Locksmith Redbridge, SO15

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Address: Redbridge, Southampton SO15 0NE   

Working in the vicinity of The Ship Inn

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!

SO Locksmith Redbridge 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 Redbridge 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

Redbridge has a rich history tied to its location at the tidal point of the River Test and as the endpoint of the Andover Canal. The first bridge was built in medieval times just north of the ford located half a mile upstream from the Pack and Pass 5 Arch Bridge, which was constructed in the early 1700s and funded by Redbridge’s merchants.

The settlement was recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as “Rodbrige” within the “Manebrige” (possibly Mansbridge) Hundred in Hampshire. In 1575 and 1607, it was depicted on maps as a small hamlet, although the latter showed it within the “Redbridg Hundred”.

In 1610, William Camden described the village and its history up to that point as follows: “Thence glideeth this water streight into Anton Haven, at Arundinis Vadum, as Bede called it and interpreteth it himselfe Reedeford: but now of the bridge where the foord was named, for Redeford, Redbridge: where, at the first springing up of the English Saxon Church, there flourished a Monasterie, the Abbat whereof Cymbreth as Beda writeth, baptised the two brethren being very little ones of Arvandus the pety King of Wight, even as they were ready to be put to death.”