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CAMBRIDGESHIRE

"Cambridgeshire, (Cambs.) inland eastern county of England; bounded North by Lincolnshire, East by Norfolk and Suffolk, South by Essex and Herts, West by Bedfordshire, Huntingdonshire, and Northamptonshire; greatest length, North and South, 48 miles; greatest breadth, East and West, 28 miles; average breadth 16 miles; area, 524,935 acres; population 185,594. The North section of the county, including the Isle of Ely and part of the Great Bedford Level, is a large flat expanse of country, which, for the most part, formerly consisted of fen and marsh. It is now intersected in all directions by wide trenches or canals. The land, thus drained and reclaimed, is a rich, black soil, and bears excellent crops. From this tract the pleasant vale of the Cam stretches away to the south-west, and contains a great number of excellent dairy farms. Cambridgeshire comprises 17 hundreds, 172 parishes with parts of 7 others, the parliamentary and municipal borough of Cambridge (1 member and Cambridge University 2 members), and the municipal borough of Wisbech (pronounced Wizbeech)."
[Bartholemew's Gazetteer of the British Isles, 1887]

INFORMATION RELATED TO ALL OF CAMBRIDGESHIRE

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Archives and Libraries

Department of Manuscripts and University Archives
Cambridge University Library
West Road
CAMBRIDGE
CB3 9DR

Telephone:- U.K. 01223 333143, Overseas +44 1223 333143

Note: Please check that copies of the records you are trying to access are not held eslewhere before trying the University Library. A prior application for a reader's ticket must be made to The Keeper of the University Archives.

Cambridge County Record Office
Shire Hall
Castle Hill
CAMBRIDGE
CB3 0AP

Telephone:- U.K. 01223 717281, Overseas +44 1223 717281
Fax:- U.K. 01223 717201, Overseas +44 1223 717201

Email: Cambridge Record Office from 18th November 2000

Cambridgeshire Collection
Central Library
Lion Yard
CAMBRIDGE
CB2 3QD

Telephone:- U.K. 0845 045 5225, Overseas +44 845 045 5225
Fax:- U.K. 01223 712018, Overseas +44 1223 712018

Email: Cambridgeshire Collection

Wisbech and Fenland Museum
Museum Square
WISBECH
Cambs
PE13 1ES

Telephone:- U.K. 01945 583817, Overseas +44 1945 583817
Fax: - U.K. 01945 589050, Overseas +44 1945 589050

Imperial War Musem
Duxford Airfield
Cambridge
CB2 4QR

Historical Manuscripts Commission - National Register of Archives

The on-line Historical Manuscripts Commission site has search capabilities to find various document references.

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Business and Commerce Records

Victuallers' Licences

Details of the location of Victuallers' Licences can be found in the book "VICTUALLERS' LICENCES - Records for Family and Local Historians" by Jeremey Gibson and Judith Hunter, published by the Federation of Family History Societies, ISBN 1 86006 048 X. This book contains details and descriptions of all records held for the Victuallers' Licences. Extracts specific to Cambridgeshire Victuallers' Licences are listed separately.

Wisbech vessel Index 1860-1913

There is a searchable database of logged vessels at the port of Wisbech between 1860-1913. These details have been extrqcted from a series of boxes of documents held at the record office Cambridge.

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Cemeteries

A large number of Monumental Inscriptions are available for sale, on microfiche, from the Cambridgeshire Family History Society Bookstall.

Cambridge American Cemetery, Madingley

The World War II Cambridge American Cemetery and Memorial is located three miles west of Cambridge on the A1303 and sixty miles north of London. The site, thirty and a half acres in extent, was donated by the University of Cambridge. It lies on a north slope with wide prospect.The west and south sides of the cemetery are framed by woodland. There are 3,812 American military dead buried there. On the wall running from the entrance to the chapel are inscribed the names of 5,126 Americans who gave their lives in the service of their country, but whose remains were never recovered or identified. Most of these died in the Battle of the Atlantic or in the strategic air bombardment of Northwest Europe during World War II.

