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  1. Hace 5 días · County of Middlesex. Calendar To the Sessions Records: New Series, Volume 1, 1612-14. Covers the sessions between December 1612 and June 1614. Middlesex Sessions Records. Originally published by Clerk of the Peace, London, 1935. This free content was digitised by double rekeying.

  2. Hace 3 días · Home. Middlesex County Records. Calendar of Sessions Books 1689-1709. A calendar of writs, indictments, recognizances, orders and memoranda from the Sessions Books for Middlesex. The volume includes a substantial introductory essay by the editor. Middlesex County Records. Originally published by Middlesex County Record Society, London, 1905.

  3. Hace 5 días · After the Middlesex county court had been reorganized by the Small Debts, Middlesex, Act of 1750 the court for Ossulstone hundred suitors was held further eastward. In 1793 (fn. 10) and 1808 (fn. 11) it was in Fulwood's Rents (now Fulwood's Place), Holborn, and by 1827 in Kingsgate Street, Holborn, (fn. 12) where it remained (fn. 13) until, after the passage of the County Courts Act, 1846, it ...

  4. 16 de may. de 2024 · Title: Sessions Rolls. Description: Among the Quarter Sessions records, four engrossed sessions rolls [Q/SR/1-4] are extant covering the years 1600-1604. These contain proceedings for both East and West Kent Quarter Sessions during the period, together with four "special sessions" and they record both judicial and administrative business.

  5. 30 de abr. de 2024 · In September 1615, a Ratcliffe mariner named Thomas Jeronimo, his wife Helen and a musician named John Anthony all appeared at the Middlesex Quarter Sessions. Helen was suspected of stealing...

  6. Hace 6 días · This essay rests on a study of cases in the courts of Upper Bench, the northern circuit assizes, great sessions in Wales, quarter sessions in both eastern and western English counties and the metropolitan courts of quarter sessions for Middlesex and Westminster.

  7. Hace 1 día · Using depositions from Middlesex and Westminster Quarter Sessions, she argues that what the rogueologists described as criminal associations were, from a different point of view, the ordinary ties of urban sociability.