Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Dedication
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Maps
- Introduction
- I Context
- II Immigrants
- III Impacts on the Host Community
- Conclusion
- Appendix 1 Occupational sectors ranked by the relative levels of participation in them by Bailiwick males, censuses 1851–1901
- Appendix 2 Occupational sectors ranked by the relative levels of participation in them by Guernsey-based non-native males, censuses 1851–1901
- Appendix 3 Proportions of total insular non-native cohort residing in country parishes, 1841–1901
- Appendix 4 Non-natives as a percentage of country parish populations, 1841–1901
- Appendix 5 Summarised extracts from St Peter Port Register of Persons Sent out of the Island
- Appendix 6 St Peter Port Constables, 1814–1914
- Appendix 7 Jurats, 1814–1914, with period of tenure
- Bibliography
- Index
Appendix 5 - Summarised extracts from St Peter Port Register of Persons Sent out of the Island
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 March 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Dedication
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Maps
- Introduction
- I Context
- II Immigrants
- III Impacts on the Host Community
- Conclusion
- Appendix 1 Occupational sectors ranked by the relative levels of participation in them by Bailiwick males, censuses 1851–1901
- Appendix 2 Occupational sectors ranked by the relative levels of participation in them by Guernsey-based non-native males, censuses 1851–1901
- Appendix 3 Proportions of total insular non-native cohort residing in country parishes, 1841–1901
- Appendix 4 Non-natives as a percentage of country parish populations, 1841–1901
- Appendix 5 Summarised extracts from St Peter Port Register of Persons Sent out of the Island
- Appendix 6 St Peter Port Constables, 1814–1914
- Appendix 7 Jurats, 1814–1914, with period of tenure
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
January 1844: Eliza Guichard, 70-year-old dressmaker from London, deported after 14 years – ‘no work’.
February 1844: Mary Mitchell, aged 42, from Millbrook in Hampshire, deported with 4 children after 23 years – ‘in distress’.
June 1844: John Blackmore, 38-year-old miller from Colyton in Devon, deported with wife and 3 children after 9 years – ‘wife deranged’.
July 1844: William Collins, 63-year-old Chelsea Pensioner from Aylesbury in Buckinghamshire, deported with wife and 2 children after 36 years – ‘ill’.
September 1844: Alexandre Bertrand, 32-year-old labourer from Cherbourg, deported after 20 years – ‘burnt hand’.
April 1845: Ellen Elliott, 55-year-old servant from Weymouth, deported after 36 years – ‘destitute’.
September 1848: Ann Williams, 23-year-old servant from Cornwall, deported after 3 years – ‘pregnant’.
March 1849: William Allen, 49-year-old labourer from Wells in Somerset, deported after 21 years – ‘sore legs’.
March 1850: Emma Thompson, 25-year-old servant from Plymouth, deported after 5 years – ‘scalded foot’.
November 1850: George Legg (13) and Thomas Legg (10) of Chard in Somerset, deported after 10 years – ‘left behind by father’.
December 1850: Elizabeth O’Neill, 37-year-old ‘distressed lady’ from Dublin, deported after 10 years – ‘destitute’.
September 1851: Maria Bargery, aged 33, from Crewkerne in Somerset, deported with 3 children after 6 years – ‘husband dead’.
September 1852: Elizabeth James, 60-year-old servant from Lyme in Dorset, deported after 32 years – ‘been in Hospital’.
March 1853: William Jones, 38-year-old cabinetmaker from Salisbury in Wiltshire, deported with wife and 4 children after 30 years – ‘in need’.
July 1853: Mary Ann Loveridge, aged 40, from Sidmouth in Devon, deported with 3 children after 8 years – ‘abandoned by husband’.
December 1854: Richard Allen, 37-year-old stone-dresser from Cullompton in Devon, deported with wife after 8 years – ‘wife insane’.
March, 1855: Mary Ann Jory, aged 32, from Warleggan in Cornwall, deported with 5 children after 7 years – ‘husband died in Hospital’.
June 1855: Margaret Pridham, aged 36, from Exeter, deported with 7 children after 11 years – ‘husband dead’.
July 1855: Grace Locke, aged 40, from Bristol, deported with 6 children after 11 years – ‘abandoned by husband’.
March 1857: John Churchill, 43-year-old seaman from Burton Bradstock in Dorset, deported with wife and 2 children after 2 years – ‘injured in an accident’.
September 1857: Elvish Palmer, aged 32, from St Tudy in Cornwall, deported with 1 child after 9 years – ‘diseased’.
July 1859: William Hale, 60-year-old miller from Milland in Hampshire, deported after 40 years – ‘destitute’.
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- Guernsey, 1814-1914Migration and Modernisation, pp. 282 - 283Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2007