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Good Surname Ancestry Results

Our indexes 1000-1999 include entries for the spelling 'good'. In the period you have requested, we have the following 826 records (displaying 421 to 430): 

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County Cork Freeholders: Booth No 5 (1841)
The poll books of voters in the parliamentary election for county Cork 13 to 15 July 1841 delivered in to the select committee that subsequently looked into the propriety of the proceedings, and then annotated with observations as to those votes to which objection had been raised. There are separate books for seven booths, with the electors' names in order of voting: giving each freeholder's full name, place of abode, situation of the freehold, value, number and date in the alphabetical registry book, and for which candidates they voted (Daniel O'Connell, Edmund Burke Roche, Nicholas Philpot Leader, and Robert Longfield). The seven booths are for these areas: 1. Duhallow barony; 2. Hall County Side, East East Carbery, West East Carbery and East West Carbery; 3. Barrymore and West West Carbery; 4. Condons and Fermoy; 5. Imokelly and West Muskerry.

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County Cork Freeholders: Booth No 5
 (1841)
County Cork Freeholders: Booth No 7 (1841)
The poll books of voters in the parliamentary election for county Cork 13 to 15 July 1841 delivered in to the select committee that subsequently looked into the propriety of the proceedings, and then annotated with observations as to those votes to which objection had been raised. There are separate books for seven booths, with the electors' names in order of voting: giving each freeholder's full name, place of abode, situation of the freehold, value, number and date in the alphabetical registry book, and for which candidates they voted (Daniel O'Connell, Edmund Burke Roche, Nicholas Philpot Leader, and Robert Longfield). The seven booths are for these areas: 1. Duhallow barony; 2. Hall County Side, East East Carbery, West East Carbery and East West Carbery; 3. Barrymore and West West Carbery; 4. Condons and Fermoy; 5. Imokelly and West Muskerry.

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County Cork Freeholders: Booth No 7
 (1841)
Dissolutions of Partnerships (1841)
Trade partnerships dissolved, or the removal of one partner from a partnership of several traders, in England and Wales

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Dissolutions of Partnerships
 (1841)
Foreign diplomats in Britain (1841)
The Royal Kalendar lists foreign ministers and consuls residing in England representing Austria, Baden, Bavaria, Belgium, the Brazils, Denmark, France, Frankfurt, Greeve, Hanover, the Hanseatic Republics, Lubeck, Bremen and Hamburg, Mecklenburgh Schwerin, Mexico, the Netherlands, Portugal, Prussia, Russia, Sardinia and Lucca, Saxony, Sicily, Spain, Sweden and Norway, Switzerland, Turkey, Tuscany, the United States of America, the United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata, Uruguay, Venezuela and Wurtemburg.

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Foreign diplomats in Britain
 (1841)
Insolvents (1841)
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
 (1841)
Insolvents (1841)
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
 (1841)
Officers and officials of English hospitals (1841)
The Royal Kalendar lists patrons, governors, officers and staff of the hospitals and infirmaries in and near London: Saint Bartholomew's; the Bridewell and Bethlem; St Thomas's; Emanuel; Asylum for Poor French Protestants; Westminster Hospital; Guy's; Bancroft's Hospital; St George's; the Foundling Hospital; the London Hospital; the Hospital for Casual Smallpox and Vaccination; Lock Hospital; Middlesex Hospital; the British Lying-in Hospital for Married Women; the City of London Lying-in Hospital; St Luke's Hospital for Lunatics; Queen Charlotte's Lying-in Hospital; the Asylum for French Orphans; the General Lying-in Hospital; the Jews Hospital; Seamen's Hospital Society; Magdalen Hospital; London Fever Hospital; Royal London Ophthalmic Hospital; Royal Sea Bathing Infirmary (at Westbrook near Margate); Royal Infirmary for Diseases of the Eye; Royal Westminster Ophthalmic Hospital; Infirmary for Asthma, Consumption and other Diseases of the Lungs; Charing Cross Hospital and Medical College; the Royal Metropolitan Hospital for Children; the Royal Maternity Charity for delivering Poor Married Women at their own Habitations; the General Dispensary for Relief of the Poor; Westminster General Dispensary; London Dispensary; Finsbury Dispensary; the Eastern Dispensary; the Public Dispensary; Marylebone General Dispensary; Queen Adelaide and British Ladies Lying-in Institution; the City Dispensary; the Western Dispensary; Surrey Dispensary; Tower Hamlets Dispensary; Bloomsbury Dispensary; the National Truss Society; the Rupture Society for the Supply of Trusses to the Indigent Poor; the City of London Truss Society; the National Vaccine Establishment; the Charitable Fund and Dispensary for Relieving the Sick Poor at their own Habitations with Medicines and Pecuniary Aid; the Northern Dispensary; the Royal Infirmary for Children; the Royal Dispensary for the Diseases of the Ear, and the Deaf and Dumb; the Royal Jennerian and London Vaccine Institution for the Extermination of Smallpox, for Gratuitous Vaccination, and Keeping up a Genuine Ichor; and St George's and St James's Dispensary.

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Officers and officials of English hospitals
 (1841)
Petitioning Creditors and Solicitors (1841)
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
 (1841)
Post office clerks and officials (1841)
The General Post Office, at St Martin's-le-Grand, was the headquarters for the English postal system. Its departments included the Money Order Office, Ship Letter Office, Dead and Returned Letter Office and the Inland Letter Office. The Two Penny Post was a separate establishment. The officials, clerks, assistants and sorters are listed in the Royal Kalendar.

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Post office clerks and officials
 (1841)
Taxmen in England and Wales (1841)
The Royal Kalendar lists officials of the Custom House in Thames Street, including the collectors and comptrollers at each of the outports (Aberystwyth, Aldborough, Arundel, Barnstaple, Beaumaris, Berwick, Bideford, Blakeney & Clay, Boston, Bridgwater, Bridlington, Bridport, Bristol, Cardiff. Cardigan, Carlisle, Chepstow, Chester, Chichester, Colchester, Cowes, Dartmouth, Deal, Dover, Exeter, Falmouth, Faversham, Fleetwood, Fowey, Gloucester, Goole, Grimsby, Gweek (in Cornwall), Harwich, Hull, Ipswich, Isle of Man, Llanelly, Lancaster, Liverpool, Lyme (Regis), (King's) Lynn, Milford, Maldon, Newcastle (on Tyne), Newhaven, Newport, Padstow, Penzance, Plymouth, Poole, Portsmouth, Ramsgate, Rochester, Rye, St Ives, Scarborough, Scilly, Shoreham, Southampton, Guernsey, Jersey, Alderney, Southwold, Stockton, Sunderland, Swansea, Truro, Wells, Weymouth, Wisbech, Whitby, Whitehaven, Woodbridge and Yarmouth), the Excise Office in Broad Street, and the Office of Stamps and Taxes in Somerset Place, including assistants, clerks and housekeepers.

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Taxmen in England and Wales
 (1841)
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