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Our indexes include entries for the spelling thistlethwaite. In the period you have requested, we have the following 112 records (displaying 101 to 110): 

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Freemasons in James D. Murray chapter, Burnley (1938)
List of members of the Ancient and Accepted Rite for England, Wales, the Dominions and Dependencies of the British Crown, January 1938. An asterisk before a name indicates a P. M. W. S. of the Chapter; the number 30 indicates a Grand Elected Knight, K. H., 30th Degree; 31, Grand Inspector Inquisitor Commander, 31st Degree; 32, Sublime Prince of the Royal Secret, 32nd Degree.
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Freemasons in James D. Murray chapter, Burnley
 (1938)
Freemasons in St Peter chapter, Bolton (1938)
List of members of the Ancient and Accepted Rite for England, Wales, the Dominions and Dependencies of the British Crown, January 1938. An asterisk before a name indicates a P. M. W. S. of the Chapter; the number 30 indicates a Grand Elected Knight, K. H., 30th Degree; 31, Grand Inspector Inquisitor Commander, 31st Degree; 32, Sublime Prince of the Royal Secret, 32nd Degree.
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Freemasons in St Peter chapter, Bolton
 (1938)
London Telephone Subscribers (1939)
The London telephone directory lists subscribers alphabetically by surname and then by christian name or initials, with their postal address and telephone number. This is the L to Z directory issued in May 1939, but also contains some names from earlier in the alphabet, for instance in the separate section for midwives. The London telephone districts comprised not only the city centre, but also the very extensive suburbs in the Home Counties (Essex, Kent, Surrey and Middlesex).
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London Telephone Subscribers
 (1939)
British Dentists (1950)
The Dentists Register is the official register of British dental practitioners. For each dentist the original certificate number is given; name (surname first, in bold; in the case of married women, maiden name is also usually given); address (in italics); date of registration; and the qualification entitling registration, with any additional qualifications, with year and place of qualification. Many of the older dentists, already practising by 1921, were qualified by virtue of the Dentists Act of that year.
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British Dentists
 (1950)
Chemists (1950)
The Royal Institute of Chemistry was founded in 1877, and was open only to British subjects (and also, in due course, to citizens of the newly-created Republic of Ireland). Associates of the institute (A. R. I. C.) qualified either by studying chemistry, physics, mathematics and an optional science for the institute's examination (which insisted on a high standard of practical laboratory efficiency); or by obtaining good honours degrees or equivalent qualifications, with chemistry as principal subject, and having undergone training in allied sciences. Associates of at least three years' standing could then be admitted to the Fellowship (F. R. I. C.) either by taking a further examination in a special branch of chemistry, or by submitting the results of work or evidence of experience sufficient to justify the Council in granting exemption from such further examination. This register of fellows and associates, correct to 31 August 1950, contains 11,545 names, arranged alphabetically, surname first (in capitals), with qualifications, current address, telephone number, and (in italics) a brief description of present post in the chemical industry. Finally, year of admission as associate (A.) (and, where appropriate, fellow (F.) is given on the right-hand side. With this may appear the notation (x) for a fellow of the Chemical Society, (y) for a member of the Society of Chemical Industry, or (z) for a joint subscriber to all three chartered bodies.
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Chemists
 (1950)
Owners and Breeders of Friesian Cattle (1951)
The British Friesian Cattle Society registered the pedigrees of pure Friesian cattle in the United Kingdom. This list of members is corrected to 10 April 1951, and gives full name (surname first), address, and where the member owned a herd, the prefix attributed to that herd. A dagger in front of an entry indicates that the herd was attested.
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Owners and Breeders of Friesian Cattle
 (1951)
British Civil Servants (1953)
The British Imperial Calendar lists civil servants in Britain, arranged according to the organizational structure of the state, and shows their qualifications and salaries.
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British Civil Servants
 (1953)
Student Structural Engineers (1953)
The Institution of Structural Engineers was founded in 1908 and incorporated by royal charter in 1934. The institution had nine branches in Britain and Northern Ireland, and one in South Africa. The 1953 year book includes this list of members corrected to 1 August 1953, giving year of election to the various grades, surname (in bold), christian name, honours, address, and telephone number. 'Students shall be persons engaged in the study of structural engineering who have attained the age of not less than 17 years and not more than 25 years and who have passed an examination entitling them to matriculate at a British University or some other examination of an equivalent Standard.'
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Student Structural Engineers
 (1953)
Inhabitants of Liverpool (1955)
Kelly's (Gore's) Directory of Liverpool and District includes this alphabetical list of residents and traders, with names, addresses, and (where applicable) telephone numbers. Covering a large area around Liverpool, the directory includes Bootle, Birkenhead and Wallasey, and thus the populous areas of southwest Lancashire and of the Wirral peninsula of Cheshire.
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Inhabitants of Liverpool
 (1955)
Residents of Southend-on-Sea (1955)
Kelly's Directory of Southend-on-Sea, Leigh-on-Sea, Westcliff and Neighbourhood for 1955 lists private residents by surname, christian name(s), house, street and area, for the whole of the county borough of Southend-on-Sea in Essex, including Westcliff-on-Sea (W), Prittlewell, North Shoebury, South Shoebury or Shoeburyness (S. & S. S), Milton, Southchurch, Southchurch Wick, Thorpe Bay (T. B), Leigh-on-Sea (L), Nobles Green and Eastwood (E).
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Residents of Southend-on-Sea
 (1955)
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