Fordingbridge
Fordingbridge is a community and wider civil parish with a population of 6,000 on the River Avon in the New Forest District of Hampshire, England, near to the Dorset and Wiltshire boundaries and on the edge of the New Forest, with museum and also a late middle ages 7-arch bridge. It is 81 miles (130 kilometres) southwest of London, as well as 10 miles (16 kilometres) south of the city of Salisbury. Fordingbridge is a previous market town. The Avon Valley Path passes through the community. The community excluding linear negotiation Sandleheath (included in its headline population with other distant houses, amounting to 1,526 citizens) has a thickness of 30.2 persons per hectare. Fordingbridge is a community as well as civil parish in Hampshire on the banks of the River Avon. The first Great Bridge, from which the community obtained its present name, was constructed in mediaeval times, and is upstream from the ford. The bridge is a major function of the town with its 7 stylish arcs, which can be seen very easily from the community's big riverside park where one can stroll along the shore draped with willows as well as waterside plants. Close by is a kids's backyard, remote memorial gardens, parks as well as sports playing areas. A bronze statue of the painter Augustus John bases on the banks of the Avon near the Great Bridge.