From the flag platform near the main entrance the great mall with its reflecting pool stretches eastward. From this mall the headstones in the burial area form a sweeping curve across the green lawn. Along the south side of the mall is the Wall of the Missing. At its far end is the chapel containing two huge military maps, stained glass windows bearing the State Seals and military decorations, and its mosaic ceiling with a memorial to our Air Forces Dead.

In the summer the cemetery is open to visitors daily from 9:00 am to 6:00 pm and in the winter from 9:00 am to 5:00 pm.

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Census

The availability of census information for the Cambridgeshire parishes is given on each Towns and Parishes page.

The Cambridgeshire Family History Society Bookstall has published full transcriptions, on microfiche, for the 1841 and 1851 Census. There were a few parishes where the 1851 Census was lost at source and these parishes have been supplimented with the 1861 transcription. There is also a full Census Index for the Isle of Ely in book form.

A list of 1891 references is available. The progress of the transcription of the 1891 Census by FreeCen is available.

There is an Searchable 1841 Census Index for Cambridgeshire and the Isle of Ely available on-line from the Cambridgeshire Family History Society.

At various times local census, as opposed to the Nation Census, were taken. Provided here is a listing of Cambridgeshire Local Census extracted from the book ""LOCAL CENSUS LISTINGS 1522-1930", by Jeremy Gibson and Mervyn Medlycott, published by the FFHS ISBN 1 872094 759.

Year Census Date
Population present
1891 April 5/6 276,156
1901 March 31/April 1 282,336
1911 April 2/3 301,239
1921 June 19/20 307,502
1931 April 26/27 327,745
1939 Mid-year estimate 345,592
1951 April 8/9 389,477
1961 April 23/24 434,915
1971 April 25/26 503,785
1974 The County Borders changed - Hunts incorporated
1981 April 5/6 *573,200
1991 April 21/22 643,439
* = Based on preliminary counts (rounded to the nearest hundred)

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Church History

The county has 169 civil parishes (131 parishes in Cambridge proper, and 38 parishes in the Isle of Ely) and 180 Ecclesiastical parishes and parts of 13. The greater part is the Diocese of Ely, forming the archdeaconry of Ely, which is subdivided into the rural deaneries of Barton, Bourn, Cambridge, Camps, Cheveley, Fordham, North Stowe, Quy and Shingay; four parishes are in the diocese of Norwich and three in that of St. Albans.

The Isle of Ely (which is the northern portion of the county) forms, for ecclesiastical purposes, part of the archdeaconry of Wisbech, which is divided into rural deaneries of Ely, March and Wisbech.

Ely Cathedral and the Diocese of Ely encompasses much of Cambridgeshire and the Isle of Ely. A list of Bishops of Ely and a list of Parishes in the Diocese of Ely are available.

For details of the churches of Cambridgeshire, access and other snippets then its is worth visiting the Churches of Cambridgeshire web site.

Church Records

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Civil Registration

The GRO District volume numbers for Cambridgeshire are:

1837 to 1852 - Vol. 14
1852 to 1946 - Vol. 3b
1946 to 1974 - Vol. 4B
1974 to date - Vol 9.

The Unions of parishes, established by the Poor Law Commissioners under the 1835 Act of Parliament, became registration districts with the introduction of civil registration of births, marriages and deaths in 1837, so superseding the medieval division of the county and even breaking with the ancient county boundaries. Only the Chesterton, Cambridge, Ely, North Witchford and Whittlesey Registration Districts lay wholly within the county; the district of Caxton contained parts of Huntingdonshire, the district of Linton contained parts of Essex, the district of Newmarket parts of Suufolk and the district of Wisbech parts of Norfolk.

Finally, several parishes on the western edge were assigned to the Huntingdonshire Registration District of St Ives, and others on the southern edge to the Hertfordshire Registration District of Royston.

These points need to be borne in mind, in particular by users of civil registration and Poor Law records.

Brett Langston has provided details of Registration Districts 1837-1930.

