate a genuine 24/7 service with fast response vans throughout Southampton and the surrounding area. No callout charges!
- 24/7 Fast Response
- Lockout Service
- BS3621 Locks on Offer
- Lost & Broken Keys
- Jammed Locks
- Number & Coded Locks
- Commercial Locksmith
- Local Locksmith
- Post Burglary Repairs
- uPVC Doors % Windows Locks
- Locks Upgrade
- Fresh Installation (New Doors)
SO Locksmith Newtown Services is an established company that caters for every address in and around Southampton, with services extended to nearby locations which are listed below. Being a mobile locksmith service, we pride ourselves on our punctuality, professionalism and quality labour.
Our vans carry an extensive range of popular locks brands such as Mul-T-Lock and Yale cylinders to mention but a few. All hardware manufactured by these brands is available at affordable prices! Our locksmith services are
available for both residential and commercial. Our staff is knowledgeable, dependable, and professional. All of our work is fully guaranteed and we take pride in our performances.
If you’re having trouble with your locks, call SO Locksmith Newtown Services immediately. With our no-obligation service that includes emergency lockout assistance, residential lockouts and commercial lockouts, we will get you back on track quickly. Call us now at 07458 149 104
- We serves & repairs:
- wooden doors,
- uPVC doors,
- glass doors,
- aluminium doors,
- uPVC window locks,
- security doors,
- internal doors,
- backdoors,
- gate locks,
- garage doors locks,
- Smart Homes,
- CCTV systems,
- security systems,
- Lockouts priority,
- Intercom system,
- Lockout priority,
- NO Call-out Charges
During the early 13th century, the Bishops of Winchester established six new towns, including Newtown, Overton, and New Alresford in Hampshire, Hindon and Downton in Wiltshire, and Newtown on the Isle of Wight. Newtown in Hampshire was founded in 1218 by Bishop Peter des Roches and was formed from part of the parish of Burghclere. The adjacent Sandleford Priory in Berkshire had been established earlier between 1193 and 1202. As a result, Newtown was sometimes referred to as Novus Burgus de Clere or Nova villa de Sandelford. In 1218, the Bishop of Winchester was granted a market and a fair at Newtown, which was attended by fifty-two burgesses who occupied sixty-seven plots of land in the new borough. In 1224-25, a ditch was dug around the town at the bishop’s expense, and the bishop’s own house was built in the borough in 1225-26. A chapel was also constructed in 1218-19 for the local people of the new borough, known as the Chapel of Sandleford. In 1336, a grant was made to Sir Nicholas atte Thorne of a burgage in Newtown situated between the brook called ‘Aleburne’ and the highway to Winchester.