About Addlestone
Addlestone is a town in the county of Surrey in England, with surrounding towns and villages which include Weybridge, Ottershaw, Chertsey and New Haw. It is close to the M25 motorway Junction 11. The Postal Code for Addlestone is KT15 and the area is served by Addlestone railway station which is on the Chertsey Branch Line. The main road in Addlestone is Station Road which is a linear development and the main thoroughfare features many restaurants supplying a host of varied cuisines.If you are looking for enthralling company, then look no further than that of one of our outstanding Addlestone escorts who will be happy to visit you in the seclusion of your home or hotel. You will be sure of an entertaining evening in her company and have outstanding memories to keep for a very long time.
Addlestone, like many of its surrounding towns and villages dates back to Saxon times, it was known then as Attel’s Denu as the valley belonged to a Saxon names Attel. It was then listed as Attelsdene in1241 and then in 1610 a map created by John Speed shows it as Adleston.
A famous landmark in the town is an oak tree called The Crouch Oak, it is believed to have originated in the 11th Century and is an important symbol in the town, once used to mark the boundary of Windsor Great Park. The tree is a main historic feature and as a consequence of this, many local businesses use its name in their title. A legend says that Queen Elizabeth 1 once enjoyed a picnic by it. The tree suffered an arson attack in 2007 but thankfully it has survived.
There is an important site on Station Road which has attracted many large employers to the area. This was originally a large Bleriot aircraft factory built in 1917 which produced several hundred aeroplanes which were then taken by road to Brooklands for their final assembly and test flights. Since then in the 1950s Weymann built buses and coaches, in the mid 1960s Caddy’s built taxis and in early 1967 Plessey moved its operation from Chessington and took over the factory. The final employer on the site was Marconi in 1990, but sadly by 2000 the site had become derelict and has been demolished and redeveloped as Aviator Business Park named after its original use.











