Pontefract, Yorkshire Family History Guide

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Pontefract is an Ancient Parish and a market town in the county of Yorkshire.

Other places in the parish include: Tanshelf, Pontefract with Castle Precincts, Monkhill, East Hardwick, Castle Precincts, Carleton near Pontefract, and Carleton.

Alternative names: Pomfret

Parish church: St. Giles

Parish registers begin:

  • Parish registers: 1585
  • Bishop’s Transcripts: 1598

Nonconformists include: Baptist, Independent/Congregational, Primitive Methodist, Roman Catholic, Society of Friends/Quaker, and Wesleyan Methodist.

Adjacent Parishes

Parish History

A Topographical Dictionary of England 1848

PONTEFRACT (St. Giles), a borough, market town, and parish, in the Upper division of the wapentake of Osgoldcross, W. riding of York; comprising the townships of Carleton, East Hardwick, Monkhill, Pontefract, and Tanshelf, and the chapelry of Knottingley; and containing 9851 inhabitants, of whom 4669 are in the borough, 23 miles (S. S. W.) from York, and 177½ (N. N. W.) from London.

This place, which appears to have risen from the ruins of Legeolium, a Roman station in the vicinity, now Castleford, was by the Saxons called Kirkby, and after the Conquest obtained the name of Pontfrete, according to some, from Pontfrete in Normandy, whence sprang the Lacys, lords of Pontefract.

But by others it is stated to have been called Pontfract from the demolition of a bridge over the river Aire in 1070, by the Northumbrian insurgents, of whom William I., with a formidable army, was in pursuit; by which act the king was detained at this place for many days, till one of his Norman knights discovered a ford across the river at Castleford, over which he passed with his army.

Though not itself a Roman station, it was probably in some way connected with Legeolium; the Watling-street passed through the park, near the town, and vestiges of a Roman camp were distinctly traceable previously to the recent inclosure of the waste lands.

During the time of the Saxons, to whom some historians attribute the building of the town, a chief named Alric erected a castle here, which, having been demolished or suffered to fall into decay, was repaired, or more probably rebuilt, by Ilbert de Lacy, to whom, at the period of the Conquest, William granted the honour and manor of Pontefract.

In the reign of Edward II. the castle, then in the possession of Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, who had revolted against the king on account of his partiality to Piers Gaveston, was besieged and taken by the royal forces; and the earl being soon after made prisoner by Andrew de Harcla, at Boroughbridge, was brought to Pontefract, where he was beheaded on a hill in sight of his own castle, and several of the barons who had joined his party were hanged.

The earl was canonized after his death; and a chapel, dedicated to St. Thomas, was erected in honour of his memory, on the spot where he had suffered decapitation. His descendant, the renowned John of Gaunt, retired to this castle in the reign of Richard II., and fortified it against the king; but a reconciliation taking place, through the medium of Joan, the king’s mother, no further hostilities ensued.

Henry de Bolingbroke, Duke of Hereford, then an exile in France, exasperated by the king’s attempt to deprive him of the duchy of Lancaster and honour of Pontefract, to which he had succeeded by the death of his father, John of Gaunt, landed at Ravenspur, near the mouth of the Humber, in this county; and being joined by the Lords Willoughby, Ross, D’Arcy, Beaumont, and other persons of distinction, a considerable force was raised, and the conspiracy terminated in the capture of the king, and the exaltation of the duke to the throne by the title of Henry IV.

Richard, after his deposition, was for some time confined in this castle, where he was inhumanly put to death. Henry frequently resided in it; he held a parliament here after the battle of Shrewsbury, and in 1404 signed at Pontefract the truce between England and Scotland.

Scroop, Archbishop of York, having raised an insurrection, in which he was joined by the Earl of Northumberland, for the dethronement of the king, was by treachery made prisoner, and, being brought hither, was sentenced to death, in 1405. In 1406, the young prince, subsequently James I. of Scotland, who had been taken on his voyage to France, was imprisoned in the castle; and after the battle of Agincourt, in the reign of Henry V., the Duke of Orleans and several French noblemen of the highest rank, were confined here.

During the war between the houses of York and Lancaster, the castle was the place of confinement of numerous noblemen, and several were put to death within its walls. Earl Rivers, who was kept a prisoner here by the Duke of Gloucester, whose designs he had ineffectually attempted to oppose, was at length put to death in the castle, together with Sir Richard Grey and Sir Thomas Vaughan.

