- Home
- Articles
- World Records
- Full list of United Kingdom records
- Institutions & Organisations
- England and Wales, Crime, Prisons and Punishment 1770-1935
- Home Office series 8, 13, 77 & 130
Institutions & Organisations
- Britain, Executions 1606-1955
- Bury Union Workhouse (Jericho Institution) Admission Registers
- Bury Workhouse Creed Registers
- Bury Workhouse Discharge Registers
- Chertsey Poor Law Union Admission and Discharge Books post-1900
- Chertsey Poor Law Union Admission and Discharge Books pre-1900
- Cheshire Workhouse Records (Baptisms)
- Cheshire Workhouse Records (Births)
- Cheshire Workhouse Records (Burials)
- Cheshire Workhouse Records (Deaths)
- Cheshire Workhouse Records, Admissions and Discharges
- Cheshire Workhouse Records, Religious Creeds
- City of York calendars of prisoners 1739-1851
- City of York hearth & window tax 1665-1778
- Cobham, Reed’s School Annual Reports 1818-1901
- Derbyshire hospital admissions and deaths 1892-1913
- Derbyshire hospital admissions and deaths 1892-1913
- Derbyshire Workhouse Reports
- Devon, Plymouth Prison Records 1832-1919
- Devon, Tavistock Borough Court Luxton Manuscripts, 1839-1896
- Dorking Poor Law Union Application and Report Books 1837-1847
- England & Wales, paupers in workhouses 1860
- England and Wales, Crime, Prisons and Punishment 1770-1935
- Farnham Board of Guardians Minute Books 1872-1910
- Godstone Poor Law Union Application and Report Books 1869-1915
- Guildford Infirmary Deaths 1933-1939
- Guildford Workhouse Births 1866-1910
- Guildford Workhouse Deaths 1887-1914
- Hambledon Board of Guardians Minute Books 1836-1910
- Hampshire, Portsmouth Hospital Records
- Hampshire, Portsmouth Workhouse Registers
- Hampshire, Portsmouth, Portsea Island Rate Books
- Ireland, Licences to Keep Arms 1832-1836
- Ireland, Ulster Covenant 1912
- Irish Tontines Annuitants 1766-1789 - Annuities
- Irish Tontines Annuitants 1766-1789 - Deaths
- Irish Tontines Annuitants 1766-1789 - Marriages
- Kent, Bexley Asylum Minute Books, 1901-1939
- Lancashire, Manchester cholera victims 1832
- Lincolnshire Poor Law Removals 1665 - 1865
- Lincolnshire Settlement Certificates 1675 - 1860
- Lincolnshire Settlement Examinations 1721 - 1861
- Lincolnshire, Workhouse Guardians' Minutes
- Lincolnshire, Workhouse Guardians' Minutes - Bourne
- Lincolnshire, Workhouse Guardians' Minutes - Caistor
- Liverpool Workhouse Registers
- London, Bethlem Hospital Patient Admission Registers and Casebooks 1683-1932
- Mayford Industrial School Admissions 1895-1907
- Middlesex, Harrow School photographs of pupils & masters 1869-1925
- Middlesex, London, Old Bailey Court records 1674-1913
- National School Admission Registers & Log-Books 1870-1914
- Princess Mary Village Homes Pupils 1870-1890s
- Prison ship (Hulk) Registers 1811-1843
- Redhill, Royal Philanthropic School Admission Registers 1788-1906
- Richmond Poor Law Union Application and Report Books 1870-1911
- Roxburghshire, Kelso Dispensary Patient Registers 1777-1781
- Royal Society of Arts Membership Lists and Minute Books
- Scotland prison registers index 1828-1884
- Scotland, Buchanan Society Members 1725-1948
- Scotland, Edinburgh Temperance Pledges 1886-1908
- Scotland, Inverness-Shire, Dores Free Church Adherents 1893
- Scotland, Linlithgowshire (West Lothian), poorhouse records 1859-1912
- South Yorkshire Asylum, Admission Records
- Surrey County Gaol Deaths 1798-1878
- Surrey feet of fines 1558-1760
- Surrey feet of fines place list
- Surrey Quarter Sessions 1780 -1820
- Surrey, Southwark, St Saviour Poor Relief 1818-1821
- Warlingham Military Hospital Chaplain's Department baptisms, confirmations and deaths 1917-1919
- Warwickshire bastardy index
- Warwickshire, Coventry workhouse admission and discharge registers 1853-1946
- Warwickshire, Coventry, Vehicle Registration Plates (1921-1944)
- Warwickshire, Coventry, Vehicle Registrations 1921-1944
- Westminster, poor law and parish administration - Admissions
- Westminster, poor law and parish administration - Apprentices
- Westminster, poor law and parish administration - Bastardy
- Westminster, poor law and parish administration - Examinations
- Westminster, poor law and parish administration - Land tax
