The name "Timsbury" is derived from the Old Englishtimber + byrig, meaning 'timber fort or manor'. Timsbury has grown from a traditional village centred on the Manor House and the Church of St Andrew. Although there may have been a Saxon church, the current Grade II listed building dates from around the early 15th century and was badly damaged by fire on 9 March 2014. Historically, Edmund Sharp and his wife Alice moved from the county of Berkshire to Timsbury towards the end of the seventeenth century. A direct descendant of Edmund Sharp was Richard Sharp, once hailed as possibly being the most popular man in Georgian London. An interesting anecdote has survived concerning one of Edmund's sons, Richard, who, born in 1665 gained a reputation as an accomplished wrestler and ‘cudgeller’ in the area. Even in those days cudgelling was a very old custom and especially popular in the West of England where great pride was attached to skills which were often handed from father to son. It was a fast and furious activity conducted brutally using a short club and the expression ‘to break a head’ was associated with the cudgeller's sport since the victor was he who first drew blood from a gash to the head. The story recorded by his grandson and clearly cherished by later generations underlines the extent of Richard's physical prowess,
While he lived at Romsey he of a summer’s day rode up toTimsbury, where he lived, where he had been brought up andwhere when young he had been so fond of wrestling. It sohappened that a stage was erected and sitting on his horse hestayed long enough to see a man throw two or three men who hadmounted the stage against him, till all were intimidated fromentering the list; the conqueror …. triumphed on the stage withso much arrogance that my grandfather was tempted to humblehim; therefore he got off his horse, mounted the stage, threw theboaster on his back and having humbled the boaster heimmediately took horse and left them.
In time the Sharp family became well established in the Romsey area and during the 18th and 19th centuries many of them held important positions as merchants or influential citizens of Romsey. A brass floor plate in Romsey Abbey commemorates many of them. Cartoonist Norman Thelwell made his home in the village, in a remodeled farmhouse with a trout pond, described in his 1978 book A Plank Bridge by a Pool.
Village Life
In modern Timsbury, the local amenities include a garden centre with cafe, a pub called "The Malthouse", a car sales garage, a fishery, St Andrew'sChurch of England church, a , a recycling site, the Hunts Farm Sports Ground, and a pre-school. The ladies of Timsbury were bequeathed a hall which was used by the Women's Institute, however, following a decline in local WI membership the hall was sold to the village band. Many local facilities are shared within the civil parish of Michelmersh and Timsbury due to their close proximity, including the Jubilee Hall and the sports pavilion. The villages share a common village design statement to guide development in the area. The local telephone exchange is located in nearby Braishfield, with most telephone numbers in the village 01794 368XXX. The parish publishes a bi-monthly newsletter distributed free to households in the parish.