Wincanton Genealogical Records
Wincanton 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.
Transcriptions of records from baptism registers, essentially recording births, but may include residence, father's occupation and more.
A printed register recording the baptism of children at Wincanton. This work essentially records births in and around Wincanton between 1629 and 1672.
Transcriptions of 255 parish baptism registers. They list children, their parents' names, residences, occupations and sometimes other details.
Transcriptions of copies of parish registers that were compiled for the Bishop of Wells.
Wincanton 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.
An index to marriages in Wincanton listing the date of marriage and the names of the bride and groom.
An index to marriages recorded by the church, listing the date of marriage and the names of the bride and groom.
Transcriptions of records from baptism registers. They may list residence, marital status, witnesses and more.
Marriage records from people who married at the church between 1593 and 1754.
Wincanton 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.
Vital details extracted from tombstones and other monuments.
Transcriptions of records from burial registers. They may include the deceased's name, residence and age. Some records may contain the names of relations, cause of death and more.
A printed register documenting the burial of people in Wincanton churchyard. They may list the age of the deceased, their residence and name of relations.
An index of burials recorded at St Peter & St Paul, Wincanton_. The index includes the name of the deceased, the date of burial, age (where available) and occasionally other notes.
Wincanton 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.
A transcription of records naming those who had taxes levied against them for the privilege of owning a hearth.
Digital images of books the list people eligible to vote in Somerset. Includes addresses and nature of that address.
An early census of men able to serve in the militia.
Newspapers Covering Wincanton
A record of births, marriages, deaths, legal, political, organisation and other news from the Wells area. Original pages of the newspaper can be viewed and located by a full text search.
Fully text-searchable articles from a local newspaper covering the Sherborne district. It includes family announcements, obituaries, court proceedings, business notices and more.
A politically independent newspaper, covering the affairs of Dorset, Devon, Cornwall and Somerset. It includes family notices.
A weekly newspaper that circulated through Wales and parts of Somerset and Gloucestershire. It published general news, literature, commentary, family notices, adverts etc. Each edition has been indexed and digitised.
A regional newspaper covering the counties of Somerset, Dorset, Wiltshire Hampshire and Berkshire. It covers local and national news, family announcements, business news, legal proceedings and more.
Wincanton 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.
Summaries of 1,616 wills that may detail family relationships, land ownership and other details.
An index to estate administrations performed by the Prerogative Court of Canterbury. The index covers the southern two thirds of England & Wales, but may also contain entries for northerners.
A calendar to wills and admons granted by the Archdeaconry of Leicester. Contains year of the grant, name and residence.
A searchable database of mid-17th Century probates performed by the Prerogative Court of Canterbury. Supplies details of testator and executor.
Wincanton 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.
Wincanton Military Records
An index to almost 11,000 men connected with Somerset who died during WWI.
An early census of men able to serve in the militia.
A history of the regiment in the run-up to and during the Napoleonic Wars.
A list of names found on World War One monuments in Somerset, with some service details.
A list of names found on World War Two monuments in Somerset, with some service details.
Wincanton Court & Legal Records
A collection of charters, writs, letters, conveyances and other records from the Dean & Chapter of Wells.
Transcripts of a large number of records detailing investigations into deaths.
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.
Wincanton Taxation Records
A transcription of records naming those who had taxes levied against them for the privilege of owning a hearth.
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.
Wincanton Land & Property Records
A collection of charters, writs, letters, conveyances and other records from the Dean & Chapter of Wells.
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.
Wincanton Directories & Gazetteers
An exhaustive gazetteer, containing details of settlement's history, governance, churches, postal services, public institutions and more. Also contains lists of residents with their occupation and address.
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 historical and contemporary facts. Contains details on local schools, churches, government and other institutions. Also contains a list of residents and businesses for each place.
Wincanton Cemeteries
Vital details extracted from tombstones and other monuments.
An index to vital details engraved on over 100,000 monuments across the county of Somerset.
Photographs and descriptions of Somerset's most illustrious church monuments, often featuring effigies, medieval inscriptions and heraldic devices.
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.
Photographs and transcriptions of millions of gravestones from cemeteries around the world.
Wincanton 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.
Wincanton Histories & Books
Selected issues of a periodical which contains many historical and genealogical tracts relating to the counties of Somerset and Dorset.