In 1461, Edward IV., with an army of 40,000 men, fixed his head-quarters at Pontefract, whence he marched against the Lancastrians at Towton. After the union of the houses of York and Lancaster in the person of Henry VII., that monarch visited the castle, in the second year of his reign. It was honoured also by visits from Henry VIII., in 1540; from James I., in 1603 and 1617, on his way to Scotland; and from Charles I., in 1625. In the rebellion called the Pilgrimage of Grace, in the reign of Henry, it was surrendered by Thomas, Lord D’Arcy, to the troops under the command of Aske.

At the commencement of the civil war, the castle was garrisoned for the king, and in 1644 was closely invested by Sir Thomas Fairfax, who had taken possession of the town for the parliament. The Royalists maintained a spirited defence under a heavy cannonade, which continued several days; and held out till the arrival of a detachment of 2000 men, under Sir Marmaduke Langdale, who, after a severe conflict with the parliamentarians in Chequer-field, in which he was assisted by sallies from the castle, at length obliged them to raise the siege.

On the departure of Sir Marmaduke, the republicans again obtained possession of the town, and throwing up intrenchments for a blockade, renewed their efforts to reduce the castle.

The garrison, under Governor Lowther, fought with obstinate intrepidity, and did considerable execution by frequent sallies; but being in want of provisions, and unable, from the blockade of the town, to procure supplies, it capitulated on honourable terms. After the castle had been for a short time in the hands of the parliamentarians, it was retaken by Col. Morrice and a small band of determined royalists, disguised as peasants carrying in provisions, who entered it without being suspected, and, having a reinforcement at hand, secured Col. Cotterell, the governor, and his men, in the dungeons.

The castle was afterwards invested by Cromwell in person; but the royalists maintained their post, and it was not till the execution of the king that they surrendered the fortress, which the parliament soon ordered to be dismantled. Of this castle, so memorable for its connexion with the most interesting periods of English history, and which consisted of numerous massive towers, connected by walls of prodigious strength, and occupying the summit of an isolated rock, only a small circular tower now remains.

The town is pleasantly situated on dry and elevated ground, near the confluence of the rivers Aire and Calder. The streets are spacious and well paved; the houses, mostly of brick, are commodious and well built, and the town is supplied with excellent water from springs.

Gas-works were erected in 1832, at an expense of upwards of £4000, the greater portion of which was raised by means of shares of £10 each, and the remainder borrowed on interest; the two gasometers are capable of containing 5000 cubic feet of gas. There are two subscription reading-rooms: the theatre, a small building erected by subscription, has been converted into a British school.

At a short distance from the town, a neat monument was erected in 1818, in commemoration of the battle of Waterloo. The environs abound with interesting and diversified scenery; the gardens and nursery-grounds produce abundance of fruit and vegetables for the supply of the adjacent markets, and are famous for a superior kind of liquorice, which is cultivated extensively, and manufactured into cakes.

The town has an excellent local trade, arising from the populousness and respectability of the neighbourhood. The Aire and Calder canal affords a conveyance from the ports of Hull and Goole to Ferrybridge, from which place there is direct land-carriage to Pontefract; the Wakefield and Goole railway runs by the town, and the York and North-Midland railway has a station within two miles, at Castleford.

The market, which is well supplied with corn and provisions of every kind, is on Saturday. The market-place is spacious: in the centre of it was formerly a cross in honour of St. Oswald, around which, for a certain distance, extended the privilege of freedom from arrest, and the area was for a considerable time kept unpaved, as a memorial of that right; the cross was removed in 1734, and a neat market-house, ornamented with pillars of the Doric order, erected in pursuance of the will of Mr. Solomon Dupier, by his widow. Fairs are held on the first Saturday in December, May 5th, Oct. 5th, and the Saturday before Palm-Sunday; also every fortnight, on the Saturday next after the fairs of York.

Pontefract, which had enjoyed various privileges under charters of the lords of the honour and manor, was first incorporated by royal charter in the reign of Richard III., which was confirmed by Henry VII. and Edward VI., and by James I. in the 4th year of his reign. The charter was enlarged in the 29th of Charles II., and a new one was granted by James II. in the first of his reign.

The government is now vested in a mayor, four aldermen, and twelve councillors, under the act 5th and 6th of William IV., cap. 76; the municipal borough is co-extensive with the township of Pontefract, and the number of magistrates is eight. The town exercised the elective franchise in the 23rd and 26th of Edward I., and the privilege was revived by James I. in 1621, since which time it has regularly returned two members to parliament: the mayor is returning officer.

