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Collapse 1 - The Court in Session: bundles1 - The Court in Session: bundles
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1 - Deposition: From John Hull, Churchwarden of Brampton, that Charles Sharp, William Stapleton and Jonathan Gray of Brampton, had on May 12th together with divers persons unknown, assembly in the parish carrying an effigy and firing a pistol in the public ways... halloing, making a great noise etc.
2 - Deposition: From Edward Austin, bailiff to Andrew Fernie of Kimbolton, surgeon, accusing Luke Hart of Colmworth (Beds) of stealing a gun, four bushels of barley and a pig from Fernie's Farm at Gt. Staughton. Hart said he had bought the pig from John Saunders for 20/-
3 - Conviction Before J.P.: Angela Smith, wife of William Smith, a gipsy, convicted under the 1824 Act (Rogues and Vagabonds) for playing at Somersham with a Tube or Instrument of Gaming called an E.O. Table at a game or pretended Game of Chance called 'E.O.' Sent to House of Correction for 7 days' hard labour.
4 - Conviction Before J.P.: Edward Albone, Thomas Richardson, Henry Albone, William Bygrave, Thomas Albone, Edward Albone Jnr. William Huckle and William Albone of Biggleswade, convicted of damaging underwood in Waresley Wood, property of Earl Kilmordy. Fined £4 + £4 costs.
5 - Conviction Before J.P.: Edward Clarke the elder of Stanground, bricklayer, fined 5/- for being drunk.
6 - Conviction Before J.P.: On the prosecution of Thomas Bartle and William Ball both of Potton (Beds), fined £5 for using snares in Waresley Parish. On the prosecution of Thomas Porter of Waresley, Richard Roberts and Stock Chriswell of Gamlingay (Cambs) were similarly fined for the same offence.
7 - Conviction Before J.P.: On the prosecution at Alwalton, by John Stevens, Inspector of Hawkers' Licences, William Stebbing of Garbaldisham, Norfolk, travelling trader in linen cloth, was fined £10 for painting at Stilton on his cart the words 'licensed hawker'.
8 - Indictment: That William Austin and Thomas Storey, Yeomen, and John Cox, Edward Cox, William Cox and Thomas Cox, labourers, all of Hemingford Abbotts entered a certain close, the freehold of Robert Francis Jenner, which was in the tenure of Jeremiah Perkins, disseised Jenner, ejected Perkins and with other evil disposed persons cut down 21 ash trees and four oak trees (A true bill against William Austin; no bill against the others).
9 - Indictment: That Charles Sharp, William Stapleton and Jonathan Gray of Brampton, labourers, with twenty or more unruly persons riotously and routously carried a certain effigy representing a human figure in and about the Public Streets of Brampton and fired off pistols [ ]
10 - Indictment: Francis Lewis, St. Ives, labourer, assaulting Joseph Hall and Thomas Cole, St. Ives, Constables. True bill.
11 - Indictment: Ann Sellars, Stilton, Spinster, maintaining a house of ill fame. True bill.
12 - Indictment: Mary Ann Taylor, assaulting Elizabeth Ward - Buckden (True Bill)
13 - Indictment: Luke Hart, Colmworth, Beds, Stealing one pig (10/-) from Andrew Fernie (True Bill.)
14 - Indictment: Thomas Burton and Henry Riddle, Spaldwick, labourers, assaulting Mary Westley. (True Bill)
15 - Indictment: John Haynes, Hemingford Abbots, Shoemaker, assaulting Matthew Bridge. (True Bill)
16 - Indictment: James Cumpton, William Day and John Maynes, Gt. Staughton, labourers, stealing a silver watch (40/-) from Thomas Whitney. (True bill)
17 - Indictment: Matthew Tebbutt and John Staughton of Somersham, labourers, assaulting James Easton, constable
18 - Indictment: William Fuller, St. Ives, labourer, killing an ass (worth £5) and wounding another (£5) belonging to Charles Culpin. (True Bill).
19 - Indictment: Thomas Chandler, St. Neots, labourer, stealing a sack (10d) from Charles Banks and Jospeh Banks (No Bill)
20 - Indictment: John Fisher, St. Ives, labourer, stealing at Houghton one pit saw (14/-) from Richard Ablett Earl. (True Bill).
21 - Indictment: Thomas Chandler, St. Neots, labourer, stealing 3 bushels wheat (30/-) from William Pope and James Pope. (True Bill).
22 - Indictment: John Deacon, Swineshead, one oak post (6d) from Thomas Lewin. (No bill).