A history of Catholicism in South West England with biographies of noted Catholics. Contains details of the Dominican, Benedictine, and Franciscan orders.
A detailed history of the county's hundreds, parishes and religious houses.
Photographs and images of churches in Somerset.
A history of turnpikes and tollhouses in Somerset. Includes profiles of individual turnpikes.
Wincanton 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.
Wincanton Occupation & Business Records
Abstracts of apprenticeship indentures initiated by parishes in Somerset. These records provide details on parents' names and occupations.
An introduction to smuggling on the west coast of Britain & the Isle of Man, with details of the act in various regions.
Histories of Somerset pubs, with photographs and lists of owners or operators.
Profiles of coal and metal mines in the south of England.
An index of Glamorgan police officers who came from the West Country.
Pedigrees & Family Trees Covering Wincanton
Pedigrees of Somerset gentry families, including depictions of their arms. The book also contains some biographical information.
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.
Wincanton Royalty, Nobility & Heraldry Records
Pedigrees of Somerset gentry families, including depictions of their arms. The book also contains some biographical information.
A detailed history of the county's hundreds, parishes and religious houses.
Photographs and descriptions of Somerset'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.
Wincanton Church Records
A collection of charters, writs, letters, conveyances and other records from the Dean & Chapter of Wells.
A book of transcriptions from the baptism, marriage and burial registers of Wincanton covering the years 1629 to 1672. These records are the primary source of birth, marriage and death documentation for people living in and around Wincanton before 1837.
Abstracts of apprenticeship indentures initiated by parishes in Somerset. These records provide details on parents' names and occupations.
A history of Catholicism in South West England with biographies of noted Catholics. Contains details of the Dominican, Benedictine, and Franciscan orders.
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.
Biographical Directories Covering Wincanton
Brief biographies of thousands of notable Somerset men.
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.
Wincanton Maps
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.
Maps of parishes in England, Scotland and Wales. They are useful in determining which parish records may be relevant to your research.
Wincanton Reference Works
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.
A dictionary of around 9,000 mottoes for British families who had right to bear arms.
Civil & Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction
Historical Description
Wincanton, a small but very neat town, built on the declivity of a hill, commanding a beautiful and extensive prospect of the adjacent country. The inhabitants carry on a considerable trade in serges and stockings, as also in cheese, great quantities of which are brought here from the neighbouring towns, and sold to dealers from London. The market is on Wednesday.
WINCANTON, anciently called “Wyndcaleton,” from its position on the river Cale, is a town of very great antiquity, and the head of a petty sessional division and union, with a station on the Somerset and Dorset railway, 115 ½ miles, via Temple Combe, from London by rail and 108 by road, 5 south from Bruton and 18 south-east from Wells, in the Eastern division of the county, Norton Ferris hundred, rural deanery of Bruton, archdeaconry of Wells and diocese of Bath and Wells. The great road through Salisbury to London from the West of England passes through the town, which is called a borough, but has no chartered corporation. The town is governed by a Parish Council of 15 members, formed under the provisions of the “Local Government Act, 1894”: it is paved, lighted with gas from works in Station road and supplied with water from springs rising at Penselwood, 3 miles north-east, whence it is conveyed through pipes laid down at a cost of £5,000, by the late Rural Sanitary Authority; an extension of the water supply is now (1901), in preparation, from plans by Mr. A. P. I. Cottrell, of Bristol: the town has been efficiently drained, the sewage flowing into tanks half a mile south, where it is deodorized and utilized on the principle of Mr. Edward Ellis, of Exeter: the lighting of the town is now under the control of the Parish Council. Stavordale, included in this parish for ecclesiastical purposes, gives the title of