About Woolstone
Great Woolstone and Little Woolstone are two historic villages in modern Milton Keynes, which is within the ceremonial Buckinghamshire now called jointly Woolstone or The Woolstones and forming the heart of a new district of that name. The Barge in Woolstone is a country pub and restaurant, oozing rural charm and rustic character. Its picturesque surroundings provide the perfect backdrop for savouring the hearty, seasonal pub-food and the carefully nurtured cask ales and fine wines gracing the bar.
Built in the early 19th century to slake the thirsts of the men that built The Grand Union Canal, The Barge has been a favourite amongst narrow boaters for many years. The now restored pub restaurant draws guests from all over Milton Keynes for good Pub food and excellent real ale. When you do visit keep an eye out, as it is said that former landlord Samuel Savage still visits the building, and he would be over 150 years old now.
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Until shortly after the turn of the 19th century, the villages were named Woolstone Magna (Great Woolstone) and Woolstone Parva (Little Woolstone). The area is now collectively known simply as "Woolstone" and it forms part of the Campbell Park Civil Parish of Milton Keynes and comes under the control of Campbell Park Parish Council. The land between the two villages is now occupied by the village cricket green. The two villages are both linear villages, being hemmed in by and along the north-south line of both the River Ouzel to the east of the villages and of the Grand Union Canal to the west. They form part of a chain of three villages along this line, the next about a mile further south being Woughton-on-the-Green.
Today, Little Woolstone is the larger of the two Woolstones, having benefited from the building of the canal. Great Woolstone still has its own village pub, the thatched roof "Cross Keys", which can trace its history back to 1560 and serves real ales. The Church of England Church in Little Woolstone is still open and serves both villages, whilst the church in Great Woolstone closed in the 1970s and has served various purposes since then, including being used as a music rehearsal room.


