The village is in two parts, one each side of the fen-edge road, the
A15. To the fenward side is Morton and to the upland side is Hanthorpe. The earlier name is that of Morton which will come from the acid peat land which the
Anglian settlers found in the fen in around the year 500. The name therefore indicates that the
fen was to a significant extent better called the
bog in modern terminology. They were
Germanic speakers so they called it a
moor. Hanthorpe is a name indicating a subsidiary settlement established in the period of the
Danish settlements, probably in the tenth century. The church and the later signs of the manorial centre are in Morton. The church is built in the
Early English and
Perpendicular styles, and was restored in 1860 and 1951. A baptist chapel was built in 1875, and still serves the village today. In the late 19th century
Morton Road railway station opened in 1872 and finally closed in 1964. A gazetteer of the 19th century said:
George Hussey Packe, the 19th-century South Lincolnshire
Member of Parliament and chairman of the
Great Northern Railway, was born at Hanthorpe Hall in 1796. On 27 August 2003 the parish was renamed from "Morton" to "Morton & Hanthorpe". ==Geography==