viscount to the Fox-Strangways family, Earls of Ilchester. The church of S.S. Peter and Paul, almost entirely rebuilt, with the exception of the tower, at a cost of £6,000, from plans by the late J. D. Sedding, architect, of London, and consecrated August 15, 1889, is an edifice of stone in the Perpendicular style, with pierced parapets and pinnacles, and consists of chancel, nave, north and two south aisles, chapel, vestries and an embattled western tower, with pinnacles, dating from the reign of Edward II. and containing 6 bells: the church is seated with oak, and has 700 sittings, of which two-thirds are free. The register dates from the year 1636. The living is a rectory, net yearly value £322, including 42 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Right Rev. H. W. Yeatman-Biggs D.D. suffragan bishop of Southwark, and held since 1896 by the Rev. Walter Farrer M.A. of Balliol College, Oxford, rural dean of Bruton, surrogate, and chaplain to the Wincanton union. The late Miss Cliafyn Grove augmented the living by presenting the great tithes, amounting in the gross to £10,000 and about £320 yearly. The Carmelite Priory in South street, erected in 1888—9, at a cost of £2,000, from plans by the Rev. Father Scoles, is a building of stone, and has an attached temporary chapel, dedicated to St. Luke, and affording 100 sittings. The convent of St. Joseph, in North street, for nuns of the Order of the Ursuline Sisters of Jesus, was acquired in 1892, and elementary, private and free schools have since been added. The meeting house of the Society of Friends is in High street and has a burial-ground attached, about 30 feet square; there is also a Congregational chapel, in Mill street, built in 1799, and seating 400 persons; and a Baptist chapel in Mill street, built in 1833, with 250 sittings: the Wesleyan chapel, in North street, will seat 200 persons; the Calvinistic Christian chapel, in High street, affords 40 sittings; the members of the New Jerusalem church (Swedenborgians) meet on Sundays at the Good Templars’ Hall, and the Brethren at a private house in High street. A Cemetery, at Glyns, west of the town, was formed in 1888, at a cost of £1,300, and is now under the control of the Parish Council.
The Town Hall, on the west side of the Market place, destroyed by fire, August 9, 1877, was rebuilt in the following year, and consists of a spacious hall, used for the sittings of the magistrates in petty sessions, the county court, and for public meetings, and holding 350 persons, with a room adjoining: the ground floor is used as a market hall. Here are the headquarters of the H Troop (B Squadron) of the North Somerset Imperial Yeomanry. A contingent of the F Co. of the 3rd Volunteer Battalion, Prince Albert’s (Somersetshire Light Infantry), has an Armoury in the Town hall.
The Constitutional Club, established 1884, and the Wincanton Social Club, formed in 1901, are in High street, the Freemasons’ Hall in Church street and the Good Templars’ Hall, built in 1881, in North street; the latter will hold 120 persons. There is a fire brigade and several clubs and local institutions, including a cricket club, coal and clothing clubs and two temperance societies. The Field Club was formed in 1889 for the purpose of examining the interesting features in which the locality abounds. Stuckey’s Banking Company Limited and the Wilts and Dorset Banking Company Limited, have each a branch here. The market day is on Wednesday, for the sale of corn, cattle and cheese. Fairs are held on Tuesday in Easter week, and on the 29th of September. Various charitable bequests, amounting to about £70 annually, have been made at different times; about £40 being allotted to church purposes and the remainder distributed amongst the poor. The Wincanton Hospital, which occupies premises in High street, was opened July 1, 1901, for patients suffering from disease (not being infectious or chronic) or accident, who cannot be properly treated at home: persons other than the very poor are required to pay; patients are admitted from the various parishes of the Wincanton union, and from other places within 10 miles. The charities are managed by a body of 16 feoffees, and comprise church and poor’s lands and the fairs and markets trust. In the ecclesiastical parish are the remains of the priory of Stavordale, founded in the reign of Henry III. for canons of the Augustinian order, and dedicated to St. James: the circumstances of the actual foundation, owing the contradictory statements, have not been definitely settled, this being attributed on the one hand to Henry, Baron Lovel of Cary, in 1263, and on the other to Sir William