Certificates of birth, death and marriage can be obtained from the Superintendent Registrars at the following District Register Offices:

For Huntingdon see Huntingdonshire

If ordering from a District Office, please note the following:

Details of Births, Marriages and Death information is available on a Cambridgeshire County Council webpage. There is a searchable index database for births, marriages and deaths available from the Registrars Office on-line. This database allows on-line ordering of certificate from the results of the search.

There is a listing of marriages for 1849 Quarter 1 for District 14 covering Cambridgeshire and also marriages for 1856 Quarter 1 for District 3b for Cambridgeshire.

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Court Records

 

The Gibson Genealogical Guides include "Quarter Session Records", 4th edition in which the Cambridgeshire records are cited.

Isle of Ely Quarter Sessions:

Cambridgeshire:

Cambridge Borough:

All of these records are at Cambridge Record Office, Shire Hall, Cambridge, where there is also a card index to all persons accused, convicted, or convicted at petty sessions, reported to quarter sessions 1660-1883.

Coroners Records - see separate page

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Description and Travel

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Directories

Pigots Directory of 1830 Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire is available on microfiche from the Society of Genealogists bookshop.

A list of Trade Directories for Cambridgeshire for the years 1830-1937 is provided here.

Trade Directories of Cambridgeshire (and some other counties) in 1830 can be searched

Various Trade Directories can be found from the Historical Directories web site.

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Emigration

Searchable shipping records, which contain passenger lists, for those which took part in emigration from the United Kingdom and Ireland are being transcribed by the Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild.

There is a searchable database of Victoria Gold Rush Cambridgeshire Emigrants as an index provided by the Cambridgeshire FHS.

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Gazetteers

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Genealogy

The LDS Church have produced the International Genealogical Index (IGI) of England which includes Cambridgeshire. However, the county is not well represented on the IGI with less than 15 percent of the county included. An easy to use look up of the IGI and link to the Family Search has been provided by Hugh Wallis for Cambridgeshire.

The Bishop of Ely delegated authority to each parish as to whether they would permit their parish registers to be filmed by the LDS. Very few have agreed, although the situation is constantly under review and it is hoped that permission will be given for more registers to be filmed for inclusion. In the meantime, the Cambridgeshireshire Family History Society are transcribing the registers eventually putting them onto microfiche; available fiche are listed on the Parish Register Publications List and are described on each parish page (see Towns and Parishes index).

There was a surnames list, compiled by Robin Drayton of the Cambridgeshire research interests of a number of Internet users; this was replaced on 1st Auguts 2001 by the Cambridgeshire Surnames List provided by Graham Januay. There is also an alternative Cambridgeshire Surnames List.

There is also a Bulletin Board maintained for Cambridgeshire surnames within the Ancestry.com message board system. The bulletin board allows you to register your family queries and allows others to respond.

Rootsweb, the world wide promoter of genealogy provide ENGLISH-FENS, ENG-CAMBRIDGESHIRE, ENG-WISBECH-AREA, ENG-EAST-ANGLIA the Genealogy Mailing Lists which cover this county and also an information series of pages solely devoted to Cambridgeshire information. To subscribe to one of these lists type the name of the list followed by either -D for digest mode or -L for list mode followed by subscribe@rootsweb.com, for example ENGLISH-FENS-L-request@rootsweb.com would subscribe you to ENGLISH-FENS in list mode. This is but a small part of the data available on the "Genealogy Resources on the Internet" pages maintained by John Fuller and Chris Gaunt.

There are two other sites covering Cambridgeshire - Cambridgeshire History covering historical details of the county and Local Ancestors covering people from the county.

The Cambridgeshire Look-up Exchange. Volunteers are offering look-ups in various research references.

The Cambridgeshire FHS have provided their database of Strays in searchable form on their website and also their Members Interests.