23 - Indictment: James Kidman, Hilton, labourer, assaulting Edward Warren. (True Bill).
24 - Indictment: John Bird, Yaxley, farmer, assaulting Hannah Pepper. (True Bill).
25 - Indictment: Matthew Cox, Eynesbury, labourer, stealing one sack (1/-) and wheat (5/-) from William Day. (True Bill)
26 - Indictment: William Corral and Daniel Watkins, Stilton, labourer, one pocket knife (10d) from William Fletcher. (True Bill)
27 - Indictment: John Moulds the younger and Thomas King, Warboys, labourers assaulting Thomas Hawkes (Warrant for arrest of Moulds and King)
28 - Indictment: Elizabeth Mills, wife of Thomas Mills, Godmanchester, earthware seller, assaulting Thirza Harvey.
29 - Indictment: Edward Warren, Hilton, assaulting Roger Peck. (True Bill).
30 - Articles of the Peace exhibited by Elizabeth Brown against her husband John Brown of St. Ives, farmer.
31 - Articles of the Peace exhibited by Elizabeth Sharman against her husband Henry Sharman of Ramsey, collarmaker.
32 - Articles of the Peace exhibited by Mary Feare against her husband William Feare, Earith
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34 - Jury Lists, Precepts, Constables' Presentments, Justices' Oaths.
35 - Sacrament Oaths, Returning Officers' Declaration.
36 - Notice of tolls payable at the Corporation wharf.
37 - Deposition: Prosecution of Ann Sellars, Stilton, for keeping a house of ill fame. At Michaelmas Sessions 1826 Ann Sellars had been convicted and bound over to appear for judgement when called upon. As Epiphany Sessions, 1827 Adam Knebb of Stilton, Gentleman stated that the house was as badly conducted as ever. Tamar Andrew, a prostitute, being frequently there. Thomas Fletcher a carpenter, who had gone bail for Mrs. Sellars, and his wife (a witness for the defence) had been very abusive to Mr. Knebb, and had set on children to sing songs ridiculing him. Rebecca Collier (witness for the prosecution at the Michaelmas Sessions) corroborated, mentioning John Chatterton (son of a witness for the defence) who had thrown a rotten egg at Mrs. Collier's door. The prosecution pressed for a severe judgement on the grounds that the morals of the rising generation were corrupted by Mrs. Sellers, that her house situate in the High Street was an open centre of immorality (bawdy houses generally being tucked away from the public eye, that for 12 years Mr. Twyning, the respectable clergyman of Stilton had been vainly trying to stop the nuisance. Judgement - One month in the House of Correction and further till she enters into surety to keep the peace.
38 - Deposition: Prosecution of Fryce Martin, Godmanchester, for assaulting, with intent to murder, Richard Church. Statements from Hannah Maile of the White Swan, Godmanchester, Robert Matson, farmer, whose prompt action seemingly prevented murder and From Richard Church on his recovery.
39 - Deposition: Prosecution of Sarah Crissell and Mary Maldon, Fenstanton, for keeping a disorderly house (rented from John Green, cabinet maker, St. Ives Statement made by John Bewers and Jonathan Garret (Garritt).
40 - Deposition: Prosecution following a Nov. 5th disturbance in Kimbolton. Charles Ibbs, the constable, stated that over 30 people assembled in the Turnpike Road Public High Street, firing pistols, letting off fireworks, and shouting. The Revd. Thomas Huntly of Kimbolton deposed to telling the crowd to depart - to James Bull's defiance - to Robert Cawley's possession of a loaded pistch. Warrent issued for arrest of Corley (Cawley) and Bull.
41 - Deposition: Samuel Saunders, common pinder of Buckden appointed to the said office in the manorial court of the Lord Bishop of Fincelin, stated that, as he was driving to the pound two pigs found trespassing in Mr. Henry Waller's garden, William Cope, Publican, owner of the pigs, horsewhipped and threatened him.
42 - Deposition: William Goodfellow, Buckden, servant - baker, stated that he had seen George Shaw of Burwell (Cambs) and Thomas Murdon of Buckden, waterman, trying to force up the flood gates in Offord Cluny with an iron bar. Witness and James Mallet of Offord Cluay, miller, pursued and overtook them. Benjamin Gifford of Hemingford Grey, miller, partner with Mr. Matthew Wassdale and Mr. Reulen Wallace stated that the bar (over 40 lbs weight) used to draw the back water gates, was the property of the partners. George Shaw, employed by Henry Aldon of St. Ives, Thomas Murden, employed by John Wyatt of Burwell, were conveying gangs of lighters up the Ouse.
