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Read Surname Ancestry Results

Our indexes 1000-1999 include entries for the spelling 'read'. In the period you have requested, we have the following 2245 records (displaying 1641 to 1650): 

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Inhabitants of Worcester (1790-1797)
The provincial sections of the Universal British Directory include lists of gentry and traders from each town and the surrounding countryside, with names of local surgeons, lawyers, postmasters, carriers, &c. (the sample scan here is from the section for Nottingham). The directory started publication in 1791, but was not completed for some years, and the provincial lists, sent in by local agents, can date back as early as 1790 and as late as 1797.

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Inhabitants of Worcester
 (1790-1797)
Members of London livery companies (1791-1797)
One of the most useful sections of the Universal British Directory, nominally produced in 1791 but including later material, is a List of the Livery of London, giving the names and addresses of members of the London livery companies, together with their professions. As a glance at the sample will show, the companies and the professions only sometimes match, so this is an invaluable key as a first step in tracing the relevant company records for a London trader of this period

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Members of London livery companies
 (1791-1797)
Anglicans in Salford and their children (1891)
The parish magazine of the populous Anglican parish of Salford St Matthias contains not only parish news and notices, but also lists of Baptisms, Marriages and Deaths. The parish was divided into 38 districts for the Christian Workers' Association, and the districts are listed, with the names of the streets, and the names and addresses of the district visitors. The Sunday School prize lists give the names of many of the children, arranged by class; and there is a long prize list for the year for boys and girls attending the Anglican day and infants schools at Broughton Road and Silk Street. The parish comprised Broughton Road, St Simon's Street, Back Sandon Street, Wood's Buildings, Sandford Street, Watkin Street, Harriet Street, Brougham Street, Wheat Hill Street, Rose Street, Pink Street, Silk Street and Back Silk Street, Adelphi Street, Flax Street, Ann Street, Diamond Street, Lester Street, Cliburn Street, Sagar Street and Back Sagar Street, Pine Street, Matthew's Buildings, Blackburn Street, Blackburn Place, North James Henry Street, Pea Street, Cannon Court, Arlington Street and Back Arlington Street, Silk Place, Russell Street, Artillery Street, Gun Street, Bow Street, Chestnut Street, North Charles Street, Peter Street, North Thomas Street, Ogden Street, North Cable Street, Cannon Street, Rockville Street, Barnet Street, Brook Street, McIntyre Square, Burton Street, Devine Street, Methvin Street, Skellorn Street, North Hill Street, Briggs Street, Simms Street, Allendale Street, Francis Terrace, Marshall Terrace, Albert Terrace, North George Street, Alexander Street, Albert Street, Marshall Street, Mount Street, Mayers Street, Peru Street, Reservoir Terrace, John Street, Richmond Terrace, Richmond Row and Back Richmond Row, Ford Lane, Ford Land View, Richmond Hill, High Holborn Terrace, Perseverance Place, Williamson Street, Willow Street, and Salford Street.

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Anglicans in Salford and their children
 (1891)
Tabular record of Wesleyan mortality (1860)
The Christian Miscellany and Family Visiter, a Wesleyan Methodist monthly published in London, carried, in most issues, a Tabular Record of Mortality, listing recent deaths. The columns of the table are: Name, Residence, [Methodist] Circuit, Age, and Date of Death.