Zouche: but little of the conventual buildings now exists: the shell of the church remains, the choir having been converted into a dwelling house and the nave into a barn: on the north side of the choir is an exquisite chapel, with a fan-traceried roof and a panelled arch by which it opened to the choir: it is now divided into several floors, the lowermost being used as a dairy; in these are some elegant brackets and shields of arms of the Lovel, St. Maur and Zouche families: the existing work is Perpendicular, and some of the woodwork in the house is of the same period. In the centre of a wood near the priory is the site of a British fort, called by the woodmen “Kennewilkins” or “Kenwalch” Castle. At Horwood, about a mile south-east of the town, are mineral springs, resembling in their properties those of Cheltenham. The manor of Wincanton was given by William I. to Walter de Dowai; it was afterwards in the possession of the Lovels, Earls of Yvery in Normandy and Barons Lovel of Cary, and descended by the marriage of Muriel, granddaughter and heiress of Richard, Baron Lovel to Nicholas, third Baron St. Maur, to the Saint Maur family. The first blood in the Revolution of 1688 was shed here, the Prince of Orange, who had landed at Torbay, 5th November of that year, being attacked on his way towards London by a party of the kings dragoons. The place suffered by a calamitous fire in 1707, when about 44 houses were consumed. During the latter part of the war with France, in the beginning of the 18th century, it was made a depot for French officers, prisoners of war, more than 400 of whom were at one time resident here. Henry Sacheverell D.D. impeached by the House of Commons in 1710, for his sermon entitled “The perils of false brethren both in Church and State,” a tirade against Dissent and the principles of the Revolution, was the grandson of John Sacheverell, incumbent here in 1661. The principal landowners are Mrs. Grant-Dalton, Sir Edward Bradford Medlycott bart. of Ven, Milborne Port, Sir Henry Hugh A. Hoars bart. of Stourhead House, the trustees of the late E. P. Trenchard esq. and C. P. Loader esq. of Buckhorn Weston. The area is 2,590 acres; assessment value, £9,289; the population in 1891, including 147 officers and inmates in the Workhouse, was 2,109 in the civil and 2,176 in the ecclesiastical parish.
By Local Government Board Orders 16,581 and 16,580, March 25, 1884 and Order 16,850, March 25, 1885, detached parts of Charlton Musgrove have been added to Wincanton.
Petty Sessions are held at the Town hall every Wednesday at 12.30 p.m. & last Monday in the month at 11 am.
The following places are included in the petty sessional division:-Alford, Ansford, Barrow North, Barrow South, Blackford, Bratton, Brewham North, Brewham South, Bruton, Cadbury. North, Cadbury South, Castle Cary, Charlton Horethorne, Charlton Musgrove, Cheriton North, Compton Pauncefoot, Corton Denham, Cucklington, Henstridge, Holton, Horsington, Lovington, Maperton, Milborne Port, Penselwood, Pitcombe, Shepton Montague, Sparkford, Stoke Trister, Stowell, Sutton Montis, Templecombe, Weston Bampfylde, Wheathill Wincanton & Yarlington.
WINCANTON UNION
Board day, Wednesday, at 11 a.m. at the Board room, Workhouse.
The Union consists of the following parishes:-Abbas & Temple Combe, Alford, Ansford, Barrow North, Barrow South, Blackford, Bratton, Brewham North, Brewham South, Bruton, Cadbury North, Cadbury South, Castle Cary, Charlton Horethorne, Charlton Musgrove, Cheriton North, Compton Pauncefoot, Corton Denham, Cucklington, Henstridge, Holton, Horsington, Lovington, Maperton, Milborne Port, Penselwood, Pitcombe, Queen Camel, Shepton Montague, Sparkford, Stoke Trister, Stowell, Sutton Montis, Weston Bampfylde, Wheathill, Wincanton & Yarlington. The population of the union in 1901 was 16,394; area, 64,540 acres; assessable value, at Lady Day, 1901, was £96,594.
The Workhouse, a structure of Ted brick, at the west end of the town, was enlarged in 1871, at a cost of £2,000, & will hold 250 inmates.
PLACES OF WORSHIP, with times of services
S.S. Peter & Paul Church, Rev. Walter Farrer M.A. rector; Rav. George Herbert Wilson M.A. curate; 8 & 11 am. & 6.30 p.m.; & 7.45 am. & 7.30 p.m. daily.
St. Luke’s Catholic Priory & Church, Very Rev. Edward Badger (prior), Rev. Joseph Elguea; Rev. Francis Lamb; Rev. Laurence Lamb & Rev. Aloysius Jackson; mass, 6.30, 8.30 & 10. 30 am. & compline, sermon & benediction, 6 p.m.; daily mass, 6.30 & 8.30 am.; Thur. & days of devotion, benediction 6 p.m.
Friends’ Meeting House; 11 am. & 6.30 p.m. in summer & 3 p.m. in winter; Thur. 11 am.
Baptist, Rev. Joseph Beaupre; 11 am. & 5 p.m.; Mon. 8 p.m.
