Pleshy Genealogical Records
Pleshy Birth & Baptism Records
An index to births registered throughout England & Wales. Provides a reference to order copies of birth certificates from the national registrar of births, marriages and deaths – the General Register Office.
Baptism registers are the primary source for birth documentation before 1837, though are relevant to the present. They record the date a child was baptised, their parents' names, occupations, residence and more.
A searchable transcript of baptism registers, essentially recording births, but may include residence, father's occupation and more.
Digital images of all baptism registers deposited at Essex Archives. Some registers are indexed by name.
Transcriptions of 206 parish baptism registers. They list children, their parents' names, residences, occupations and sometimes other details.
Pleshy Marriage & Divorce Records
An index to marriages registered throughout England & Wales. This is the only national marriage index that allows you to search by both spouse's names. Provides a reference to order copies of marriage certificates from the national registrar of births, marriages and deaths – the General Register Office.
Banns registers list the names of people who intended to marry by the system of calling banns, in which the bride and groom's name were called for three weeks at church. At these callings objections could be made to a marriage. Thus they record any intended marriages that didn't occur.
Marriage registers are the primary source for marital documentation before 1837, though are relevant to the present. They typically record marital status and residence. Details may also be given on a party's parents, age and parish of origin.
Brief notes on marriages that occurred at the church between 1657 and 1737.
Images of original marriage licences from the Diocese of London, searchable by a name index. These records can provide details not listed in marriage registers, such as age, parents and occupations. They can also act as a substitute in the case of missing marriage registers.
Pleshy Death & Burial Records
An index to deaths registered throughout England & Wales. Provides a reference to order copies of death certificates from the national registrar of births, marriages and deaths – the General Register Office.
Records of burial for people buried at Holy Trinity, Pleshy between 1656 and 1993. Details include the deceased's name, residence and age.
A transcript of the registers of burial for people buried at the church. Details include the deceased's name, residence and age.
An index of burials recorded at Holy Trinity, Pleshy_. The index includes the name of the deceased, the date of burial, age (where available) and occasionally other notes.
Digital images of all burial registers deposited at Essex Archives. Some registers are indexed by name.
Pleshy Census & Population Lists
An index to and digital images of records that detail 40 million civilians in England and Wales. Records list name, date of birth, address, marital status, occupation and details of trade or profession.
The 1911 census provides details on an individual's age, residence, place of birth, relations and occupation. FindMyPast's index allows searches on for multiple metrics including occupation and residence.
The 1901 census provides details on an individual's age, residence, place of birth, relations and occupation. FindMyPast's index allows searches on for multiple metrics including occupation and residence.
The 1891 census provides details on an individual's age, residence, place of birth, relations and occupation. FindMyPast's index allows searches on for multiple metrics including occupation and residence.
The 1881 census provides details on an individual's age, residence and occupation. FindMyPast's index allows for searches on multiple metrics including occupation and residence.
Newspapers Covering Pleshy
A local newspaper including news from the Chelmsford district, business notices, family announcements, legal & governmental proceedings, advertisements and more.
Regional news; notices of births, marriages and deaths; business notices; details on the proceedings of public institutions; adverts and a rich tapestry of other regional information from the Essex district. Every line of text from the newspaper can be searched and images of the original pages viewed.
A regional newspaper including news from the Essex district, business notices, family announcements, legal & governmental proceedings, advertisements and more.
A regional newspaper primarily covering Hertfordshire, but also Essex, Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire, Cambridgeshire and Middlesex. Its coverage was biased towards agricultural issues and affairs. It contained announcements of births, marriages and deaths.
A newspaper covering Essex, Suffolk, Norfolk, Cambridgeshire and Hertfordshire. Around 50% of issues from 1814-1817. Original images, searchable by an OCR index.
Pleshy Wills & Probate Records
Searchable index and original images of over 12.5 million probates and administrations granted by civil registries. Entries usually include the testator's name, date of death, date of probate and registry. Names of relations may be given.
A searchable index connected to images surviving wills and probate documents for the Commissary Court of London. These records can help trace families back to the late 15th century.
A searchable index connected to images surviving wills and probate documents for the Consistory Court of London. These records can help trace families back to the late 15th century.
Transcriptions of early wills covering the City of London and its environs.
An index to probates granted by the Consistory Court of London. The index contains name of the deceased, type and date of grant and residence.
Pleshy Immigration & Travel Records
A name index connected to original images of passenger lists recording people travelling from Britain to destinations outside Europe. Records may detail a passenger's age or date of birth, residence, occupation, destination and more.
