Hartshill Park is a large nature reserve stretching along the western edge of the city of Stoke-on-Trent, England. The park is a patchwork of different habitats, including five ponds. It is notable for being part of a Norman deer hunting park that has survived as open space into the modern era. It is a local nature reserve.

1. History

The place takes its name from Hart, meaning "deer". The Roman road called Rykeneld Street may have passed directly along the top of the ridge and gone down to where Stoke-on-Trent railway station is now, although the exact route it ran along from Wolstanton is unknown. However, local historians suspect that the road actually dropped into the valley at Basford and came into Stoke via Etruria There are various military and topographical reasons why an Etruria route is far more likely. Hartshill Park was part of a Norman deer hunting park, which survived as such well into the 15th century – evidenced by records of the boundaries being repaired at that time. The lower Cliffe Vale flatter section of the park – in the valley between Shelton Old Road and Eturia Road (now occupied by the A500 and the West Coast Main Line railway line) was likely to have been deforested sometime in the 15th century. The more elevated core of the hunting park became a landed estate and farm, and it is marked on 1st edition six-inch (152 mm) Ordnance Survey map (c. 1860) as "Cliff Ville" – this was a gentleman's residence with extensive grounds that later became Saint Dominic's High School. In the early 20th Century some of the accessible parts of the area were used for dumping pottery and brick-making waste. The bulk of the land in the park was farmed from 1916 to 1978, for grazing and dairy. Stoke-on-Trent City Council compulsorily purchased the land in 1975. Parts of the park were lost to two new state schools and their extensive playing fields, in the 1960s and 1970s (one of these schools has since closed and been redeveloped for housing). The rest of the land underwent basic reclamation from the late 1970s onwards, to serve as public open space, but it then had very little maintenance or attention from the city council for the next thirty years.

1. The Convent and Convent Pools

The southern tip of the park became the grounds of a Catholic convent and associated school in the early 1920s. The nuns used the pools for nature sketching, and built a large grotto (still standing) to hold a statue of Our Lady. The convent is now the site of an old people's home. The pools at the far southern end of the contemporary park are called the "Convent Pools", and as of 2012 are being repaired and restocked with the aid of various grants.

1. Friends of Hartshill Park group

In 1999 the Friends of Hartshill Park group was formed. The friends have accessed small grants to repair paths, create new habitats, and plant trees.

1. References
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Hartshill, Staffordshire

Hartshill is a suburb and historic township of Stoke-on-Trent in Staffordshire, England.
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North Staffordshire Coalfield

The North Staffordshire Coalfield was a coalfield in Staffordshire, England, with an area of nearly 100 square miles (260 km2), virtually all of it within the city of Stoke on Trent and the borough of Newcastle-under-Lyme, apart from three smaller coalfields, Shaffalong and Goldsitch Moss Coalfields near Leek and the Cheadle Coalfield. Coal mining in North Staffordshire began early in the 13th century, but the industry grew during the Industrial Revolution when coal mined in North Staffordshire was used in the local Potteries ceramics and iron industry (ironstone deposits were also found with the coal in certain areas). Before the First World War, 20,000 men worked in the industry and over 50 pits were in operation. After nationalisation in 1947, the industry was gradually reduced in size as smaller pits closed or merged with larger, more modern mines. The industry began its final decline after the 1984-85 miners' strike and the last deep mine, Silverdale, closed on Christmas Eve 1998.
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North Staffordshire Royal Infirmary

The North Staffordshire Royal Infirmary was a hospital at Hartshill in the English county of Staffordshire. It was located half a mile east of the site of the Royal Stoke University Hospital. It was run by the University Hospitals of North Midlands NHS Trust.
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Hartshill and Basford Halt railway station

Hartshill and Basford Halt was a railway station located between the Stoke-on-Trent and Newcastle-under-Lyme stations on the Market Drayton branch of the North Staffordshire Railway, approx 1.5 miles (2.4 km) east of Newcastle. It closed in 1926 three years after the North Staffordshire Railway was succeeded by the London Midland and Scottish Railway or LMS for short until the line to Newcastle under Lyme closed in 1964-5.