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Courteney Surname Ancestry Results

Our indexes 1000-1999 include entries for the spelling 'courteney'. In the period you have requested, we have the following 64 records (displaying 41 to 50): 

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Government officers and officials (1805)
Many of the main government offices, almost all in London, are covered by these lists from Holden's Triennial Directory of 1805 to 1807 - Receipt of His Majesty's Exchequer and Exchequer Bill Pay Office in Old Palace Yard; First Annuity Office; Second Annuity Office; Examiners of Tellers Vouchers Department; Pell's Office, Old Annuity and Tontine; Tellers of Receipts; Tally Office; Exchequer Bill Pay Office in New Palace Yard; the Board of Commissioners for the Affairs in India, in Whitehall; Lord Commissioners for Trade and Foreign Plantations, in Whitehall; Board of Works, in Scotland Yard; Barrack Office, in Spring Gardens; Officers of the Tower; the Land Tax Redemption Office, in Parliament Street; the Land Tax Register Office, in Lincoln's Inn Fields; the St Domingo Board, at Poet's Corner; the Queen Anne's Bounty Office, in Dean's Yard, Westminster; the King's Stationery Office, in Palace Yard; the Stamp Office, at Somerset House; the Tax Office there; the Office for Sick and Wounded Seamen, also there; the Hawkers' and Pedlars' Office in Somerset Place; the Hackney Coach Office at Somerset House; the Lord Treasurer's Remembrancer's Office; the Pipe Office, in Somerset Place; the Signet Office, at Somerset House; the Privy Seal Office, there; the Duchy Court of Lancaster, also there; the Transport Office at Dorset Square (which included the staff dealing with prisoners-of-war); and the Office of the County Palatine of Lancaster.

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Government officers and officials
 (1805)
Inhabitants of Waterford (1805)
Holden's Triennial Directory of 1805 to 1807 included a provincial section, listing professional people and traders in England, Wales, Scotland and Ireland. (The sample scan here is from the listing for Bath)

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Inhabitants of Waterford
 (1805)
Traders and professionals in London (1805)
Holden's Triennial Directory for 1805 to 1807 includes this 'London Alphabet of Businesses, Professions, &c.': coverage is good; about 30,000 individuals are recorded.

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Traders and professionals in London
 (1805)
Deaths, Marriages, News and Promotions (1811)
Death notices and obituaries, marriage and birth notices, civil and military promotions, clerical preferments and domestic occurrences, as reported in the Gentleman's Magazine. Mostly from England and Wales, but items from Ireland, Scotland and abroad.

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Deaths, Marriages, News and Promotions
 (1811)
Anglican Clergy (1817)
The Clerical Guide for 1817 includes this alphabetical list of rectors (R.), vicars (V.) and other Anglican clergy. Names of the king's chaplains-in-ordinary, and of churches and chapels of peculiar or exempt jurisdiction, are printed in italics. The clergy are listed more or less alphabetically by surname, with initial or christian name.

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Anglican Clergy
 (1817)
Merchants, Bankers, Shipowners and Traders of London (1834)
The public prints of December 1834 carried this loyal address to king William IV of merchants, bankers, shipowners, traders and others connected with the city of London, requesting 'permission at the present juncture to address your Majesty for the purpose of renewing the expression of our dutiful and loyal attachment to your Majesty’s person and crown. Deeply sensible of the practical blessings we have hitherto enjoyed under our wisely mixed constitution of King, Lords, and Commons, and feeling that the free and legitimate exercise of the Royal prerogative forms an integral part of that constitution (as essential to the maintenance of our own liberties as to the power and dignity of the Throne), we beg humbly to assure your Majesty of our determination steadfastly to uphold the same by every means in our power. 'Feeling, in common with all classes of your Majesty’s subjects, the deep importance of applying to all real abuses, wherever they may be found, a wholesome and timely correction, and of effecting in our excellent institutions every improvement of which careful examination and experience may prove them to be susceptible, we desire further dutifully to express our entire confidence that these useful purposes will ever occupy your Majesty’s paternal care. Nor can we permit ourselves to believe that the importance of these objects will be less apparent to those to whom the powers of government have been recently intrusted.' Full names are given (or surname with initials), and address. Over 5000 subscribed.

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Merchants, Bankers, Shipowners and Traders of London
 (1834)
London and Middlesex crimes tried at the Central Criminal Court: victims and witnesses (1835)
Henry Buckler copied in shorthand the proceedings of trials at the Central Criminal Court in London, and his transcripts were printed. This volume (iii), from 1836, covers sessions i to vi of the Copeland mayoralty of 1835 to 1836. The bulk of the cases were from London and Middlesex, with separate sections for Essex, Kent and Surrey, but, preceding all these, Capital Convictions. The names of the accused are annotated with an asterisk to show if they had previously been in custody; an obelisk indicates a known associate of bad characters. Most cases resulted in a guilty verdict, and a large proportion of these led to a sentence of transportation to Australia. This index covers the victims, witnesses (including constables) and others incidentally named in the London and Middlesex cases of November 1835.

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London and Middlesex crimes tried at the Central Criminal Court: victims and witnesses
 (1835)
Yeomanry and Militia Officers (1850)
The Royal Military Calendar lists officers of the Yeomanry Cavalry and the Militia, the armed forces supporting the civil power in Britain and Ireland

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Yeomanry and Militia Officers
 (1850)
Inhabitants of Leeds, Yorkshire (1853)
William White's directory lists traders, farmers and private residents in the area.

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Inhabitants of Leeds, Yorkshire
 (1853)
Insolvents (1856)
Insolvency notices for England and Wales: insolvency often caused people to restart their lives elsewhere, so these are an important source for lost links

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Insolvents
 (1856)
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