Congregational, Rev. James Houston; 11 am. & 6.30 p.m.; Mon. 8 p.m.
Calvinistic Christians' Chapel; 11 am. & 6 p.m.; Tues. 7 p.m.
Wesleyan Methodist; 11 am. & 6 p.m.; Tues. 7.30 p.m.
Brethren’s Meeting Room, 47 High street; 11 am. & 6.30 p.m.; Tues. 8 p.m.; Thur. 7.30 p.m.
New Jerusalem; Sun. 11 am.
SCHOOLS
A School Board of 5 members was formed March 16, 1871; Frederick William Lancaster, West hill, clerk to the board; Frederick Francis, Station road, Wincanton, attendance officer.
Board Schools, South street, erected in 1896, at a cost of £4,000, for 160 boys, 160 girls & 140 infants; average attendance, 103 boys, 80 girls & 70 infants.
Catholic School, North street, founded in 1892, for 60 children; average attendance, 32; & conducted by the Ursuline Sisters.
Most Common Surnames in Wincanton
| Rank | Surname | Incidence | Frequency | Percent of Parent | Rank in Norton Ferris Hundred |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Parsons | 61 | 1:40 | 2.89% | 11 |
| 2 | Day | 37 | 1:65 | 3.17% | 37 |
| 3 | Feltham | 33 | 1:73 | 20.37% | 563 |
| 4 | Read | 31 | 1:78 | 6.11% | 153 |
| 5 | Pitman | 30 | 1:81 | 3.83% | 75 |
| 6 | Vining | 29 | 1:83 | 26.61% | 832 |
| 7 | White | 27 | 1:90 | 0.93% | 3 |
| 7 | Green | 27 | 1:90 | 2.53% | 47 |
| 9 | Thomas | 26 | 1:93 | 1.79% | 22 |
| 9 | Coombs | 26 | 1:93 | 3.15% | 71 |
| 11 | Cross | 23 | 1:105 | 3.69% | 111 |
| 11 | Perry | 23 | 1:105 | 1.52% | 19 |
| 13 | Edwards | 22 | 1:110 | 1.49% | 21 |
| 13 | Dyke | 22 | 1:110 | 7.80% | 313 |
| 13 | Davidge | 22 | 1:110 | 24.18% | 998 |
| 16 | Hutchings | 21 | 1:115 | 2.79% | 84 |
| 16 | Hoskins | 21 | 1:115 | 9.29% | 403 |
| 18 | Bond | 20 | 1:121 | 2.16% | 61 |
| 19 | Mitchell | 19 | 1:127 | 2.06% | 63 |
| 19 | Ford | 19 | 1:127 | 1.65% | 39 |
| 19 | Stacey | 19 | 1:127 | 3.97% | 167 |
| 22 | Newman | 18 | 1:134 | 3.56% | 157 |
| 22 | Weare | 18 | 1:134 | 14.63% | 744 |
| 24 | Harvey | 17 | 1:142 | 1.76% | 58 |
| 24 | Wadman | 17 | 1:142 | 21.25% | 1,126 |
| 24 | Benjafield | 17 | 1:142 | 32.08% | 1,514 |
| 27 | Woodcock | 16 | 1:151 | 50.00% | 2,217 |
| 27 | March | 16 | 1:151 | 5.05% | 281 |
| 27 | Hannam | 16 | 1:151 | 8.04% | 459 |
| 27 | Clewett | 16 | 1:151 | 88.89% | 3,173 |
| 31 | Richards | 15 | 1:161 | 1.18% | 33 |
| 31 | Knight | 15 | 1:161 | 1.32% | 41 |
| 31 | Shepherd | 15 | 1:161 | 3.42% | 183 |
| 31 | Mead | 15 | 1:161 | 3.48% | 188 |
| 31 | Dowding | 15 | 1:161 | 9.62% | 584 |