43 - Deposition: William Woods of Hemingford Grey, servant to Messers. Wasdale, said that the bar, produced in Court was kept in a tree for concealment.
44 - Depositions from Richard Daintree, Hemingford Abbotts, William Anderson, constable, Hemingford Abbotts, and Edward Edwards, labourer, concerning two pieces of wood alleged to have been stolen from Daintree's bullock hovel by George Nicholls, shoemaker.
45 - Depositions from John Martin, Somersham tailor and John Bedford, Somersham, tailor and John Bedford, constable, concerning goods, fustian cloth (9d), metal buttons (6d), twilled calico (5d), found by Martin in the box of his apprentice Thomas Hillyard.
46 - Depositions of Thomas Bedford, constable, Warboys, accusing Joseph Huggins, turfman and Martin Hodson the younger, gardener, of assaulting him as he was arresting Edward Grange for drunkenness in the 'Cook' Public House, Warboys (March 26th)
47 - Depostion of John Longland Ekins, Woodhurst farmer, and George Hills, Warboys, turfman, concerning attacks made on Ekins by Hodson and by John Gadsby of Warboys, turfdigger, when Ekins had aided the constable, Bedford, to resist the rescue attempt. (For Gadsby see infra).
48 - Depositions from Henry Saunders, Ramsey, farmer, his servant, Thomas Palmer, John Barker, March, grocer, and John Kilby, concerning a hundred bundles of reed (£2) alleged to have been stolen by Kilby from Saunders and sold to Barker, Kilby said he had bought it partly from John Poulton of Ramsey, partly from a Yaxley man who had brought it over Whittlesea beer and delivered it on the [ ] at the end of Bevills River, where Kilby carried it by boat to March.
49 - Deposition: Sarah Doggett, Kings Ripton charged Philip Tyson with assault.
50 - Deposition: Ann Anderson charged Susan wife of William Terry, Ramsey, with assault.
51 - Deposition: John Catling, Ramsey Innkeeper, accused John Gadsby, Warboys, of stealing a jug, sold to Robert Beharrell (Ramsey) (July).
52 - Deposition: John Jones, Ramsey accused of stealing his cap from George Palmer's boat.
53 - Deposition: James Goodliff, Brampton, Overseer of the Poor, said that John Palmer, Brampton, loafer, had left his wife and six children chargeable to the Parish.
54 - Articles of the Peace exhibited by Susannah Harradine, against his husband John, a farmer of Long Stow (Cambs), threatening her life and besetting the house of her brother-in-law Jonathan Islett, farmer, Earith.
55 - Indictment: True bill against James Flanders, Somersham, labourer, for embezzling sums of money entrusted to him for his master, William Nix, farmer.
56 - Indictment: True bill against Henry Gale, Kimbolton labourer, for assaulting Charles Ibbs, constable.
57 - Indictment: True bill against Sarah Criswell and Mary Mauldon, Fenstanton spinsters for keeping a house of ill fame to the manifest destruction, ruination and subversion of Youth and other people in their manners conversation etc.
58 - Indictment: True bill against William David Skeef, Stilton, defrauding John Edwin Gameau. (The presentment crossed out).
59 - Indictment: True bill against James Willimott, Witton labourer, and Henry Allpress, Houghton labourer, for assaulting Sarah, wife of Thomas Corbit.
60 - Indictment: No bill against William Upthorpe for assaulting with intent to steal from John Frost.
61 - Indictment: No bill against William Upthorpe, Offord Darcy, labourer - assaulting a pregnant woman, Sarah, wife of John Frost.
62 - Indictment: True bill against Hannah Pepper, Yaxley, widow, and John Gorham labourer for rescuing 40 sheep (value £40) lawfully impounded, [ ] as a distress for damage done by trespass in the public street by John Bird, farmer and pindard.
63 - Indictment: True bills against Joseph Huggins, Warboys, turfman and Martin Hodson, the younger, gardener, for assaulting Thomas Bedford constable, and against John Gadsby, turf digger and Marton Hodson, the younger, for assaulting John Longland Ekins.
64 - Indictment against Thomas Key, pig jobber, Upwood, for assaulting Henry Thompson at Woodwalton (No parties appeared).
65 - Indictment: True bill against Thomas Harvey, Kimbolton, labourer, stealing a silver watch £4 from John Edmunds.
