Lincolnshire Phillimore Marriages Volumes 01 to 11 on one CD. *Addlethorpe 1561-1837 *Alford 1538-1837 *Anderby 1561-1837 *Asserby 1561-1837 *Auborn 1562-1837 *Barrowby 1538-1837 *Bassingham 1572-1812 *Beesby 1565-1837 *Bilsby with Asserby and Thurley 1561-1837 *Boothby Graffoe 1562-1837 *Boultham 1562-1837 *Bracebridge 1562-1837 *Carlton le Moorland 1561-1812 *Claxby 1561-1837 *Claypole 1538-1837 *Cowbitt 1561-1837 with certain marriages between 1846 and 1850 *Cumberworth 1561- More Info
Can't find what you're looking for? Try using our filter system to narrow down your search.
We welcome any donations in support of our work to transcribe and make available Wiltshire family history related records. If you would like to help, please click on "Donation £5" and then, on the 'My Basket' page, you will be able to adjust the quantity to indicate how much you want to donate . ....................and Thank You!...
This publication is a re-release of previously published information. Volunteers are currently revising and adding in additional material from other sources for non-conformist records held in Wiltshire. There is considerable work to be completed and although it is hoped to be able to publish this in the future, no publication date can yet be proposed. The registers of the Wiltshire nonconformis...More Info
This volume is the earliest surviving vestry order book for Westbury. It records the work of the vestry in managing the poor; appointing overseers and churchwardens, setting rates, providing medical support, dealing with settlement cases of the settlement and removal of paupers, supervising the Workhouse and providing clothing and other forms of assistance to individuals. A4 softback, 70 pages
See Also SPECIAL OFFER page. Lay Subsidies were the main tax laid on people prior to the Civil War. Their records in the period from, roughly, 1524 to the 1640's, list, with varying degrees of fullness, the inhabitants of the area, with some gauge as to their wealth. Transcribed and Indexed by Cliff Webb (2002). 72 pages.
See Also SPECIAL OFFER page. Feet of Fines record the transfer of land and are an invaluable source. The records are arranged by place and listed chronologically, and then indexed by name. Compiled by Cliff Webb (1998). 52 pages.