| 36 | Cox | 14 | 1:173 | 0.59% | 8 |
| 36 | Smart | 14 | 1:173 | 3.67% | 219 |
| 36 | Butt | 14 | 1:173 | 3.94% | 239 |
| 36 | Budgen | 14 | 1:173 | 87.50% | 3,399 |
| 40 | Perrett | 13 | 1:186 | 4.47% | 303 |
| 41 | Hunt | 12 | 1:202 | 0.84% | 23 |
| 41 | Pocock | 12 | 1:202 | 5.58% | 422 |
| 41 | Sweetman | 12 | 1:202 | 16.67% | 1,227 |
| 44 | Evans | 11 | 1:220 | 1.05% | 53 |
| 44 | Thompson | 11 | 1:220 | 2.28% | 166 |
| 44 | Tucker | 11 | 1:220 | 0.58% | 13 |
| 44 | Humphries | 11 | 1:220 | 2.93% | 224 |
| 44 | Hansford | 11 | 1:220 | 12.79% | 1,057 |
| 44 | Hilliar | 11 | 1:220 | 15.28% | 1,227 |
| 44 | Meares | 11 | 1:220 | 64.71% | 3,277 |
| 51 | Williams | 10 | 1:242 | 0.37% | 4 |
| 51 | Martin | 10 | 1:242 | 0.74% | 28 |
| 51 | Bailey | 10 | 1:242 | 0.92% | 45 |
| 51 | Warren | 10 | 1:242 | 1.29% | 77 |
| 51 | Roper | 10 | 1:242 | 6.21% | 568 |
| 51 | Symes | 10 | 1:242 | 3.03% | 266 |
| 51 | Maddocks | 10 | 1:242 | 71.43% | 3,674 |
| 51 | Bisgrove | 10 | 1:242 | 10.20% | 935 |
| 59 | Smith | 9 | 1:269 | 0.21% | 1 |
| 59 | Lewis | 9 | 1:269 | 0.59% | 18 |
| 59 | Long | 9 | 1:269 | 1.25% | 89 |
| 59 | Jennings | 9 | 1:269 | 1.75% | 146 |
| 59 | Gibbs | 9 | 1:269 | 1.10% | 72 |
| 59 | Sims | 9 | 1:269 | 1.97% | 172 |
| 59 | Rich | 9 | 1:269 | 2.14% | 194 |
| 59 | Foot | 9 | 1:269 | 3.53% | 354 |
| 59 | Bottle | 9 | 1:269 | 30.00% | 2,313 |
| 68 | Wright | 8 | 1:303 | 1.44% | 129 |
| 68 | Shaw | 8 | 1:303 | 8.60% | 975 |
| 68 | Payne | 8 | 1:303 | 0.75% | 49 |
| 68 | Coleman | 8 | 1:303 | 2.10% | 219 |
| 68 | Jordan | 8 | 1:303 | 4.15% | 471 |
| 68 | Coles | 8 | 1:303 | 0.46% | 14 |
| 68 | Lovell | 8 | 1:303 | 1.43% | 127 |
| 68 | Penny | 8 | 1:303 | 1.40% | 126 |
| 68 | Doughty | 8 | 1:303 | 24.24% | 2,166 |
| 68 | Snook | 8 | 1:303 | 2.25% | 239 |
| 68 | Pond | 8 | 1:303 | 14.29% | 1,465 |
| 68 | Hinks | 8 | 1:303 | 16.67% | 1,653 |
| 68 | Somers | 8 | 1:303 | 5.41% | 614 |
| 68 | Foyle | 8 | 1:303 | 24.24% | 2,166 |
| 68 | Hiscox | 8 | 1:303 | 4.82% | 542 |
| 68 | Bracher | 8 | 1:303 | 14.29% | 1,465 |
| 68 | Sugg | 8 | 1:303 | 11.11% | 1,227 |
| 68 | Beverage | 8 | 1:303 | 100.00% | 5,187 |
| 86 | Gilbert | 7 | 1:346 | 5.11% | 669 |
| 86 | Small | 7 | 1:346 | 1.88% | 229 |
| 86 | Everett | 7 | 1:346 | 14.89% | 1,681 |
| 86 | Shackleton | 7 | 1:346 | 77.78% | 4,797 |
| 86 | Ashford | 7 | 1:346 | 2.56% | 327 |
| 86 | Walford | 7 | 1:346 | 7.22% | 943 |
| 86 | Venn | 7 | 1:346 | 2.42% | 306 |
