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The following lists entries from page 160 of the feoffee payment ledgers.
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Date Name Type Description Amount (£ s d)  
0/0/1796 George Cox support CE 0 - 03 - 06  
0/0/1796 John Amos support CE Family 0 - 05 - 00  
0/0/1796 Benjamin Downing support CE 0 - 02 - 06  
0/0/1796 Worster Hakes , widow support CE Worster Hakes Widow 0 - 02 - 06  
0/0/1796 William Carter support CE Daughter 0 - 02 - 00  
0/0/1796 Elizabeth Boarman support CE 0 - 02 - 00  
0/0/1796 John Panter support CE 0 - 02 - 00  
0/0/1796 John Burbidge support Tathall End 0 - 03 - 06  
0/0/1796 Walter Woodcock support CE 0 - 02 - 06  
0/0/1796 Edward Gregory , widow support CE Edward Gregory's Widow 0 - 02 - 00  
0/0/1796 Mary Hakes support CE 0 - 02 - 00  
0/0/1796 George Aldridge support CE 0 - 02 - 06  
0/0/1796 Ann Crick support CE 0 - 02 - 00  
0/0/1796 Samuel Crick support CE 0 - 03 - 00  
0/0/1796 William Whitehead support CE 0 - 02 - 00  
0/0/1796 John Abbey support CE 0 - 02 - 00  
0/0/1796 Thomas Rainbow support CE Junior 0 - 02 - 00  
0/0/1796 John Denton support CE 0 - 02 - 06  
0/0/1796 John Buckmaster support CE 0 - 04 - 00  
0/0/1796 William Kingston support CE 0 - 02 - 06  
0/0/1796 Elizabeth Neal , widow support CE 0 - 03 - 00  
0/0/1796 Lucy Gregory support CE 0 - 05 - 00  
0/0/1796 Charles Panter support CE 0 - 02 - 00  
0/0/1796 Elizabeth Askew support CE 0 - 01 - 00  
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Notes:  
  Click on the name of a person to see all the entries for that person.
  The Feoffee was a charity which owned several properties and provide aid to the poor from the income derived from these properties.
  Feoffee payment ledgers survive for the period 1766 to 1866.  During this period, it appears that the Feoffee owned Stafford House and was running it as a work house.
  The payment are of two types:
support payments to beneficiaries, occasionally with a brief explanation of why the support was needed

payments for services or taxes, usually connected with the maintenance of feoffee properties, sometimes with an indication of the work
  Most of the support payments are made in the winter months, presumably because there was insufficient agricultural work to provide employment for everyone in these months.