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Fonds

Workington Petty Sessional Division

Catalogue reference: CQ/PWo

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This record is about the Workington Petty Sessional Division.

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Full description and record details

Reference
CQ/PWo
Title
Workington Petty Sessional Division
Held by
Cumbria Archive and Local Studies Centre, Whitehaven
Language
English
Creator(s)
<corpname>Workington Petty Sessional Division</corpname>
Access conditions

No volume or paper hereof less than 100 years old at time of intended consultation may be used until 100 years have expired since that volume's most recent entry. Except for Items 69,70,72, 81-83.

Immediate source of acquisition

Records of the Workington Petty Sessional Division, deposited by the Clerk to the Division on 19th December 1974 and 31st August 1978

The items deposited in 1974 were these:

1974 ref. no: CQ/PWo/1/1 - 18 Court registers, 1929-63 Present ref. no: CQ/PWo/9-28

1974 ref. no: CQ/PWo/2/1 - 26 Court minute books, 1927-68 Present ref. no: CQ/PWo/31; 38-62

1974 ref. no: CQ/PWo/3/1 - 5 Juvenile Court registers, 1946-64 Present ref. no: CQ/PWo/64-68

1974 ref. no: CQ/PWo/4/1 - 4 Other registers: Music & Dancing, 1910-57 Present ref. no: CQ/PWo/69

[Liquor] licences, 1911-57 Present ref. no: CQ/PWo/72

Clubs, 1922-55 Present ref. no: CQ/PWo/70

Adoptions, 1930-59 Present ref. no: CQ/PWo/71

The rest were deposited on 31st August 1978, and include those from the firm of D.J. Mason, solicitors, Workington, as Clerks to the Court.

Administrative / biographical background

LOCAL MAGISTRATES COURT DIVISIONS

"Justices of the Peace developed from the Keepers of the Peace who were appointed by a commission under the Great Seal in 1277 and 1287. They had acquired their name by 1361, when a statute gave them the power to try minor offenders. Their duties were greatly extended under the Tudors." [Oxford Companion to Local and Family History].

Most of the more important work of the justices was conducted at the Quarter Sessions for each county. But informal meetings of a few local justices gradually developed into the Petty Sessions, which dealt with minor criminal proceedings. These early meetings were generally not well recorded, and the borderline between Quarter and Petty Sessions was not always clear-cut. But during 1828 Petty Sessions were first formally recognised within parliamentary legislation: the county justices were authorised to divide their areas into petty sessional districts and to appoint a local attorney to act as clerk.

Record URL
https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/59709969-2dd9-4b05-a9d6-461d33cdc27e/

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Workington Petty Sessional Division