The aim of the project is to provide 50 communities throughout Cambridgeshire, over a two year period, the opportunity to record their heritage on the CCAN online archive (www.ccan.co.uk). These archives consist of photographs (old and new), oral and written reminiscences, video and hotspots (the latter can link people and names across different records). Each archive will have a constituted history/archive group that will act as custodians/researchers for their archive. Sustainability has been built into the project and groups will be able to carry on recording their history after the project funding has ended.

This network of 50 archives will provide a substantial resource for web users interested in local history, particularly genealogists, with each community archive potentially listing hundreds of names. In a pilot project, involving 7 villages the archive groups added 1000 records and they received many emails requesting genealogical information. The current project has just set up its first 10 groups and in two months the groups have added 500 records. The CCAN website is in the latter stages of its development with hotspots now functional. Another 1000 records will be added from the pilot project during Spring 2007. The website is fully searchable and information can be easily accessed.

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Guardianship

 

For those who have family members who were adopted or taken into care then the following address may be useful to write to:

Post Adoption & Care: Counselling & Research Project
91-93 Queens Road
Peckham
LONDON
SE15 2EZ

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History

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Land and Property

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Maps

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Medical Records

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Military History

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Names, Personal

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Newspapers

In the book "An Introduction to Using Newspapers and Periodicals" by Colin R. Chapman and published by the Federation of Family History Societies, page 12 includes the reference:

"The Northampton Mercury, for example, was the only paper published in that part of the country for many years and regularly reported events in Bedfordshire, Huntingdonshire, Cambridgeshire, Oxfordshire, Leicestershire and Rutland, as well as further afield."

The book "NEWSPAPERS AND LOCAL HISTORY" by Michael Murphy and published by the British Association for Local History carries several references to Cambridgeshire and the Isle of Ely.

Page 4 contains a cartoon from The Cambridge Chronicle, 5 December 1913, p. 8, entitled "Swavesey Parish Council's Fear of the Press".

Page 8 contains "One of the most important pioneers in the transformation of the provincial press emerged, rather surprisingly, from the county and university town of Cambridge. From 1793 to 1803 Benjamin Flower, a radical Unitarian, published the Cambridge Intelligencer".

Page 10 contains "In 1895, for example, reporters from the Cambridge Independent Press toured Cambridgeshire discussing with chairmen of newly formed parish councils the problems they saw confronting their villages."

Page 11 contains an illustration of an early railway-train with locomotive, tender and two coaches from the Cambridgeshire Advertiser, 17 June 1846.

Page 12 contains "After 1918 a principal feature of many local newspapers was to reproduce old photographs and illustrations sent in by readers weekly. These range (in the case of the Cambridge Chronicle) from general views of town streets and buildings to quite rare pictures - such as steam tugs working on the River Cam."

Michael Murphy also published the book Cambridgeshire and Opinion, 1780-1850 (Cambridge, 1977) examining the interaction between local press and public opinion during the same period.

The Cambridgeshire Collection has a highly organised indexing project which is remarkably comprehensive and also commercial. Everything within the library system - newspapers, books, maps, pictures and tapes - are indexed cover to cover, paragraph to paragraph. For the period 1916-34 all pictures from newspapers are indexed, and from 1953 a cuttings file has also been available. The headings used match the catalogue numbers for books, and the cards themselves carry all the information needed by the researcher to find the material he or she wants, be it in a newspaper, in a book or elsewhere. A number of local groups in the county have also produced 'village chronicles' which detail local news and events in their respective parishes by reproducing quotes from the various local newspapers.

At least one local newspaper is on-line, Cambridge News has been in existence since 1888 and has seen many events in its time.

The electronic news reporting has seen the introduction of newspapers such as East Cambridgeshire On-Line News which provides news by internet but also links to historical information about people and places.

Extracts from the Soham Chronicle 1787-1899 can be found on Sharon Walker's web site.

The "Isle of Ely and Wisbech Advertiser" became the "Fenland Advertiser" and then the "Fenland Citizen".

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Occupations

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Poorhouses, Poor Law, etc.

Cambridgeshire contains several poor law unions which are constructed from various parishes. The various workhouses for Cambridgeshire are gradually being put on-line.