The recorder holds a court of quarter-sessions; and a court of record for the borough occurs every three weeks, for the recovery of debts to any amount. Petty-sessions are held every alternate Saturday in the West-riding court-house, and the borough magistrates meet every Monday in the town-hall; the general quarter-sessions for the riding are held here at Easter. The county debt-court of Pontefract, established in 1847, has jurisdiction over the registration-district of Pontefract.

The town-hall is a neat building, erected at the joint expense of the county and the corporation; the lower part, surrounded by an open corridor, forms a prison, and above is the hall, which is conveniently arranged for the borough courts, and occasionally used as an assembly-room: the front of the building is ornamented with pilasters of the Doric order, surmounted by a cornice. The court-house, erected at the expense of the county, is a handsome structure of freestone, in the Grecian style, and of the Ionic order.

The living is a discharged vicarage, valued in the king’s books at £13. 6. 8., and in the patronage of the Crown, in right of the duchy of Lancaster; net income, £313; impropriator, the Earl of Harewood.

The old parochial church, dedicated to All Saints, now a district church, was nearly demolished in the parliamentary war, and is still partly in ruins, but the north and south transepts and the tower were restored in 1831, at an expense of £4300, raised by subscription: the living is a perpetual curacy, in the gift of the Crown, endowed with £200 per annum, arising from lands bequeathed by Mr. Fothergill.

The church of St. Giles, rendered parochial by an act of parliament passed in the 29th of George III., is a neat edifice, of which the old tower was taken down and rebuilt; it is situated on elevated ground in the market-place, and forms a conspicuous feature in the view of the town.

The collegiate chapel dedicated to St. Clement, within the precincts of the castle; and the free chapel of St. Thomas, erected on the spot where the Earl of Lancaster was beheaded, have long since disappeared.

At Knottingley, East Knottingley, and East Hardwick, are separate incumbencies.

There are places of worship for the Society of Friends, Independents, Primitive Methodists, and Wesleyans, and a Roman Catholic chapel.

A free grammar school was founded, and endowed with a house and garden, and £50 per annum from the revenues of the duchy of Lancaster, in the 2nd year of the reign of Edward VI.; and the endowment was augmented in the reign of Elizabeth. Having fallen into decay, the institution was refounded, on petition of the inhabitants, 32nd of George III.

The college and hospital of St. Nicholas was originally founded by an abbot of the monastery of St. Oswald, in the county of York, for a reader and thirteen persons, and was endowed with an income of £23. 13. 4., payable out of the revenue of the duchy of Lancaster. It was vested in the corporation of the borough by James I., and was rebuilt, or largely repaired, by means of a sum of £100 bequeathed by Mr. Thomas Sayle. The endowment, by subsequent donations, has been increased to £36 per annum.

Knolles, or the Trinity, alms-house was founded in the reign of Richard II., by Sir Robert Knolles, and endowed with an annual sum, also payable from the revenue of the duchy, with the moiety of an estate in Whitechapel, London, devised by Mr. John Mercer, and other property, producing a yearly income of more than £108. The premises comprise rooms for seven aged men and nine women.

Perfect’s hospital was built at the joint expense of the corporation and the town, and endowed by Mr. William Perfect with land, which, with other donations, produces £40 per annum; the premises comprise three dwellings, each for an aged man and his wife. The Bede House, of which the origin is unknown, is maintained by the overseers.

The building called Thwaites’ hospital was bequeathed for the residence of four aged unmarried women, by Richard Thwaites, in 1620. Cowper’s hospital was founded in 1668, by Robert Cowper, and has been rebuilt at the expense of the parish, for four aged widows.

Two almshouses, built respectively by Mr. Matthew and Mr. Robert Franks, in 1737, and containing each apartments for two aged widows, have endowments of £11. 10. and £17. 10. per annum. Watkinson’s hospital was founded in 1765, by Edward Watkinson, M.D., who endowed it with estates producing £87. 14.; the premises contain apartments for eight aged men and women. George Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, gave in trust to the corporation £200 per annum, to be employed in loans to tradesmen; and there are numerous bequests for distribution among the poor generally.

Among the various monastic institutions that existed here, was a Cluniac priory, founded in the reign of William Rufus by Robert de Lacy, and dedicated to St. John the Evangelist; the revenue at the Dissolution was £472. 16. 1. A convent of Carmelites was established in the year 1257, by Edmund Lacy, Earl of Lincoln. A convent of Dominican or Black friars was instituted in 1266, by Simon Pyper, in a place now called Friar-Wood; at the Dissolution it consisted of a prior, seven brethren, and a novice.

