Stockbridge is a town as well as civil parish in the Test Valley district of Hampshire, England. It is just one of the tiniest towns in the United Kingdom with a population of 592 as of the 2011 census. It sits astride the River Test and also at the foot of Stockbridge Down. The community is situated on the A30 road, which as soon as brought most of the web traffic from London to Dorset, south Somerset, Devon and also Cornwall in the South West, though today this path is lesser than the A303 double carriageway to the north. The bridge over the Test brought about the town's name, a neighborhood legend recommended a coach stop equipped stipulations, however it derives from an earlier bridge that was made from 'stocks' (tree trunks). Salisbury is 15 miles (24 km) by road; Winchester is 8.3 miles (13.4 km) by the B3049 road that joins the A30 close by. The town's lengthy high street was therefore on an useful route in between the two medieval cathedral cities. The town's civil parish has a location of 1,323 acres (535 ha). The town's street goes across the River Test, marking the border of the churches of Stockbridge and Longstock by a low bridge of 3 arcs rebuilt and also broadened in 1799. Five smaller sized river networks flow through the community. For a brief time, to provide area for fish, these were split into 8 man-made ditches simply over the town. The community is on a common pedestrian/footpath, the Test Way.