A full index of passenger lists for vessels arriving in the UK linked to original images. Does not include lists from vessels sailing from European ports. Early entries can be brief, but later entries may include dates of births, occupations, home addresses and more. Useful for documenting immigration.
An index to and images of documents recording over 1.65 million passengers who arrived in Victoria, Australia, including passengers whose voyage was paid for by others.
Details on over 600,000 non-British citizens arriving in England. Often includes age and professions. Useful for discerning the origin of immigrants.
Details on thousands of 17th century British immigrants to the U.S., detailing their origins and nature of their immigration.
Pleshy Military Records
A chronicle of the regiment's part in numerous military campaigns from around the world.
A list of names found on World War One monuments in Essex, with some service details.
A list of names found on World War Two monuments in Essex, with some service details.
A searchable list of over 100,000 British Army POWs. Records contains details on the captured, their military career and where they were held prisoner.
Details on around 165,000 men serving in the British Army, Navy and Air Force who were held as prisoners during WWII.
Pleshy Court & Legal Records
An index to over 1,800 cases brought before the court. For witnesses, age and residence is usually given. The cases cover such matters as defamation, marriage and tithes.
An index to 3,104 cases brought before the court. For witnesses, age and residence is usually given. The cases cover such matters as defamation, marriage and tithes.
An index to names and places mentioned in act books of the Province of Canterbury. It records various licences and conferments, such as marriage and physician licences.
Records of over 300,000 prisoners held by quarter sessions in England & Wales. Records may contain age, occupation, criminal history, offence and trial proceedings.
Over 175,000 records detailing prisoner's alleged offences and the outcome of their trial. Contains genealogical information.
Pleshy Taxation Records
An index to 11,000,000 parcels of land and property, connected to digital images of registers that record their owner, occupier, description, agricultural use, size and rateable value.
This vital collection details almost 1.2 million properties eligible for land tax. Records include the name of the landowner, occupier, amount assessed and sometimes the name and/or description of the property. It is a useful starting point for locating relevant estate records and establishing the succession of tenancies and freehold. Most records cover 1798, but some extend up to 1811.
An index linked to original images of registers recording apprenticeship indentures. Details are given on the trade and nature of apprenticeship. Many records list the parents of the apprentice.
A compilation of records from the Court of the Exchequer primarily dealing with taxes and land. These records are in Latin.
An index to wills and administrations that incurred a death duty tax. The index can be used to order documents that give a brief abstract of the will and details on the duty. It can be used as a make-shift probate index.
Pleshy Land & Property Records
An index to 11,000,000 parcels of land and property, connected to digital images of registers that record their owner, occupier, description, agricultural use, size and rateable value.
This vital collection details almost 1.2 million properties eligible for land tax. Records include the name of the landowner, occupier, amount assessed and sometimes the name and/or description of the property. It is a useful starting point for locating relevant estate records and establishing the succession of tenancies and freehold. Most records cover 1798, but some extend up to 1811.
Poll books record the names of voters and the direction of their vote. Until 1872 only landholders could vote, so not everyone will be listed. Useful for discerning an ancestor's political leanings and landholdings. The collection is supplemented with other records relating to the vote.
Abstracts of records detailing the estates and families of deceased tenants from the reigns of Henry III and Edward I.
A compilation of records from the Court of the Exchequer primarily dealing with taxes and land. These records are in Latin.
Pleshy Directories & Gazetteers
A comprehensive place-by-place gazetteer, listing key contemporary and historical facts. Each place has a list of residents and businesses. Contains details on local schools, churches, government and other institutions.
A comprehensive place-by-place gazetteer, listing key contemporary and historical facts. Each place has a list of residents and businesses. Contains details on local schools, churches, government and other institutions.
A comprehensive place-by-place gazetteer, listing key contemporary and historical facts. Each place has a list of residents and businesses. Contains details on local schools, churches, government and other institutions.
A comprehensive place-by-place gazetteer, listing key contemporary and historical facts. Each place has a list of residents and businesses. Contains details on local schools, churches, government and other institutions.
A comprehensive place-by-place gazetteer, listing key contemporary and historical facts. Each place has a list of residents and businesses. Contains details on local schools, churches, government and other institutions.
Pleshy Cemeteries
Vital details extracted from tombstones and other monuments at Holy Trinity, Pleshy.
Transcriptions and illustrations of monuments erected remembrance of personages in Essex. Also contains pedigrees for historic families of the county.