There was also an hospital for Lazars, dedicated to St. Mary Magdalene, of uncertain foundation, to which, in 1286, Archbishop Romain was a benefactor, and of which the site is supposed to be occupied by Franks’ hospital. An hospital for a chaplain and eight poor brethren, established in the reign of Edward III., by William La Tabourere, is by some identified with the Bede House.

On the 25th of March, 1822, as two labourers were trenching the land for liquorice, in a field called Paper-Mill Field, near St. Thomas’ Hill, one of them struck his spade against a stone coffin, which weighed about a ton and a half, and which, on examination, was found to contain the skeleton of a man, with the head between the legs, in good preservation.

These were supposed to be the decapitated remains of Thomas, Earl of Lancaster, who suffered on the 22nd of March, 1322, exactly 500 years previously. The coffin and its contents were removed into the grounds of R. P. Milnes, Esq., of Frystone Hall, where they now remain, inclosed within a palisade.

Near a windmill occupying the site of St. Thomas’ chapel, great quantities of beautifully carved stones were dug up in 1841, which were removed by the Earl of Mexborough, as owner of the soil: from the sculpture of the stones, the building to which they belonged seems to have been of pointed architecture.

Thomas de Castleford, a monkish historian, was a brother of the Dominican convent. Dr. Bramhall, who after the Restoration was made primate of Ireland, was a native of Pontefract; and Dr. Johnson, a physician and eminent antiquary, resided in the town. It gives the title of Earl to the family of Fermor, who are styled Earls of Pomfret.

Source: A Topographical Dictionary of England by Samuel Lewis 1848

Parish Registers

Marriage Licences and Allegations

London Marriage Licences and Allegations 1521 to 1869

The following have been extracted from London Marriage Licences 1521 to 1869.

Abbreviations. — B. Bishop of London’s Office; D. Dean and Chapter of Westminster; F. Faculty Office of Archbishop of Canterbury; V. Registry of the Vicar-General of Canterbury.

Alcocke, William (Awcocke), of St. Catharine Cree Church, bachelor, 22, and Rebecca Richardson, of same, spinster, 22, daughter of William Richardson, of Pomfret, co. York, gent., at St. Faith. 20 April, 1633. B.

Source: London Marriage Licences 1521 to 1869; Edited by Joseph Foster; London 1887

Paver’s Marriage Licences

It would appear that a good many licences were never used. So genealogists should exercise a little care in their acceptance of the licenses.

1630 Richard Thompson, Pontefract, and Ann Horncastle, Badsworth —either place.

1630 John Skipton, Pontefract, and Margaret Finch, Felkirk—either place.

1630 John Stables, Brotherton, and Ann Turner, Pontefract—there. 

1630 John Stable, Pontefract, and Elizabeth Wood, Warmfield—there.

Source: The Yorkshire Archaeological Society Record Series Vol XL for the Year 1908; Edited by John WM. Clay, F.S.A., Vice-President of the Yorkshire Archaeological Society; Printed for the Society 1909.

Parish Records

FamilySearch

England, Yorkshire, Pontefract – Buildings, dwellings, etc. ( 1 )
Pontefract priory excavations, 1957-1961
Author:    Bellamy, C. Vincent

England, Yorkshire, Pontefract – Cemeteries ( 3 )
Baptisms, burials, burial plans, list of members and pew rentals, 1784- 1867
Author:    Ebenezer Chapel (Pontefract, Yorkshire : Independent)

Monumental inscriptions of All Saints Church, Pontefract
Author:    Garside, Tom; Garside, Jean

Monumental inscriptions of the burials ground of Pontefract Congregational (Evangelical) Church
Author:    Garside, Tom

England, Yorkshire, Pontefract – Census ( 3 )
Census returns for Carleton, 1841-1891
Author:    Great Britain. Census Office

Census returns for East Hardwick, 1841-1891
Author:    Great Britain. Census Office

Census returns for Pontefract, 1841-1891
Author:    Great Britain. Census Office

England, Yorkshire, Pontefract – Church records ( 39 )
Baptisms of Knottingley, Independent Church, 1813-1837
Author:    Independent Chapel (Knottingley, Yorkshire)

Baptisms of Knottingley, Independent Church, 1813-1837
Author:    Independent Chapel (Knottingley, Yorkshire)

Baptisms, 1838-1922
Author:    Wesleyan Methodist Church (Knottingley, Yorkshire)

