


The village is well served by public transport having its own railway station
on the Clacton branch line with direct services by One Railway to London Liverpool
Street (http://www.nationalrail.co.uk/) as well as bus services 74/74B/77/78/78A
& 78X by First Bus and services 74X and 78X by Cedric's Coaches of Wivenhoe.
It is also on National Express routes NX350 and NX484
By road take the A133 from Colchester towards Clacton, turning right onto the B1027 towards Wivenhoe then left at the traffic lights toward St. Osyth.
The southern boundary of the village is formed by Alresford Creek, a tributary of the River Colne Estuary that reaches the sea at Brightlingsea. The creek is still navigable at high tide as far as Thorrington Tide Mill and provides mud berths for a number of yachts.
To the west is the town of Wivenhoe, which can be reached by road or a footpath
along the dismantled former railway line that follows the river.
This line, which opened in 1866 as part of the 'Tendring Hundred Railway'
and was known locally as the "Oyster Creek Line", used to go to
Brightlingsea via a swing bridge over the Creek and was a victim of Dr Beeching's
cuts in 1964.
The northern part of Alresford was previously known as Elmstead Heath and
the village of Elmstead Market now borders Alresford to the north and west
with Frating to the north-east and Thorrington to the south-east.
Alresford is surrounded by current and former gravel workings and the gravel was at one time exported to London and beyond via sailing barges from Alresford Creek. The remains of a conveyor system from the processing plant to the creek can still be seen from the pit to the riverbank.
The centre of the village is now about a mile north of the creek and is split
in two by the railway line with two manned level crossings. The main shopping
centre, adjacent to the railway station in Station Road, has a General Store,
Post Office, Butcher and Hairdresser as well as a Fish-and-Chip shop, a Chinese
take-away and a Carpet shop.
The Public House in Alresford is The Pointer in Wivenhoe Road.
There are a number of businesses along Main Road (B1027) including another
general store, Estate Agent , Car Sales, Replacement Windows ,Lawnmower repairs
,Kennels and a Furniture shop.
The village has a Primary School that also hosts the Pre-School at the junction
of Ford Lane and Church Road.
St. Andrew's Church is a modern building that was built in 1976 when St. Peter's
Church was tragically destroyed by fire in the early morning of the 2nd October
1971.
The shell of the 12th Century St. Peter's remains in Ford Lane and the graveyard
is still in use.

Welcome to the Alresford, Essex, Parish Council website!
Alresford is a village of approximately 2,100 people about 6 miles south-east
of Colchester.
It is believed that the name is derived from the Alders that grew alongside
the Ford over the creek between the village and Brightlingsea.
The 1° East longitude line bisects the village, which is about 51°51"
North