Hartshorne published: •
A Geyfte ffor the Newe Yere, or a playne, plesaunte, and profytable Pathewaie to the Black Letter Paradyse. Emprinted over the grete Gatewaie off Saincte Jhonnes College, 1825; twenty copies (including two on vellum) were printed. Three copies are known today, at St John's College Cambridge, the British Library and the Bodleian. A fourth copy, the location of which is unknown, was sold at Christies (2 June 1999) for £2070. It was printed on vellum. •
The Book Rarities of the University of Cambridge, 1829 •
Ancient Metrical Tales, 1829, referred to by
Walter Scott in the Introduction to
Ivanhoe •
Sepulchral Remains in Northamptonshire, 1840 •
Salopia Antiqua; or an Enquiry into the Early Remains in Shropshire and the North Welsh Borders, including a
Glossary of the Provincial Dialect of Shropshire, 1841 • • "English Medieval Embroidery, section the second", in
Archaeological Journal, vol. 4, 1847, pp. 285–301 •
English Medieval Embroidery, 1848 [see review by J. H. Parker in
Archaeological Journal, vol. 5, 1848, p. 171] •
Historical Memorials of Northampton, 1848 •
Memoirs illustrative of the History and Antiquities of Northumberland, 1858, a valuable contribution to the history of the borders Hartshorne contributed an article on
The Latin Plays acted before the University of Cambridge to the
Retrospective Review; and wrote in the
Archæological Journal. His archæological papers deal with the architectural history of mediæval towns and castles; medieval parliaments; the royal councils of
Worcester; the obsequies of
Catherine of Aragon; early remains in the great isle of Arran; the itineraries of Edward I and II; and domestic manners in the reign of Edward I. He wrote on the drainage of the
Nene Valley, and subjects in the social science. ==Family==