Further reading: 'Poor Law Union Records - 1. South - East England and East Anglia' by Jeremy Gibson, Colin Rogers and Cliff Webb, published by the Federation of Family History Societies.

See also J. Hurst and J. Gilmour, 'Pauper lunatics in Victorian Cambridgeshire', Cambridgeshire FHS, 8.6 (1992).

The Cambridgeshire FHS have provided on-line their colection of poor law papers as a searchable database, these cover settlements, apprenticeships and bastardy agreements between the periods 1604-1860.

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Probate Records

Details of the location of Cambridgeshire Probate records can be found in the book "PROBATE JURISDICTIONS: Where to look for Wills" compiled by Jeremy Gibson, 4th edition 1997 and published by the Federation of Family History Societies, pages 18-19.

Specific details of locations are also published in the book "GENEALOGICAL SOURCES IN CAMBRIDGESHIRE" by Michael Farrar, 2nd edition 1994, pages 10-16.

An index to "Consistory Court of Ely Probate Records 1449-1858" has been published, in 3 volumes A-E, F-P, Q-Z, by the British Records Society.

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SOCIETIES - See separate page - Societies

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Taxation

Land Tax

Details of the location of Land Tax Assessment records for Cambridgeshire and the Isle of Ely can be found in the book "LAND and WINDOW TAX ASSESSMENTS" compiled by Jeremy Gibson, Mervyn Medlycott and Dennis Mills, 2nd edition 1998 and published by the Federation of Family History Societies, page 20.

Window Tax

Details of the location of Window Tax Assessment records for Cambridgeshire and the Isle of Ely can be found in the book "LAND and WINDOW TAX ASSESSMENTS" compiled by Jeremy Gibson, Mervyn Medlycott and Dennis Mills, 2nd edition 1998 and published by the Federation of Family History Societies, page 20.

The Hearth Tax

The majonty of the taxes and their records relate to the reign of Charles II (1660-1655), of which the Hearth Tax generated by far the most (surviving) records. and consequently is the best known and most useful. Others were the 1661 Free and Voluntary Present to the King, Subsidies and Aids, and the Poll Tax. On the accession of William and Mary. the Hearth Tax was repealed (1689). beIng replaced eventually by the Land Tax and the Window Tax - few records of which survive pre-1715, and these only for the more prosperous - and, for a short time, the 'Marriage Tax', which is of great use and interest to genealogists, but unfortunately only exists for a few places.

Details of the location of these records and other later Stuart Tax Lists and the Association Oath Rolls can be found in the book "THE HEARTH TAX and other later Stuart Tax Lists and the ASSOCIATION OATH ROLLS" compiled by Jeremey Gibson, 2nd edition 1996 published by the Federation of Family History Societies, pages 16-17. Details of these can be found on the Hearth Tax page.

Protestations Returns 1641-42

The Protestation, a form of oath of loyalty ostensibly to the King, but in fact to Parliament, was initiated in the House of Commons in May 1641, when Members themselves took it. Nine months later its scope was vastly widened, when instructions went out that it should be taken by every adult (male); very occasionally women were also recorded. Closely assodated with the Protestation was the Collection in Aid of Distressed Protestants in Ireland. The oath was taken and the collection made, often simultaneously, in February 1641/2 and March.

Parliament-approved taxation records recommence, after Charles l's eleven years of personal rule, with Tudor-type Subsidies, to be collected during 1641. In July 1641 a Poll Tax was voted, but few records of this survive. Thirdly, an Assessment or Grant was agreed, to be collected in May and November 1642. This Assessment had a much lower tax threshold and consequently many more taxpayers are named.

Details of the location of these records and other contempary listings can be found in the book "THE PROTESTATION RETURNS 1641-42 and other contemporary listings" compiled by Jeremey Gibson and Alan Dell, 1995 published by the Federation of Family History Societies, pages 21-22. Details of these can be found on the Protestation Returns page.

Cambridgeshire Tax on Male Servant

The Cambridgeshire Tax on Male Servants for the year 1780 is available on microfiche from the Cambridgeshire Family History Society Bookstall.

