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Our indexes include entries for the spelling dale. In the period you have requested, we have the following 1,615 records (displaying 761 to 770): 

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Petitioning Creditors and Solicitors (1828)
Principal creditors petitioning to force a bankruptcy (but often close relatives of the bankrupt helping to protect his assets): and solicitors
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Petitioning Creditors and Solicitors
 (1828)
Petitioning Creditors and Solicitors (1828-1829)
Principal creditors petitioning to force a bankruptcy (but often close relatives of the bankrupt helping to protect his assets). Perry's Bankrupt and Insolvent Gazette was printed monthly for subscribers only, and included a section entitled Bankrupts, summarizing notices of bankruptcy proceedings. Volume 4, for 1829, covers bankruptcies gazetted from 2 December 1828 to 24 November 1829. The Gazette provided an index to the names of the principal bankrupts, but we have prepared this index to the names of the principal creditors, together with some stray names and solicitors from the records.
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Petitioning Creditors and Solicitors   
 (1828-1829)
Boroughholders of Stockton-on-Tees (1829)
The 1829 second edition of John Brewster's 'Parochial History and Antiquities of Stockton-upon-Tees', county Durham, included this appendix (number vii), a list of the boroughholders (burgesses) of the borough. Full names are given: on occasion, where a boroughholder was lately deceased, the formula 'The heir or devisee of ...' is used.
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Boroughholders of Stockton-on-Tees
 (1829)
Dissolutions of Partnerships (1829)
Trade partnerships dissolved, or the removal of one partner from a partnership of several traders
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Dissolutions of Partnerships
 (1829)
Agriculturists and horticulturists (1830)
J. Baxter of Lewes, proprietor of the Sussex Agricultural Press, published a compendium called 'The Library of Agricultural and Horticultural Knowledge; with an Appendix on Suspended Animation, Poisons, and the Principal Laws relating to Farming and Rural Affairs'. This was supported by a large subscription of interested gentlemen, farmers and gardeners, whose names and addresses are indexed here. There is a separate list for gardeners, nurserymen and florists, but that and the main list overlap, so both are incorporated here.
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Agriculturists and horticulturists
 (1830)
Inhabitants of Cornwall (1830)
Pigot & Co.'s National Commercial Directory lists traders, farmers and private residents in the county.
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Inhabitants of Cornwall
 (1830)
Inhabitants of Dorset (1830)
Pigot & Co.'s National Commercial Directory lists traders, farmers and private residents in the county.
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Inhabitants of Dorset
 (1830)
Inhabitants of Somerset (1830)
Pigot & Co.'s National Commercial Directory lists traders, farmers and private residents in the county.
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Inhabitants of Somerset
 (1830)
Cambridgeshire Voters: Harlton (1832)
The poll on the election of three knights of the shire to serve in Parliament for the county of Cambridge, was taken at Cambridge, Royston, Newmarket, Ely, Wisbech and Whittlesea 18 and 19 December 1832. The candidates were Henry John Adeane esquire, Richard Greaves Townley esquire, Charles Philip Yorke esquire and John Walbanke Childers esquire. This poll book sets out the names of the voters in alphabetical order hundred by hundred and parish by parish. The voters' full names are stated, surname first. The right hand column records their votes. The new qualification for suffrage in the counties, after the passage of the 1832 Great Reform Bill, was the possession of a freehold estate worth 40s a year or more, a copyhold or long leasehold of £10 a year or more, or a tenancy or short leasehold of £50 a year or more.
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Cambridgeshire Voters: Harlton
 (1832)
Householders of Newcastle-upon-Tyne (1832)
The parliamentary election to represent Newcastle-upon-Tyne (with the townships of Benwell, Byker, Heaton, Jesmond and Westgate) took place on 13 and 14 December 1832. Under the Reform Act, the franchise was available to freeholders worth 40s a year or over; copyholders and long leaseholders of £10 or more; short leaseholders and tenants of £50 or more: but limited to adult males. This poll book lists the free burgesses and the householders separately, in each case giving full name, profession, address, and showing whether voting for sir Matthew White Ridley (R.), John Hodgson (H.) or Charles Attwood (A.). Each voter had two votes, but could opt to plump (X) for a single candidate.
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Householders of Newcastle-upon-Tyne
 (1832)
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