Photographs and descriptions of Essex's most illustrious church monuments, often featuring effigies, medieval inscriptions and heraldic devices.
An index to vital details engraved on over 170,000 gravestones and other monuments across the county of Essex.
Images of millions of pages from cemetery and crematoria registers, photographs of memorials, cemetery plans and more. Records can be search by a name index.
Pleshy Obituaries
The UKs largest repository of obituaries, containing millions of searchable notices.
A growing collection currently containing over 425,000 abstracts of obituaries with reference to the location of the full obituary.
A collection of 364 obituaries of Quakers from the British Isles. The volume was published in 1849 and includes obituaries of those who died in late 1847 through 1848.
This transcribed and searchable work by Sir William Musgrave contains 10,000s of brief obituaries. The work is a reference point for other works containing information on an individual.
A text index and digital images of all editions of a journal containing medical articles and obituaries of medical practitioners.
Pleshy Histories & Books
A detailed history of the county's hundreds, parishes and religious houses.
A traveller's guide to four Southern counties.
Photographs and images of churches in Essex.
Photographs of the interiors and exteriors of Essex churches. Also contains some architectural information.
A short list of words and phrases peculiar to the two counties.
Pleshy School & Education Records
A name index connected to digital images of registers recording millions of children educated in schools operated by the National Society for Promoting Religious Education. Records contain a variety of information including genealogical details, education history, illnesses, exam result, fathers occupation and more.
A name index linked to original images of registers recording the education and careers of teachers in England & Wales.
A name index linked to original images of short biographies for over 120,000 Oxford University students. This is a particularly useful source for tracing the ancestry of the landed gentry.
A transcript of a vast scholarly work briefly chronicling the heritage, education and careers of over 150,000 Cambridge University students. This is a particularly useful source for tracing the ancestry of the landed gentry.
A searchable database containing over 90,000 note-form biographies for students of Cambridge University.
Pleshy Occupation & Business Records
An introduction to smuggling in on the east coast of England, with details of the act in various regions.
Details of the wages to be expected for various tradesmen and labourers.
An introduction to smuggling on the east coast of England, with details of the act in various regions.
Histories of Essex pubs, with photographs and lists of owners or operators.
Short histories of former public houses, with photographs and lists of owners or operators.
Pedigrees & Family Trees Covering Pleshy
Transcriptions and illustrations of monuments erected remembrance of personages in Essex. Also contains pedigrees for historic families of the county.
A detailed history of the county's hundreds, parishes and religious houses.
Extensive and impeccably sourced genealogies for British, Irish & Manx royalty and nobility. Scroll down to 'British Isles' for relevant sections.
A searchable database of linked genealogies compiled from thousands of reputable and not-so-reputable sources. Contains many details on European gentry & nobility, but covers many countries outside Europe and people from all walks of life.
A searchable book, listing pedigrees of titled families and biographies of their members.
Pleshy Royalty, Nobility & Heraldry Records
A detailed history of the county's hundreds, parishes and religious houses.
Five collections of pedigrees based on 16th and 17th century genealogical manuscripts. These works record families who had a right to bear coat of arms, essentially the gentry.
Photographs and descriptions of Essex's most illustrious church monuments, often featuring effigies, medieval inscriptions and heraldic devices.
Extensive and impeccably sourced genealogies for British, Irish & Manx royalty and nobility. Scroll down to 'British Isles' for relevant sections.
A searchable database of linked genealogies compiled from thousands of reputable and not-so-reputable sources. Contains many details on European gentry & nobility, but covers many countries outside Europe and people from all walks of life.
Pleshy Church Records
The parish registers of Pleshy are a collection of books essentially documenting births, marriages and deaths. Their records can assist tracing a family back numerous generations.
An index to over 1,800 cases brought before the court. For witnesses, age and residence is usually given. The cases cover such matters as defamation, marriage and tithes.
Digital images of all parish registers deposited at Essex Archives. Some registers are indexed by name.
Transcriptions of registers that record baptisms, which typically occur shortly after birth; marriages and burials. They can help establish links between individuals back to the 16th century.
Photographs of the interiors and exteriors of Essex churches. Also contains some architectural information.
Biographical Directories Covering Pleshy
A searchable book, listing pedigrees of titled families and biographies of their members.
A book containing genealogies and biographies of Britain's titled families.
A book containing genealogies and biographies of Britain's titled families.
Brief biographies of Anglican clergy in the UK.
A directory containing lengthy biographies of noted British figures. The work took over two decades to compile. Biographies can be searched by name and are linked to images of the original publication.