Church Taxes

Church Commissioners. The body that manages the temporal affairs of the Church of England. Created in 1948 by the amalgamation of the former Ecclesiastical Commissioners (first appointed in 1836) and the commissioners of "Queen Anne's Bounty", the Church Commissioners are responsible for the administration of church properties and finances and for the reorganisation, when necessary, of parishes. These include the tithes due on church owned land; this was a common occurence throughout Cambridgeshire and the tithes were levied by a system whereby a landowner had to collect the money from other landowners in the parish), whether he managed to collect it or not, he had to pay it for the patish. Each landowner was nominated in turn each year. As can be seen by the various Twons and Parishes listed here much of the property was owned by the church.

Tithes a tenth part of the produce of the land paid from quite early years of the Church to maintain the Clergy. In England, when the lord of a Manor built a Church on his estate, he often enforced payment of tithes to its priest as its endowment, and in time such allocation of tithes became general law. A Synod in 786 strongly enjoined the payment of tithes, which was enforced by law in 900. Tithes were of three sorts - 'praedial', of the fruits of the earth; 'personal', of the profits of labour; and 'mixed', partly of the ground and partly of the industry of man. They were further divided into 'great' (tithes of wheat, oats and other major crops) and 'small' (tithes of lambs, chicken and other minor produce). A Rector had all the tithes, but a Vicar only the small tithes. Gradually many landowners substituted annual cash payments instead of tithes. The Tithes Commutation Act (1836) converted tithes into rent charges dependent on the varying price of corn, but in 1918 the value was fixed, and in 1925 and 1936 further acts were passed (Tithe Redemption Act) to extinguish tithes. There are now no such things as tithes in England.

Ecclesiastical Commission a permanent body, consisting of Bishops and certain lay members appointed by the Crown and the Archbishop of Canterbury, created in 1835 by Act of Parliament through the efforts of Sir Robert Peel to hold much of the property of the Church of England and make better use of it. The Commission abolished sinecures, diminished the chapters of cathedrals brought the incomes of bishops nearer to equality and increased the endowments of poor parishes. In 1948 it was united with Queen Anne's bounty to form a new body, the Church Commissioners for England.

Queen Anne's Bounty. A fund established by Queen Anne in 1704. She surrendered her revenues from first fruits and tenths to the fund, which was to be used for the benefit of poorer beneficed clergy. In the 19th century the fund also received parliamentary wants and private donations. In 1948 the administration of the fund passed to the Church Commissioners.

First fruits and tenths were payments made to the Pope by beneficed clergymen. In 1534 in England these were acquired by the King under Act. Various exemptions were made in 1535, 1536, 1558, 1706 and 1707. In 1703 an Act was passed enabling Queen Anne to employ these moneys in augmenting poor benefices, and since then they have been known as Queen Anne's Bounty, and have been administered by commissioners, first appointed in 1704. Existing legislation regarding Queen Anne's Bounty are Acts of 1703, 1716, 1777, 1780, 1801, 1803,1805, 1830, 1837, 1838, 1839, 1840, 1846, 1865, 1870, 1874, 1875, 1881, 1890, 1894, 1908. The Acts known as Queen Anne's Bounty Acts are those of 1703, 1716, 1803, 1838, 1840 and 1870.

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TOWNS AND PARISHES - See Alphabetical Listing

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Voting Registers

Poll Books

Details of the location of Poll Book records for Cambridgeshire and the Isle of Ely can be found in the book "POLL BOOKS c 1696-1872: A Directory to Holdings in Great Britain" compiled by Jeremy Gibson and Colin Rogers, 3rd edition 1994 and published by the Federation of Family History Societies, pages 16-17.

The 1772 Poll Book of Cambridgeshire is available on microfiche from the Society of Genealogists bookshop.

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Find help, report problems, and contribute information.


This county is maintained by Martin Edwards with help and information provided by a number of assistants.

[Last updated: 22 October 2007 Martin Edwards]