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The following entries in the feoffee payment records mention Thomas Surridge.
Click on the date to see the whole page of entries from which a line is taken

Date Name Type Description Amount (£ s d)  
10/2/1766 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 02 - 06  
16/10/1766 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 02 - 03  
15/12/1766 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 10 - 00  
14/1/1767 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 05 - 00  
21/11/1767 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 07 - 06  
4/1/1768 Thomas Surridge support A second time 0 - 05 - 03  
10/12/1768 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 10 - 06  
16/2/1769 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 05 - 03  
4/12/1769 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 10 - 06  
13/1/1772 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 05 - 03  
1/1/1773 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 01 - 00  
10/1/1774 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 05 - 03  
8/5/1774 Thomas Surridge support In distress 0 - 01 - 00  
20/12/1774 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 07 - 06  
8/2/1775 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 05 - 03  
29/1/1777 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 05 - 00  
9/2/1778 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 05 - 00  
18/1/1783 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 04 - 00  
24/1/1784 Thomas Surridge support 0 - 04 - 00  
11/1/1785 Thomas Surridge support ML 0 - 04 - 00  
11/1/1786 Thomas Surridge support ML 0 - 02 - 00  
21/12/1790 Thomas Surridge support MM 0 - 05 - 06  
0/0/1796 Thomas Surridge support MM 0 - 03 - 06  
0/0/1799 Thomas Surridge support Thomas Surridges Daughter 0 - 01 - 06  
0/0/1808 Thomas Surridge support MM-B 0 - 00 - 00  
Notes:  
  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.