| 86 | Rumble | 7 | 1:346 | 38.89% | 3,173 |
| 86 | Sleeman | 7 | 1:346 | 46.67% | 3,536 |
| 86 | Dashwood | 7 | 1:346 | 26.92% | 2,545 |
| 86 | Vallis | 7 | 1:346 | 9.59% | 1,214 |
| 86 | Reakes | 7 | 1:346 | 4.14% | 534 |
| 86 | Dauncey | 7 | 1:346 | 23.33% | 2,313 |
| 86 | Beacher | 7 | 1:346 | 100.00% | 5,654 |
| 86 | Latcham | 7 | 1:346 | 8.54% | 1,099 |
| 101 | Wilson | 6 | 1:403 | 1.69% | 241 |
| 101 | Baker | 6 | 1:403 | 0.17% | 2 |
| 101 | King | 6 | 1:403 | 0.43% | 25 |
| 101 | James | 6 | 1:403 | 0.38% | 17 |
| 101 | Palmer | 6 | 1:403 | 0.36% | 15 |
| 101 | Freeman | 6 | 1:403 | 4.88% | 744 |
| 101 | Fowler | 6 | 1:403 | 1.37% | 184 |
| 101 | Atkins | 6 | 1:403 | 2.26% | 333 |
| 101 | English | 6 | 1:403 | 9.23% | 1,315 |
| 101 | Cannon | 6 | 1:403 | 5.66% | 858 |
| 101 | Howes | 6 | 1:403 | 11.54% | 1,540 |
| 101 | Cave | 6 | 1:403 | 4.38% | 669 |
| 101 | Dove | 6 | 1:403 | 13.64% | 1,779 |
| 101 | Goodfellow | 6 | 1:403 | 12.00% | 1,593 |
| 101 | Stagg | 6 | 1:403 | 2.29% | 340 |
| 101 | Watling | 6 | 1:403 | 33.33% | 3,173 |
| 101 | Osmond | 6 | 1:403 | 2.59% | 387 |
| 101 | Player | 6 | 1:403 | 5.41% | 816 |
| 101 | Brine | 6 | 1:403 | 3.03% | 461 |
| 101 | Trim | 6 | 1:403 | 4.72% | 716 |
| 101 | Chilcott | 6 | 1:403 | 2.11% | 308 |
| 101 | Biles | 6 | 1:403 | 50.00% | 4,036 |
| 101 | Biggin | 6 | 1:403 | 6.67% | 1,008 |
| 101 | Grinter | 6 | 1:403 | 3.37% | 509 |
| 101 | Doman | 6 | 1:403 | 11.54% | 1,540 |
| 101 | Marlin | 6 | 1:403 | 100.00% | 6,245 |
| 101 | Scamell | 6 | 1:403 | 100.00% | 6,245 |
| 101 | Shawe | 6 | 1:403 | 85.71% | 5,654 |
| 101 | Lydford | 6 | 1:403 | 22.22% | 2,481 |
| 101 | Hollway | 6 | 1:403 | 46.15% | 3,842 |
| 101 | Portnell | 6 | 1:403 | 100.00% | 6,245 |
| 101 | Top | 6 | 1:403 | 85.71% | 5,654 |
| 101 | Walburton | 6 | 1:403 | 85.71% | 5,654 |
| 134 | Taylor | 5 | 1:484 | 0.20% | 7 |
| 134 | Roberts | 5 | 1:484 | 0.95% | 144 |
| 134 | Bell | 5 | 1:484 | 1.53% | 271 |
| 134 | Bennett | 5 | 1:484 | 0.44% | 42 |
| 134 | Mason | 5 | 1:484 | 1.79% | 317 |
| 134 | Willis | 5 | 1:484 | 1.00% | 161 |
| 134 | Lucas | 5 | 1:484 | 1.48% | 259 |
| 134 | Vincent | 5 | 1:484 | 0.85% | 121 |
| 134 | Lancaster | 5 | 1:484 | 7.94% | 1,348 |
| 134 | Ralph | 5 | 1:484 | 8.06% | 1,363 |
| 134 | Earl | 5 | 1:484 | 8.20% | 1,376 |
| 134 | Way | 5 | 1:484 | 2.43% | 446 |
| 134 | Dix | 5 | 1:484 | 2.33% | 422 |
| 134 | Deane | 5 | 1:484 | 6.76% | 1,199 |