Pleshy Maps
A collection of maps plotting the counties of Essex and Suffolk, and some of their settlements.
Digital images of maps covering the county.
Detailed maps covering much of the UK. They depict forests, mountains, larger farms, roads, railroads, towns, and more.
Maps showing settlements, features and some buildings in mainland Britain.
An index to 11,000,000 parcels of land and property, connected to digital images of registers that record their owner, occupier, description, agricultural use, size and rateable value.
Pleshy Reference Works
A database of names of fields, roads, inns, houses, farms, manors, places, rivers, streams, woods, etc, and names of owners, tenants, landlords, parties to agreements etc, recorded from historic documents.
A beginner’s guide to researching ancestry in England.
Compiled in 1831, this book details the coverage and condition of parish registers in England & Wales.
A comprehensive guide to researching the history of buildings in the British Isles.
A service that provides advanced and custom surname maps for the British Isles and the US.
Civil & Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction
Historical Description
The village of Pleshy, which though at present obscure and unimportant, was formerly of no small consequence, as the high constables of England, from the first establishment of the office till nearly four centuries after the Norman invasion, made this their place of residence. Here still exists the keep of a strong fortress erected by the Normans, within the area of an entrenchment, which surrounds the village; by Gough and Morant conjectured to have been of Roman origin. The following description of the grand and imposing magnificence of this venerable relic, is taken from the introduction to the History and Antiquities of Pleshey, and is so beautifully just that we could not resist the desire we felt of introducing it.
"No massy door
Grates on harsh hinges o’er the ruin’d floor;
No pointed arch, with dread portcullis hung, Bids horror stalk the timid hinds among;
No deep dark dungeon strikes their soulswith fear, Nor swelling towers their threat’ning turrets rear. Yet still remains, and marks the ancient bound, The bold abutment of the outer mound;
Still with a slow, and pausing step we tread High o’er the lofty arch, and hence are led To mount the keep, whose hard access of yore A moat defended—but defends no more;
For where of old did guardian waters flow,
Now spreading ash and humbler alders grow."
In the vicinity of the intrenchment, have been found several Roman bricks and other relies, strongly corroborative of the supposition that the castle was erected by the Romans; the keep is however indisputably of Norman origin, and its erection is, with some appearance of probability, ascribed to William, second son of Geoffrey de Magnaville, who procured a licence for fortifying his castle at Pleshey from Henry II. and was here married to Hawise daughter and heiress of the Earl of Albemarle, in the year 1180.
Of the entrenchments, Gough, in his additions to Camden, observes, that the earth-works may defy the injuries of time and cultivation, but of the buildings which once adorned them, remains only the bridge leading across the moat to the keep. This bridge is of brick, of one pointed arch, strongly cramped together with iron, 18 feet high, and 18 wide, and remarkable for the singular circumstance of contracting, as it approaches the basis. Foundations of brick run from the end of this bridge to the left round the keep, and on each side of the way to it are the foundations of large rooms and angles of stone buildings. The site of the castle has been a warren; and four ragged yews occupy the keep, in planting which some foundations were laid open. The keep is somewhat elliptical in its form, measuring upwards of 890 feet in its ambit.
Here formerly stood a College, founded by Thomas of Woodstock, with an endowment for a master, warden, eight chaplains, two clerks, and two choristers; it stood to the south of the church, but not a vestige of its buildings points out its site, which has long submitted itself to the dominion of the plough, and preserves the memory of its former services only in its name, being still honoured with the appellation of the College Field.
Of the former importance of this village the only trace which remains is the election of a mayor, annually chosen from among the freemen upon the court day held for the manor. This manor is now the property of Jolliffe Tufnell, Esq. whose seat, called LANGLEYS, is situated close by Great Waltham, at a short distance from Pleshey; it is a handsome modern structure, erected by the late Samuel Tuffnell, Esq. and is seated upon an agreeable eminence, in a beautiful park, which is washed by the waters of the Chelmer upon the north and north-east, and those of a small subsidiary rivulet to the south-west and south. This park is laid out with the greatest taste; it was formerly known by the name of Marshalls, from having been the property of an ancient family of that name, who continued its masters till the reign of Edward III. when it came into the possession of the Langleys, ancestors of the present proprietor, and from whom it obtained the name by which it is still distinguished.
