Add this eBook to your basket to receive access to all 50 records. Our indexes include entries for the spelling penruddock. In the period you have requested, we have the following 50 records (displaying 31 to 40): 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. Treasury Books
(1714-1715) Records of the Treasury administration in Britain and the colonies, for August 1714 to December 1715. This is a digest of Treasury Minute Books T29/21-22; Disposition Books T61/22-23; King's Warrants T52/24, 26-29; Order Books T60/8-9; Plantation Auditor Out Letters T64/90; Caveat Book T64/40; Warrants Relating to Money T53/14, 16-25; Warrants Not Relating to Money T54/21-24; Lord Chamberlain's Warrants T56/18; Queen Anne's Debts T56/34; Customs Out Letters T11/16; General Out Letters T27/21-23; Ireland Out Letters T14/9-10; North Britain (Scotland) Out Letters T17/2-3; Affairs of Taxes T22/2; Reference Books T4/8-9; and Register of Papers Read at the Treasury Board T4/19: prepared by William A. Shaw for the Lords Commissioners of Her Majesty's Treasury. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
| Defendants prosecuted by the Treasury Solicitor
(1715-1716) Abstract of the Treasury declared accounts for the Treasury Solicitor, 1 June 1715 to 1 June 1716, AO 1/2319/32, listing cases brought in that period. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
| Apprentices registered at Leicester
(1741-1745) Apprenticeship indentures and clerks' articles were subject to a 6d or 12d per pound stamp duty: the registers of the payments usually give the master's trade, address, and occupation, and the apprentice's father's name and address, as well as details of the date and length of the apprenticeship. There are central registers for collections of the stamp duty in London, as well as returns from collectors in the provinces. These collectors generally received duty just from their own county, but sometimes from further afield. (The sample entry shown on this scan is taken from a Norfolk return) | Sample scan, click to enlarge
| Subscribers to the Racing Calendar: Wiltshire
(1777) The extensive subscription list for 1777 to the annual Racing Calendar first gives the names of the nobility, then the other subscribers county by county for England, with separate sections for Wales, Ireland and Scotland. Initials or christian names are stated only occasionally. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
| Apprentices and clerks
(1791) Apprenticeship indentures and clerks' articles were subject to a 6d or 12d per pound stamp duty: the registers of the payments usually give the master's trade, address, and occupation, and the apprentice's name, as well as details of the date and length of the apprenticeship. 5 March to 31 December 1791. IR 1/35 | Sample scan, click to enlarge
| London nobility and gentry
(1791) The Universal British Directory includes a list of the nobility, gentry, &c. in London and Westminster: esquires, i. e., gentlemen without titles, are sometimes listed without their christian names. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
| Deaths, Marriages, News and Promotions
(1796) 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
(1799) 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.
| Sample scan, click to enlarge
| Army officials and clerks
(1805) Officials and clerks of the War Office in Whitehall, the Army Pay Office in Whitehall, the Ordnance in Palace Yard, the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich, the Royal Elaboratory at Woolwich, the Artillery, Officers at Out Ports and Garrisons (in Britain, Guernsey, Jersey, the Isle of Man, Gibraltar, Jamaica, St Christophers, Antigua, Dominica, Quebec, St Vincents, Barbadoes, Halifax (Nova Scotia), New Brunswick, St John's (Newfoundland), Annapolis, Trinidad, the Bahamas, and Bermuda), the Corps of Royal Engineers, his Majesty's Mint, the Commissary's Department to the Field Train, the Commander-in-Chief's Office in Whitehall, the Commissary-General's Office of Musters in Whitehall, the Commissary-General's Office of Stores at 35 George Street in Westminster, the War Department in Downing Street, and the Army Agents are listed in Holden's Triennial Directory of 1805 to 1807. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
| Inhabitants of Wiltshire
(1830) Pigot & Co.'s National Commercial Directory lists traders, farmers and private residents in the county. | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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