Baptisms, 1838-1952
Author:    Horsefair Chapel (Pontefract, Yorkshire : Wesleyan Methodist)

Baptisms, 1841-1902
Author:    Micklegate Chapel (Pontefract, Yorkshire : Primitive Methodist

Baptisms, 1844-1920
Author:    Wesleyan Methodist Church (South Elmsall, Yorkshire)

Baptisms, 1844-1977
Author:    Primitive Methodist Church (Knottingley, Yorkshire)

Baptisms, 1856-1963
Author:    Wesleyan Methodist Church (Ferrybridge, Yorkshire)

Baptisms, 1858-1925
Author:    Wesleyan Methodist Church (Ackworth, Yorkshire)

Baptisms, 1875-1959
Author:    Wesleyan Methodist Church (Beal, Yorkshire)

Baptisms, 1878-1891
Author:    Wilson Street Chapel (Featherstone, Yorkshire : United Methodist Free)

Baptisms, 1884-1956
Author:    Wesleyan Methodist Church (Little Smeaton, Yorkshire)

Baptisms, burials, burial plans, list of members and pew rentals, 1784- 1867
Author:    Ebenezer Chapel (Pontefract, Yorkshire : Independent)

Baptisms, marriages and deaths of Tanshelf, parish of Pontefract, Catholic Church, 1787-1840
Author:    Catholic Church. Pontefract Chapel (Tanshelf, Yorkshire)

Births and baptisms of Pontefract, Wesleyan Church, 1803-1837
Author:    Wesleyan Church (Pontefract, England)

Births and baptisms, 1832-1834
Author:    Primitive Methodist Chapel (Pontefract, Yorkshire)

Births and baptisms, 1832-1834
Author:    Primitive Methodist Chapel (Pontefract, Yorkshire)

Births, 1776-1792
Author:    Society of Friends. Pontefract Monthly Meeting (Yorkshire)

Births, baptisms and burials, 1812-1837
Author:    Ebenezer Chapel (Finkle Street, Pontefract, Yorkshire : Independent)

Births, baptisms and burials, 1812-1837
Author:    Ebenezer Chapel (Finkle Street, Pontefract, Yorkshire : Independent)

Bishop’s transcripts for All Saints’ Church, Pontefract, 1842-1867
Author:    Church of England. All Saints Church (Pontefract, Yorkshire)

Bishop’s transcripts for East Knottingley, 1848-1868
Author:    Church of England. Chapelry of East Knottingley (Yorkshire)

Bishop’s transcripts for Knottingley, 1813-1870
Author:    Church of England. Chapelry of Knottingley (Yorkshire)

Bishop’s transcripts for St. Giles’ Church, Pontefract, 1598-1878
Author:    Church of England. St. Giles’ Church (Pontefract, Yorkshire)

Index to St. Botolph’s burial register, Dec. 1839 to 1932
Author:    Gosney, Ron; Church of England. St. Botolph’s Church (Knottingley, Yorkshire)

Knottingley, St. Botolph, baptisms, marriages, burials, 1724-1804
Author:    Church of England. St. Botolph’s Church (Knottingley, Yorkshire)

The marriage register, St. Botolph’s Church, Knottingley, 1837-1897
Author:    Dearden, C. P.; Church of England. St. Botolph’s Church (Knottingley, Yorkshire)

Marriage registers of Christ Church, Knottingley, 1849-1931
Author:    Dearden, C. P.; Church of England. Christ Church (Knottingley, Yorkshire)

Marriages of Knottingley people from the register of St. Giles, Pontefract
Author:    Dearden, C. P.; Church of England. St. Giles’ Church (Pontefract, Yorkshire)

Marriages, births and burials, 1657-1837
Author:    Society of Friends. Pontefract Monthly Meeting (Yorkshire)

The parish register of Pontefract, 1585-1641
Author:    Church of England. Parish Church of Pontefract (Yorkshire); Willis, Thomas B.