- Westminster, poor law and parish administration - Paupers
- Westminster, poor law and parish administration - Poor law and workhouse records
- Westminster, poor law and parish administration - Valuations
- Wiltshire Asylum Registers, 1789-1921
- Woking, St Peter’s Memorial Home Patients 1885-1908
- Women’s Suffrage Petition 1866
- Yorkshire, Sheffield Crime Courts and Convicts 1737-1938
- Yorkshire, Sheffield Crime Courts And Convicts 1769-1931
- Yorkshire, Sheffield social and institutional records 1558-1939
- Yorkshire, Sheffield, asylum & hospital admissions & subscriptions 1748-1937
- Yorkshire, Sheffield, Workhouse Admissions 1700-1915
Records in this collection
- Home Office: criminal petitions part 1
- Metropolitan Police: Habitual criminals and miscellaneous papers
- Admiralty: convicts in hulks
- Central Criminal Court: calendars of prisoners
- Home Office 23 & 24
- Home Office and Prison Commission: female licences
- Home Office and Prison Commission: prisons records
- Home Office and Prison Commission: prisons records(PCOM2)
- Home Office series 8, 13, 77 & 130
- Home Office: calendar of prisons
- Home Office: convict hulks, convict prisons and criminal lunatic asylums, quarterly returns of prisoners
- Home Office: convicts, miscellanea
- Home Office: criminal petitions, part 2
- Home Office: criminal registers
- Home Office: judges’ reports on criminals 1784-1830
- Home Office: old captions and transfer papers
- Miscellaneous Home Office documents and the Newgate Prison Calendar
- Series HO140, MEPO6, PCOM2, & PCOM3
- Series HO18, HO19, & T38
Find your ancestors in Home Office series 8, 13, 77 & 130
In association with The National Archives, Findmypast is excited to release an extensive collection of records from criminal cases, gaols, hulks, prisons, and criminal calendars. England & Wales, crime, prisons & punishment, 1770-1935 is the largest single collection of British crime records online. Explore the world of courts and prisons, and discover if your ancestor committed a criminal offence and what your ancestor’s sentence was. You can also find physical descriptions and photographs of your ancestor, whether your ancestor was executed or transported, and official correspondence about your ancestor’s case, as well as petitions sent by the accused individuals and their family and friends to have sentences reduced. This extraordinarily rich collection of records covers the justice system from the days of the Bloody Code – where most property crimes carried a death sentence – to the justice system we know today. The collection holds 22 series of records from The National Archives. Below you can find out more about the files. You will find the series listed on the transcript.
HO8: Home Office: convict hulks, convict prisons and criminal lunatic asylums, quarterly returns of prisoners
This series contains almost 1,290,578 records from sworn lists of convicts on board prison hulks between 1801 and 1854. Records of prisoners in convict prisons and criminal lunatic asylums will follow in due course.
HO13: Home Office: correspondence and warrants
There are almost 272,950 records of people mentioned in the correspondence and warrants between 1782 and 1871. The records will usually reveal information related to your ancestor’s conviction, the trial and sentencing.
HO77: Home Office: Newgate Prison calendar 1782-1853
There are almost 339,400 records here from the printed lists of the prisoners to be tried at Newgate, in London. As well as the printed list, from July 1822 onwards there are manuscript additions giving the results of the trials.
HO130: Home Office: miscellaneous criminal books 1798-1831
This small set of 888 records contains a calendar of the prisoner at Winchester listed for trial at a Special Commission of Assize after the agricultural riots of 1830. The so-called Swing Riots swept England between 1830 and 1831. Agricultural workers burnt barns and haystacks and destroyed farm machinery in protest at increased mechanisation and low wages. Within the records is the most notorious rioter James Thomas Cooper, who was known as Captain or Lord Hunt. He had organised riots in Hampshire, Wiltshire and Dorset and was executed in Winchester on 15 January 1831.