66 - Indictment: True bill against John Gadsby, Ramsey, labourer, stealing an earthenware jug (1/-) and 2 quarts of beer (1/-) from John Catling and ditto from James Turner.
67 - Indictment: True bills against Dring, Hillyard, Nicholls, John Gadsby and Martin Hodson (see Depositions).
68 - Indictment: No true bills against Thomas Allen, Carpenter, Brampton, and James Abbott, Shoemaker, Godmanchester, who charged each other with assault.
69 - The indictment against Philip Fyson, Kings Ripton, (assault on Sarah Doggett) was withdrawn.
70 - Conviction by J.P.: William Dawes, Bluntisham, yeoman, fined 2/6 and 12/6 costs for grazing horses on the Somersham Turnpike Road (contrary to 1800 Act)
71 - Conviction by J.P.: Robert Wheaton, Bluntisham, butcher, fined 5/- + 12/6 costs for turning 50 sheep to graze on the Somersham Turnpike Road.
72 - Conviction by J.P.: On the prosecution of Thomas Porter, Waresley, John Mann, Eynesbury, labourer for having a gun and spaniel and killing game on Thomson's manor was fined £5.
73 - Conviction by J.P.: John Stimpson of Stilton, labourer, was convicted of breaking the game Laws at Glatton. (First Offence).
74 - Conviction by J.P.: John Palmer, Brampton, cooper, sentenced to 21 days' hard labour for being drunken and lazy and leaving family chargeable to the Parish. On September indictment he was given 2 months' hard labour for deserting his family.
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76 - Deposition. Complaint of John Edwin Gameau, brick merchant of Stilton, who accuses William David Skeef of fraud
77 - The information of Thomas Allen of Brampton, accusing James Abbott of challenging him to a fight
78 - J.P. Conviction: A return of forfeitures levied at Hurstingstone sessions. (July and August) for having defective weights and false and unequal balances.
79 - Depositions. William Dring, theft of chaff from the farm of William Behagg in Warboys
80 - Precepts. Names of Jurors and reports on the state of the gaol.
81 - Articles of the peace exhibited by Elizabeth Dare against her husband William Dare of Somersham, brewer
82 - Constables presentments and returns ('All well').
83 - Deposition by John Stutters of St Ives, pork butcher, accusing his brother Joseph Stutter of threatening him
84 - Warrant for the arrest of James Abbot of Godmanchester
85 - Letter from James Gallier re gaol water supply
86 - Bundle of unlisted recognizances and indictments
87 - Bundle of unlisted recognizances and indictments
91 - A letter to L. Reyholds, Esq., Chairman of the Quarter Sessions, Paxton House, St. Neots, from John Orridge, Governor of the Jail, Bury St. Edmunds (July 9, 1827) recalling that four years before the Rev. Mr. Hanley had asked him to go over to Huntingdon to meet a committee of magistrates respecting the erection of the French mule at the House of Correction. The writer had contracted with - Medlock of St. Neots for the erection of such a mule for 200 guineas - but had received no payment for out of pocket expenses etc. nor for two copies of a published book on prisons supplied to Mr. Margetts.
92 - Deposition from William Nix, Somersham, farmer accusing his servant James Flanders of embezzling 4/6d. paid by John Papworth and Joseph Youle for potatoes.
93 - Deposition from John Humbley, farmer, Hail Weston, alleging theft of a bottle of hay by William Tomlinson, Hail Weston, journeyman butcher; from James Banks, baker, whose maidservant, Susan Hart, gave a graphic eyewitness account of the theft; from William Barton, a constable, who was afraid, as the Prisoner was a resolute young man, and asked him to go to the Public House and drink a pint of ale. They went to the Alehouse together; and he then told him he was his prisoner; from James Parish, Humbley's shepherd, who identified the hay a particular sort - clover and bents mixed.
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Expand 2 - The Court in Session: other records2 - The Court in Session: other records
Expand 3 - County Treasurer3 - County Treasurer
Expand 4 - Elections4 - Elections
Expand 5 - Buildings5 - Buildings
Expand 6 - Inclosure6 - Inclosure
Expand 7 - Drainage7 - Drainage
Expand 8 - Railway Plans (Hunts Clerk of the Peace)8 - Railway Plans (Hunts Clerk of the Peace)
Expand 9 - Committees9 - Committees
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Expand ADDL - Additional recordsADDL - Additional records
Expand UNCAT - Uncatalogued records: includes some Huntingdon and Peterborough Quarter Sessions recordsUNCAT - Uncatalogued records: includes some Huntingdon and Peterborough Quarter Sessions records