PLESHEY is an ancient town, consisting chiefly of a long street of small houses, once a place of great importance and the seat of the High Constables of England from the earliest institution of that office till nearly four centuries after the Conquest: it is on a small feeder of the Chelmer, 8 miles north-west from Chelmsford station on the main line of the Great Eastern railway to Colchester and Ipswich, and 7 south-east from Dunmow station on the Dunmow and Braintree branch of that company, and 37 from London, in the Western division of the county, Dunmow hundred and petty sessional division, Chelmsford union and county court district, rural deanery of Roding, archdeaconry of Essex and diocese of St. Albans. The first parish church of Pleshey was consecrated and endowed between 1244 and 1259, in the time of Humphrey de Bohun, the good Earl of Hereford and Lord High Constable; besides the old church there were two chapels, one within the castle and the other attached to the church and dedicated to St. Nicholas: the tower and transepts of the existing church of Holy Trinity are the mutilated remains of a fine cruciform double-aisled church of Late Decorated character, which belonged jointly to the parish and to a college of nine priests, founded here in 1393 by Thomas de Woodstock, 6th son of Edward III. and Duke of Gloucester, and endowed by him with the tithes: the college fell with the lesser monasteries in 1536, when the revenues were £143 12s. 3d.; and of several marble tombs of the founders’ family which formerly stood in the chancel, only two slabs stripped of their brasses now remain: Henry Compton, bishop of London (1675—86), erected a small nave on the ruins of the ancient structure in 1708, and a chancel was added about forty years after by Samuel Tufnell esq. which is now adorned with mural monuments of his family: the church was completely restored in 1868, by the late J. J. Tufnell esq. and the Rev. J. Hutchinson, then vicar, at a cost of £3,000, and consists of chancel, nave, transepts, north porch and an embattled central tower, with a stair turret and containing a clock and 5 bells, two being the old Pre-Reformation bells: there are three stained windows, the large west window being a memorial placed at the expense of the parishioners to the Rev. J. Hutchinson: there is an old churchyard, now desecrated, in which the parish church stood before the college was built: the church affords 250 sittings. The register dates from the year 1656. The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £180, including 20 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Col. W. N. Tufnell, and held since 1886 by the Rev. Charles William Howis. The Dean and Chapter of Westminster are the impropriators of a portion of the tithes. The town was anciently called “Tumblestoun,” or “the town of the Tumuli,” and here it is supposed was formerly a Roman camp; the remains of a strong fortress erected by the Normans still exist and are attributed, with some probability, to Geoffrey de Magnaville or Mandeville, Earl of Essex, who, as possessor of this place, held by repute the office of Great Constable of England; he was slain in 1144, at the siege of Burwell Castle, but his third son William, eventually inheriting the estate, oblained a licence from Henry II. to fortify his castle at Pleshey, which continued to be the seat of the High Constables of England till some time after 1400: he died in 1189: the keep of this castle is elliptical in form and has a circumference of 890 feet; the vallum, with a noble foss, is in part very perfect, and the four roads leading into the camp can be easily traced. Here dwelt Thomas de Wood. stock, Duke of Gloucester, youngest son of Edward III. who came into possession of this estate by his marriage with Eleanor, daughter of Joan, widow of Humphrey, Earl of Hereford, Essex and Northampton; he was here basely arrested, hurried to the Thames, put on shipboard and conveyed to Calais, where, after a short imprisonment, he was murdered, through the treachery of his nephew, Bichard II. Here also, in 1400, John Holland, Duke of Exeter, was beheaded by the populace, in revenge for his share in Prince Thomas’s murder. The materials of the castle, which after his death fell to decay, were used about 1600 to build the lodge, but this in its turn was token down in 1767: the vast earthworks, the mount, with its singular bridge and the two moats, still attest the ancient grandeur and strength of the castle. The manor became part of the Duchy of Lancaster in 1521: three farms, constituting two-thirds of the parish, belong to Col. William Nevill Tufnell, of Langleys, Great Waltham. The soil is chalky clay, with flints and chalk fossils; subsoil, loam. The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is 730 acres, 627 being arable; rateable value, £935; the population in 1901 was 231.
PLESHEY BURY lies to the west; ROPHEY GREEN is half a mile north-east; LINKTAIL GREEN, 1 mile north-east; HARVEYS, 1 mile north-west.
Parochial School (mixed), built, with mistress’s house, in 1872 for 60 children; average attendance, 56.