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Tabular record of Wesleyan mortality
 (1860)
British Army administration (1841)
The British Army of queen Victoria's time had a very extensive system of administration. The Royal Kalendar lists officials, both uniformed and civilian, from the Commander-in-Chief's Office at Horse Guards, the Adjutant-General's Office, the Recruiting Department, the Quarter Master-General's Office, the Judge Advocate-General's Office, the Consolidated Board of General Officers, the Cinque Ports, the War Office, the Office of her Majesty's Paymaster-General, the Ordnance Department (including the out-ports and stations at Woolwich, Chatham, Dover, Portsmouth, Devonport, Guernsey, Jersey, Chester and Liverpool, Carlisle, Hull, Landguard Fort and Harwich, Alderne, the gunpowder manufactory at Waltham Abbey, the gunpowder magazines at Hyde Park, Purfleet, Gravesend and Tilbury, Upnor Castle, Priddy's Hard, Tipner Point, Keyham Point, Marchwood and Tynemouth; at Edinburgh, Stirling Castle and Fort George in Scotland; in Antigua, Australia, the Bahamas, Barbadoes, Berbice, Bermuda, Cape of Good Hope, Colombo, Corfu, Demerara, Dominica, Gibraltar, Grenada, Halifax (Nova Scotia), Jamaica, Isle aux Nois, Kingston (Upper Canada), Malta, Mauritius, Montreal, New Brunswick, Prince Edward's Island, Quebec, Rideau Canal, Ottawa Canals, St Christopher, St Helena, St Lucia, St Vincent's, Santa Maura, Sierra Leone, Toronto, Tobago, Trincomalee, Trinidad and Zante), the Royal Military College at Sandhurst, the Royal Hospital at Chelsea, the Royal Military Asylum at Chelsea and Southampton, Army Agents, General Agents for the Recruiting Service, and Army general staff and governors of forts and garrisons in Ireland.

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British Army administration
 (1841)
British sea officers (1841)
The Royal Kalendar lists the 177 flag officers of the Royal Navy; the 670 captains (including superannuated and retired) and 751 commanders. The captains and commanders are given in order of precedence, determined by the dates of their appointment. Then there is a list of the ships of the navy, annotated with the names of their captains, with a separate section for steam vessels; packet brigs at Falmouth; and mail steam vessels at Dover, Weymouth, Pembroke, Liverpool, Holyhead and Portpatrick.

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British sea officers
 (1841)
Officials and officers of the Admiralty, dockyards, and maritime institutions (1841)
The Royal Kalendar lists officials and clerks of the Admiralty at Charing Cross, including those of the Admiralty Court; then there are the various civil departments of the Admiralty at Somerset Place: the Surveyor's Department, the Accountant-General's Department, Storekeeper-General's Department, Department of the Comptroller for Victualling and Transport Services; Department of the Physician-General; the Dockyards at Deptford, Woolwich, Chatham, Sheerness, Deal, Portsmouth, Plymouth, Pembroke, Halifax (Nova Scotia), Malta, Cape of Good Hope, Trincomalee and Bermuda; the Victualling Officers at the outports of Deptford, Portsmouth, Plymouth, Sheerness and Cork; the Royal Naval Hospitals at Haslar, Plymouth, Malta, Jamaica and Bermuda; the Royal Marines' Navy and Marine Agents in London; the Royal Hospital at Greenwich; Royal Hospital School; Corporation of the Trinity House; Corporation for Sick and Maimed Seamen in the Merchants Service; Royal Naval Benevolent Society; Naval Medical Supplemental Fund; Marine Society; London Maritime Institution; Royal National Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck; and the Royal Naval School for Educating the Sons of the Less Affluent Naval and Marine Officers at the Least Possible Expense.

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Officials and officers of the Admiralty, dockyards, and maritime institutions
 (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)
Hospital governors, staff and officials (1805)
Governors, surgeons, officers and clerks of several hospitals, both official and charitable, are listed in Holden's Triennial Directory of 1805 to 1807: St Bartholomew's in West Smithfield; Christ's, in Newgate Street; Bridewell and Bethlehem on New Bridge Street; St Thomas's, in Southwark; the Royal Hospital in Chelsea; the London Hospital in Whitechapel Road; Guy's, in Southwark; St George's, on Hyde Park Corner; St Luke's, for lunatics, in Old Street; and the Royal Hospital in Greenwich.

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Hospital governors, staff and officials
 (1805)
London medical men (1805)
London fellows, candidates, licentiates, licentiates in midwifery and extra licentiates of the Royal College of Physicians, members of the Royal College of Surgeons, members of the Society of Apothecaries, and fellows of the Medical Society of London, as well as officers and council of the society, and vice-presidents, officers and medical assistants of the Royal Humane Society for the Restoration of Human Life, and the officers and directors of the Society for the Relief of Widows and Orphans of Medical Men in London and its Vicinity, are listed in Holden's Triennial Directory of 1805 to 1807.

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London medical men
 (1805)
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