Search between and
BasketGBP GBP
0 items£0.00
Click here to change currency

Minnican Surname Ancestry Results

Our indexes 1000-1999 include entries for the spelling 'minnican'. In the period you have requested, we have the following 3 records (displaying 1 to 3): 

Buy all
Get all 3 records to view, to save and print for £18.00

These sample scans are from the original record. You will get scans of the full pages or articles where the surname you searched for has been found.

Your web browser may prevent the sample windows from opening; in this case please change your browser settings to allow pop-up windows from this site.

Norfolk Marriages (1796)
Volume 2 of the Monthly Magazine and British Register contains issues 6 to 11, for July to December 1796, plus a supplement. Each issue included notices of news, marriages and deaths in and around London, and a section entitled Provincial Occurrences, 'including accounts of all Improvements relating to Agriculture, the Commerce, the Economy, the Police, &c. of every part of the Kingdom; with Notices of eminent Marriages, and of all the Deaths reported in the Provincial Prints: to which are added, Biographical Anecdotes of remarkable and distinguished Characters.'

MINNICAN. Cost: £6.00. Add to basket

Sample scan, click to enlarge
Norfolk Marriages
 (1796)
Deaths, Marriages, Bankrupts, Dividends and Patents (1820-1821)
Death notices and obituaries, marriage and birth notices, bankrupts and dividends, and patents, as reported in the Monthly Magazine or British Register. Includes some marriages and deaths from Ireland, Scotland and abroad.

MINNICAN. Cost: £6.00. Add to basket

Sample scan, click to enlarge
Deaths, Marriages, Bankrupts, Dividends and Patents
 (1820-1821)
Long-stay Paupers in Workhouses: Cockermouth (1861)
This comprehensive return by the Poor Law Board for England and Wales in July 1861 revealed that of the 67,800 paupers aged 16 or over, exclusive of vagrants, then in the Board's workhouses, 14,216 (6,569 men, 7,647 women) had been inmates for a continuous period of five years and upwards. The return lists all these long-stay inmates from each of the 626 workhouses that had been existence for five years and more, giving full name; the amount of time that each had been in the workhouse (years and months); the reason assigned why the pauper in each case was unable to sustain himself or herself; and whether or not the pauper had been brought up in a district or workhouse school (very few had). The commonest reasons given for this long stay in the workhouse were: old age and infirm (3,331); infirm (2,565); idiot (1,565); weak mind (1,026); imbecile (997); and illness (493).

MINNICAN. Cost: £6.00. Add to basket

Sample scan, click to enlarge
Long-stay Paupers in Workhouses: Cockermouth
 (1861)

Research your ancestry, family history, genealogy and one-name study by direct access to original records and archives indexed by surname.