Jermain Surname Ancestry ResultsOur indexes 1000-1900 include entries for the spelling 'jermain'. In the period you have requested, we have the following 18 records (displaying 1 to 10): Single Surname Subscription | | Buying all 18 results of this search individually would cost £106.00. But you can have free access to all 18 records for a year, to view, to save and print, for £100. Save £6.00. More... |
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(1588) The State Papers Foreign of queen Elizabeth consist mainly of letters and reports concerning England's relations with continental Europe. July to December 1588.JERMAIN. Cost: £6.00.  | Sample scan, click to enlarge
| Treasury Books
(1712) Records of the Treasury administration in Britain, America and the colonies, for 1712. These also include records of the appointment and replacement of customs officers such as tide waiters and surveyors.JERMAIN. Cost: £4.00.  | Sample scan, click to enlarge
| Treasury General Abstract
(1715-1716) A calendar of the 'Accounts of the Revenues of the Croan and of Taxes and Money Borrowed: for One Entire Year: to wit from Michaelmas 1715 to Michaelmas 1716' including the subsidiary Declared Accounts enrolled in the records of the Audit Office and the Pipe was prepared for the Public Record Office by Dr William A. Shaw and published posthumously, unindexed.JERMAIN. Cost: £6.00.  | Sample scan, click to enlarge
| Treasury and Customs Officials, Officers and Pensioners
(1717) Government accounts, with details of income and expenditure in Britain, America and the colonies
JERMAIN. Cost: £6.00.  | Sample scan, click to enlarge
| Apprentices registered in Essex
(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)JERMAIN. Cost: £8.00.  | Sample scan, click to enlarge
| Masters and Apprentices
(1749) 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.JERMAIN. Cost: £8.00.  | Sample scan, click to enlarge
| Russell family correspondence
(1670-1754) Mrs S. C. Lomas of the Historical Manuscripts Commission prepared this report on the manuscripts of Mrs Frankland-Russell-Astley of Chequers Court in Buckinghamshire, published in 1900. There are a few items included earlier than 1670, and a few later than 1754, but broadly the collection was divided into three groups: 1. Russell and Frankland correspondence 1657 to 1697; 2. Cutts and Revett papers 1687 to 1708; 3. Colonel Charles Russell's letters 1742 to 1754. Sir John Russell was married to Frances, daughter of Oliver Cromwell; their daughter Elizabeth married sir Thomas Frankland. Their son John Russell, governor of Fort William in Bengal, married as his second wife Joanna (niece of Lord Cutts) widow of colonel Edmund Revett; and John's son, colonel Charles Russell married Colonel Revett's daughter, Mary Joanna. The largest part of this collection is the correspondence of Colonel Russell, of the 1st Regiment of Foot, and later of the Coldstream Guards, soldiering in the Netherlands.JERMAIN. Cost: £4.00.  | Sample scan, click to enlarge
| Apprentices
(1769) Apprenticeship indentures and clerks' articles were subject to a 6d or 12d per pound stamp duty (late payment of the 6d rate attracted double duty (D D) of 12d): 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. 2 January to 31 December 1769.JERMAIN. Cost: £8.00.  | Sample scan, click to enlarge
| City of Westminster Voters
(1780) The poll for the election of two citizens to serve in Parliament for the City and Liberty of Westminster was begun 7 September and ended 23 September 1780, the candidates being the Hon. Charles James Fox (F), Sir George Brydges Rodney, bart. (R), and the Right Hon. Thomas Pelham Clinton the Earl of Lincoln (L). In this poll book the names of all voters are given, by parish and within each parish by street, arranged alphabetically by surname and christian name, with the individual votes cast shown in the right hand columns. Pages 1 to 48 cover the parish of St George, Hanover Square; 49 to 100, St Martin; 101 to 134, St Clement and St Mary le Strand; 135 to 155, St Ann, Soho; 157 to 166, St Paul, Covent Garden; 167 to 170, St Martin le Grand; 171 to 224, St James; 225 to 274, St Margaret and St John.JERMAIN. Cost: £6.00.  | 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.JERMAIN. Cost: £6.00.  | Sample scan, click to enlarge
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