| 134 | Hine | 5 | 1:484 | 4.72% | 858 |
| 134 | Frampton | 5 | 1:484 | 2.87% | 518 |
| 134 | Pickford | 5 | 1:484 | 1.98% | 357 |
| 134 | Sansom | 5 | 1:484 | 5.10% | 935 |
| 134 | Longman | 5 | 1:484 | 3.42% | 621 |
| 134 | Shepperd | 5 | 1:484 | 11.11% | 1,753 |
| 134 | Foote | 5 | 1:484 | 7.81% | 1,331 |
| 134 | Kingdon | 5 | 1:484 | 6.33% | 1,142 |
| 134 | Herridge | 5 | 1:484 | 7.04% | 1,241 |
| 134 | Topp | 5 | 1:484 | 62.50% | 5,187 |
| 134 | Hoddinott | 5 | 1:484 | 3.94% | 716 |
| 134 | Selwyn | 5 | 1:484 | 38.46% | 3,842 |
| 134 | Oborn | 5 | 1:484 | 12.82% | 1,932 |
| 134 | Flicker | 5 | 1:484 | 27.78% | 3,173 |
| 134 | Huss | 5 | 1:484 | 100.00% | 6,987 |
| 134 | Mowland | 5 | 1:484 | 100.00% | 6,987 |
| 134 | Parman | 5 | 1:484 | 100.00% | 6,987 |
| 134 | Deanesly | 5 | 1:484 | 71.43% | 5,654 |
| 166 | Cooper | 4 | 1:605 | 0.55% | 87 |
| 166 | Parker | 4 | 1:605 | 0.33% | 36 |
| 166 | Carter | 4 | 1:605 | 0.39% | 54 |
| 166 | Barnes | 4 | 1:605 | 0.67% | 119 |
| 166 | Ross | 4 | 1:605 | 6.78% | 1,416 |
| 166 | McKay | 4 | 1:605 | 11.11% | 2,049 |
| 166 | Barber | 4 | 1:605 | 0.96% | 198 |
| 166 | Francis | 4 | 1:605 | 0.48% | 70 |
| 166 | Hodges | 4 | 1:605 | 0.56% | 92 |
| 166 | Lock | 4 | 1:605 | 0.43% | 62 |
| 166 | Jacobs | 4 | 1:605 | 1.65% | 371 |
| 166 | Burt | 4 | 1:605 | 0.98% | 201 |
| 166 | Horn | 4 | 1:605 | 9.76% | 1,863 |
| 166 | Beer | 4 | 1:605 | 2.44% | 555 |
| 166 | Rawlings | 4 | 1:605 | 1.25% | 277 |
| 166 | Gifford | 4 | 1:605 | 2.40% | 541 |
| 166 | Hayter | 4 | 1:605 | 4.40% | 998 |
| 166 | Parfitt | 4 | 1:605 | 0.66% | 116 |
| 166 | Raymond | 4 | 1:605 | 1.87% | 426 |
| 166 | Farthing | 4 | 1:605 | 1.82% | 415 |
| 166 | Knighton | 4 | 1:605 | 40.00% | 4,470 |
| 166 | Dymond | 4 | 1:605 | 17.39% | 2,758 |
| 166 | Whitelock | 4 | 1:605 | 9.30% | 1,805 |
| 166 | Spearing | 4 | 1:605 | 3.23% | 740 |
| 166 | Riddick | 4 | 1:605 | 14.29% | 2,419 |
| 166 | Coke | 4 | 1:605 | 50.00% | 5,187 |
| 166 | Sherring | 4 | 1:605 | 9.09% | 1,779 |
| 166 | Gawler | 4 | 1:605 | 6.90% | 1,434 |
| 166 | Traves | 4 | 1:605 | 28.57% | 3,674 |
| 166 | Plenty | 4 | 1:605 | 6.90% | 1,434 |
| 166 | Carp | 4 | 1:605 | 8.51% | 1,681 |
| 166 | Breeds | 4 | 1:605 | 100.00% | 7,808 |
| 166 | Hamblyn | 4 | 1:605 | 23.53% | 3,277 |
| 166 | Keniston | 4 | 1:605 | 20.00% | 2,987 |
| 166 | Dave | 4 | 1:605 | 80.00% | 6,987 |
| 166 | Glisson | 4 | 1:605 | 14.81% | 2,481 |
| 166 | Melyard | 4 | 1:605 | 100.00% | 7,808 |