Skip to main content
iPhone Repairs for Hartshill carried out by Apple certified technicians.

There are so many reasons to choose SimplyFixIt for your iPhone Repairs. Our technicians are certified by Apple. We use the highest quality screens available, including genuine Apple screens, and we pay our staff the Real Living Wage.

For over 25 years we have carried out computer and other IT repairs for people who came into our shops, and now we can give the people of Hartshill the same quality of repairs for their iPhones.

Mail-In iPhone Screen Repairs for Hartshill, by SimplyFixIt

People from Hartshill choose SimplyFixIt as their iPhone repair company because we offer the highest standards of repairs, including using genuine Apple screens, which typically can't be matched by a local independent computer store. They post us their iPhone, which is professionally repaired, and returned by a secure overnight courier. In most cases, they receive their iPhone back 2 days after they post it to us.

Fast Repairs

Quality Components

Spread the cost

All Repairs Guaranteed

At SimplyFixIt, we believe that doing things right is better than doing things quickly, so there may be some cases where we need just a bit longer to get your iPhone ready. Don't worry though, as soon as the iPhone repair is completed, we'll be in touch to let you know. We can then arrange a secure, express delivery back to Hartshill.

SimplyFixIt customers near Hartshill

We Fix iPhones for people from all over the country, including near Hartshill. Chances are that you live close to one of our customers already. Here is a map of the people1, who live near Hartshill, that have had their iPhone fixed by SimplyFixIt recently. They have posted their iPhone to us, and then we repaired it and sent it back using an insured, overnight courier service.

1For security & data protection reasons, we are not showing the exact location of our customers. We apply slight randomness to the location markers, so they don't show the exact address. The markers fall in a slightly different location each time, but the general area is correct.

picture of Hartshill.

Send your iPhone to us via Royal Mail Special Delivery, which should provide you with adequate insurance. We will fix it and return it to you without any fuss.


Choose an iPhone


More about Hartshill

Hartshill is a large village and civil parish in North Warwickshire, England, adjoined with the much larger town of Nuneaton, the town centre of which is 2.5 miles (4 km) to the south-east. The parish borders the district of Nuneaton and Bedworth at the south, the North Warwickshire district parishes of Ansley at the south-west, Mancetter at the north-west, and Caldecote at the east, and the parish of Witherley in Leicestershire to the north-east from which it is separated by the A5 road. The market town of Atherstone is 3.5 miles (6 km) to the north-west.

At the 2021 census, the civil parish of Hartshill, which also includes the hamlet of Oldbury had a population of 3,655.

The village stands on a hill overlooking the Leicestershire plains to the north. The county boundary is defined by the A5 road, the former Roman Watling Street. The area has been settled since at least the Iron Age, just west of Hartshill are the remains of an Iron Age hill fort. The village was mentioned in the Domesday Book as Hardreshull, derived from the old English term meaning Heardred's Hill. Near the centre of the village are the remains of Hartshill Castle, a medieval castle.

The village grew due to its quarrying industry, which quarried red syenite and manganese from the local hillside. At one time there were several industrial tramways serving the local quarries and connecting them to the nearby Trent Valley railway line and Coventry Canal. The Talyllyn Railway locomotive Midlander was purchased in 1957 from Jee's quarries at Hartshill.

The most famous person associated with Hartshill was the Elizabethan poet Michael Drayton, who was born at Chapel Cottage in Hartshill Green in 1563. The cottage in which he was born was pulled down in 1941 due to a road widening scheme. There was a memorial to him in the form of the village bus shelter, which was erected in 1972, and was made from local stone and shaped like a scroll. This was removed around 2006 due to vandalism and replaced by a plaque. Michael Drayton Junior School in Hartshill also bears his name. Other schools in the village include Hartshill Academy secondary school.

The village church of Holy Trinity was built as a commissioners' church between 1843 and 1848 by T.L. Walker. It is made from local stone, and is noted for its large doorway which has six orders of columns and arches. The church is grade II listed.

The parish has five pubs: The Stag & Pheasant, The Malt Shovel, Royal Oak, the Hartshill Club, and The Anchor which is on the Coventry Canal.

Immediately west of the village is the Hartshill Hayes Country Park, which covers 137 acres (55 ha) of woodland.


Nearby Areas

Chipping Campden | Lower Brailes | Shipston on Stour | Banbury | Syresham | Wickhamford | Greatworth | Badsey | Ilmington | Helmdon | Chacombe | Mickleton | Silverstone | Evesham | Honeybourne | Wardington | Fladbury | South Littleton | Newbold on Stour | Cropredy | Pebworth | Chipping Warden | Harvington | Cleeve Prior | Blakesley

© 1996 - 2024 SimplyFixIt – For more information, please visit SimplyFixIt.co.uk