Most Common Surnames in Pleshy
| Rank | Surname | Incidence | Frequency | Percent of Parent | Rank in Dunmow Hundred |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Reeve | 30 | 1:10 | 4.69% | 126 |
| 2 | Bohannon | 23 | 1:13 | 47.92% | 1,837 |
| 3 | Clark | 19 | 1:16 | 0.53% | 3 |
| 3 | Dowsett | 19 | 1:16 | 3.50% | 148 |
| 5 | Everitt | 12 | 1:25 | 2.19% | 147 |
| 6 | Cannon | 10 | 1:30 | 6.06% | 606 |
| 6 | Eve | 10 | 1:30 | 2.80% | 264 |
| 6 | Portway | 10 | 1:30 | 10.00% | 1,031 |
| 6 | Campen | 10 | 1:30 | 21.74% | 1,901 |
| 10 | Ketley | 9 | 1:34 | 3.73% | 405 |
| 10 | Quilter | 9 | 1:34 | 6.00% | 680 |
| 10 | Harmon | 9 | 1:34 | 56.25% | 4,181 |
| 13 | Saltmash | 8 | 1:38 | 40.00% | 3,557 |
| 14 | Matthews | 7 | 1:43 | 1.34% | 159 |
| 14 | Brewster | 7 | 1:43 | 1.90% | 254 |
| 16 | Hornsby | 6 | 1:50 | 4.00% | 680 |
| 16 | Wolden | 6 | 1:50 | 100.00% | 9,145 |
| 18 | Smith | 5 | 1:60 | 0.05% | 1 |
| 18 | Day | 5 | 1:60 | 0.39% | 31 |
| 18 | Little | 5 | 1:60 | 1.04% | 181 |
| 18 | Rayment | 5 | 1:60 | 1.96% | 380 |
| 18 | Hasler | 5 | 1:60 | 2.37% | 455 |
| 23 | Darby | 4 | 1:76 | 3.70% | 961 |
| 23 | Philpott | 4 | 1:76 | 7.14% | 1,622 |
| 23 | Hitching | 4 | 1:76 | 5.19% | 1,274 |
| 23 | Halks | 4 | 1:76 | 100.00% | 12,157 |
| 27 | Joyce | 3 | 1:101 | 0.93% | 293 |
| 27 | Grove | 3 | 1:101 | 3.26% | 1,098 |
| 27 | Owers | 3 | 1:101 | 0.96% | 308 |
| 27 | Witney | 3 | 1:101 | 4.48% | 1,433 |
| 27 | Brewester | 3 | 1:101 | 50.00% | 9,145 |
| 27 | Habler | 3 | 1:101 | 100.00% | 13,972 |
| 33 | Young | 2 | 1:151 | 0.16% | 36 |
| 33 | Bradley | 2 | 1:151 | 0.66% | 315 |
| 33 | Franklin | 2 | 1:151 | 0.49% | 220 |
| 33 | Beard | 2 | 1:151 | 0.46% | 207 |
| 33 | Sewell | 2 | 1:151 | 0.46% | 201 |
| 33 | Crabb | 2 | 1:151 | 0.58% | 278 |
| 33 | Clift | 2 | 1:151 | 2.27% | 1,145 |
| 33 | Hawks | 2 | 1:151 | 2.78% | 1,351 |
| 33 | Feast | 2 | 1:151 | 2.41% | 1,200 |
| 33 | Deamer | 2 | 1:151 | 100.00% | 15,983 |
| 33 | Donner | 2 | 1:151 | 100.00% | 15,983 |
| 33 | Tween | 2 | 1:151 | 1.79% | 928 |
| 45 | Phillips | 1 | 1:302 | 0.12% | 82 |
| 45 | Rogers | 1 | 1:302 | 0.10% | 62 |
| 45 | Barnes | 1 | 1:302 | 0.13% | 97 |
| 45 | Cole | 1 | 1:302 | 0.08% | 37 |
| 45 | Black | 1 | 1:302 | 1.39% | 1,351 |
| 45 | Stock | 1 | 1:302 | 0.14% | 109 |
| 45 | Lines | 1 | 1:302 | 0.88% | 908 |
| 45 | Walden | 1 | 1:302 | 0.83% | 862 |
| 45 | Spalding | 1 | 1:302 | 1.06% | 1,079 |
| 45 | Boreham | 1 | 1:302 | 0.30% | 284 |
| 45 | Gowers | 1 | 1:302 | 0.33% | 319 |
| 45 | Tennent | 1 | 1:302 | 100.00% | 18,911 |
| 45 | Sewel | 1 | 1:302 | 25.00% | 12,157 |
| 45 | Woolverton | 1 | 1:302 | 100.00% | 18,911 |