About Arborfield
Arborfield is a village in Berkshire about 4.5 miles south-east of Reading, about 4 miles west of Wokingham, it is also 0.6 miles west of the sister village of Arborfield Cross although recently, both Arborfield and Arborfield Cross have become collectively known as Arborfield, and there are no signs marking the boundary between Arborfield and Arborfield Cross. Arborfield may be best known for the adjoining army base of Arborfield Garrison, the headquarters and training base of the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers corps of the British Army.
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There are three well-known and historic pubs in Arborfield where you could also meet your date. The Bramshill Hunt, now on the edge of the Garrison, was the traditional meeting place of this hunting party from Eversley in Hampshire. The Swan, is perhaps the most picturesque. It was built in 1661 and is supposed to have played host to King George III, presumably whilst on another hunting expedition. The Bull Inn, once a stop-over for his granddaughter, Queen Victoria, is named after the Bullock family who were Lords of the Manor for several centuries.
Excavations at Whitehall Farm in Arborfield have revealed that the area was the site of a small Iron Age farmstead and metalworking community. Iron ore was being placed in furnaces and smelted with charcoal to produce blooms of the metal. These could eventually be processed into the tools and weapons from which the period takes its name. Occupation continued into Roman times when the industrious locals also turned to pottery production. However, Arborfield is essentially an Anglo-Saxon village. The 'field' was one of several areas of open land lying in a band across mid-Berkshire and marking the western boundary of Windsor Forest. It was originally part of the huge parish of Sonning and as such was owned by the Bishop of Salisbury. The old mill pool supplied him with eels for his dining table.


