Pub landlady calls for warning signs to be installed at dangerous T-junction after NINE vehicles plunge into river or fly through her beer garden fence


A pub landlady has railed against an accident black spot after a ninth car crashed into her beer garden.

Barbara Smith, who runs The Woolpack in the village of Sopley, Dorset, said drivers have consistently been caught out by a T-junction followed by a sharp bend around the pub.

Police were called shortly before 4am on Monday morning after a silver Renault Megane drove across the junction and ploughed through the brick wall of a historic bridge next to the pub.

It then flew across a 20ft brook and collided with a concrete post in the pub garden. There were no injuries but both the car and the pub suffered ‘extensive damage’.

Officers later arrested two 21-year-old men at a house in Bournemouth, both on suspicion of driving a motor vehicle while unfit through drugs, driving a motor vehicle with a proportion of a specified controlled drug above the specified limit and driving a motor vehicle dangerously.

One of the men was also arrested on suspicion of driving while unfit through drink. He was later released with no further action to be taken, while the other man was released under investigation, Hampshire Police told the Daily Mail.

Ms Smith, whose pub has been closed for repairs following flooding in January, said ‘something needs to be done before someone gets hurt’.

She compared the latest car crash to the flying orange Dodge Charger from 1980s American action comedy television series The Dukes of Hazzard.

A Renault Megane became the ninth vehicle to crash into The Woolpack in Dorset after it drove through a bridge in the early hours of Monday

A Renault Megane became the ninth vehicle to crash into The Woolpack in Dorset after it drove through a bridge in the early hours of Monday

Two men were arrested after the car crashed through a bridge and cleared a brook before causing damage to the pub garden

Two men were arrested after the car crashed through a bridge and cleared a brook before causing damage to the pub garden

The Woolpack lies on the edge of a brook, which is passed over by Coronation Bridge, renamed to mark the crowning of King Charles in 2023

The Woolpack lies on the edge of a brook, which is passed over by Coronation Bridge, renamed to mark the crowning of King Charles in 2023

The pub lies on a sharp bend after a T-junction where a lack of street lighting obscures the dangerous turn at night

The pub lies on a sharp bend after a T-junction where a lack of street lighting obscures the dangerous turn at night

The Woolpack's landlady Barbara Smith, pictured with a Sopley resident, said more should be done to warn drivers of the dangerous bend

The Woolpack’s landlady Barbara Smith, pictured with a Sopley resident, said more should be done to warn drivers of the dangerous bend

‘Literally it is like Dukes of Hazzard as the car has cleared the bank and gone through a concrete post in the garden,’ she said.

‘It must have been going at some speed.’

Most crashes outside the pub have been at night, as a lack of street lighting means drivers sometimes fail to spot the bend.

In 2014 the bridge – which was named Coronation Bridge after King Charles was crowned in 2023 – was partially rebuilt after a car crashed through it, before four more smashes the following year.

A van crashed there in 2018 before another car did the same in 2023.

After a smash in March, a Renault was left wedged nose-down in the water at a 45-degree angle.

Barbara continued: ‘The junction by the pub and over the bridge is a T-junction but should not be approached too fast as it’s quite a tight turn.

A previous crash saw a van stranded above the brook with its bonnet smashed into the bank

A previous crash saw a van stranded above the brook with its bonnet smashed into the bank

Another example saw a car lodged in the water with bricks crumbling from Coronation Bridge in the wake of the crash

Another example saw a car lodged in the water with bricks crumbling from Coronation Bridge in the wake of the crash

‘Most local people know this and slow down and pay attention but those not familiar with the area approach too fast and don’t have time to react when they see the left turn and then go straight into the wall of the bridge.

‘Maybe the authorities can put up more warning signs to get cars to slow down before the T-junction. 

‘Maybe some lighting on the bridge so it can be seen at night by drivers approaching the pub.’



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