According to the
English Place-Name Society the name of the village derives from the
Old English for either 'Stags' hill' or 'hill connected with Heorta'. Hartington was mentioned in the
Domesday Book as belonging to
Henry de Ferrers and being worth forty shillings. The parish was originally quite large, and part of the
hundred of Wirksworth. Hartington had four
townships, known as the Town Quarter,
Nether Quarter, and
Middle Quarter, and
Upper Quarter, which are now all separate parishes. These became separate civil parishes in their own right in 1866. They are marked on
Ordnance Survey maps. Surnames that originate from this area include
Heathcote.
Railway Hartington railway station, on the
Cromford and High Peak Railway, was opened in 1899; it was sited on the part of the line that ran from
Buxton to
Ashbourne. Regular passenger services ceased in 1954, due to low passenger numbers, and the line through Hartington was lifted in 1964. Much of the line has since been converted to a shared-use path called the
Tissington Trail. Hartington signal box has been retained and is now used as an information centre. ==Cheese==