Parish registers for All Saints Church, Pontefract, 1842-1924
Author:    Church of England. All Saints Church (Pontefract, Yorkshire)

Parish registers for East Knottingley, 1848-1929
Author:    Church of England. Chapelry of East Knottingley (Yorkshire)

Parish registers for Knottingley, 1724-1932
Author:    Church of England. Chapelry of Knottingley (Yorkshire)

Parish registers for St. Giles’ Church, Pontefract, 1585-1909
Author:    Church of England. St. Giles’ Church (Pontefract, Yorkshire)

Pontefract, St. Giles and St. Mary, parish register, 1653-1670
Author:    Church of England. St. Mary’s Church (Pontefract, Yorkshire); Church of England. St. Giles’ Church (Pontefract, Yorkshire)

St. Botolph’s Church, Knottingley : register of baptisms for the years 1828-1830
Author:    Dearden, C. P.; Church of England. St. Botolph’s Church (Knottingley, Yorkshire)

Tithes, 1719-1723
Author:    Church of England. Chapelry of Knottingley (Yorkshire)

Vestry minute book, 1770-1798
Author:    Church of England. St. Giles’ Church (Pontefract, Yorkshire)

England, Yorkshire, Pontefract – Church records – Indexes ( 9 )
Computer printout of East Knottingley, Yorks., Eng

Computer printout of Knottingley, Yorks., Eng

Computer printout of Pontefract, All Saints, Yorks., Eng

Computer printout of Pontefract, Ebenezer Chapel Finkle Street Independent, Yorks., Eng

Computer printout of Pontefract, Wesleyan Methodist, Yorks., Eng

Computer printout of Pontefract, Yorks., Eng

Digest of marriages, Society of Friends (Quakers), Pontefract monthly meeting : incl. Holmfirth, Dewsbury, Wakefield, Barnsley & Penistone
Author:    Levon, Shirley; Reynolds, Jane; Smith, Joan P.; Wakefield and District Family History Society; Society of Friends. Pontefract Monthly Meeting (Yorkshire)

Parish register printouts of Pontefract, Yorkshire, Engl (Independent, Ebenezer Chapel, Finkle Street) ; christenings, 1819-1837
Author:    Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Genealogical Department

Parish register printouts of Pontefract, Yorkshire, England (Wesleyan) ; christenings, 1803-1837
Author:    Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Genealogical Department

England, Yorkshire, Pontefract – History ( 3 )
Chronicles of old Pontefract
Author:    Padgett, Lorenzo

The history of Pontefract, in Yorkshire
Author:    Fox, George, 1802-1871

The history of the ancient borough of Pontefract, containing an interesting account of its castle …
Author:    Boothroyd, Benjamin

England, Yorkshire, Pontefract – Land and property ( 1 )
The chartulary of St. John of Pontefract, from the original document in the possession of Godfrey Wentworth, esq., of Woolley park
Author:    Holmes, Richard

England, Yorkshire, Pontefract – Poorhouses, poor law, etc. ( 1 )
Poor rates, 1806-1825, and survey and valuations, 1821
Author:    Pontefract (Yorkshire)

England, Yorkshire, Pontefract – Probate records ( 2 )
England, Yorkshire, Pontefract, probate records
Author:    Northumberland County Record Office (England)

Testamenta leodiensia : wills of Leeds, Pontefract, Wakefield, Otley and district, 1539 to 1561
Author:    Lumb, George Denison, 1858-1939; York Probate Registry

England, Yorkshire, Pontefract – Public records ( 1 )
Burgage book for Pontefract : containing the “Fee Farm and Burgage Rents due to His Majesty issuing forth and out of the Town and Borough of Pontefract for the year ending at Michaelmas 1767, and in the Collection of the Major of Pontefract for the time being.”
Author:    Kendall, H. P.

England, Yorkshire, Pontefract – Schools ( 1 )
Admission registers, 1892-1926
Author:    Pontefract Church of England School (Yorkshire)

England, Yorkshire, Pontefract – Taxation ( 7 )
Chronicles of old Pontefract
Author:    Padgett, Lorenzo

Land tax assessments for Carleton township, 1781-1832
Author:    Great Britain. Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace (Yorkshire)

Land tax assessments for Carleton township, 1781-1832
Author:    Great Britain. Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace (Yorkshire)

Land tax assessments for East Hardwick township, 1781-1832
Author:    Great Britain. Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace (Yorkshire)

Land tax assessments for Pontefract township, 1784
Author:    Great Britain. Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace (Yorkshire)

Land tax assessments for Tanshelf township, 1781-1832
Author:    Great Britain. Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace (Yorkshire)

Poor rates, 1806-1825, and survey and valuations, 1821
Author:    Pontefract (Yorkshire)

Administration

  • County: Yorkshire
  • Civil Registration District: Pontefract
  • Probate Court: Exchequer and Prerogative Courts of the Archbishop of York
  • Diocese: York
  • Rural Deanery: New Ainsty
  • Poor Law Union: Pontefract
  • Hundred: Osgoldcross
  • Province: York