England Insurance Records - International Institute

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The original content for this article was contributed by The International Institute of Genealogical Studies in June 2012. It is an excerpt from their course English: Taxes, Lists, Business, Electoral and Insurance Records  by Dr. Penelope Christensen. The Institute offers over 200 comprehensive genealogy courses for a fee ($).







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Insurance (cont.)[edit | edit source]

Chart: TOPPINGS Index to Records of Sun Fire Office
(MS 11936)

NAME DETAILS DATES
TOPPING Other occupier on the Green at Richmond 14 Nov 1816
Other occupier near the Orange Tree, Richmond 1819-1824
William TOPPING The Duke’s Head, New Road back lane, victualler 29 Jan 1818
The Duke’s Head, Cable Street, victualler 5 Aug 1818
48 Union Street, Somers Town gent 11 Feb 1819
Red Lion, Red Lion Street, Holborn, victualler 13 Sep 1920
TOPPING WHARF Warehouse, Tooley St. 29 May 1820


It is probable that the two addresses in Richmond are actually the same dwelling. Did William have two pubs called The Duke’s Head or is this same edifice described differently? Did he keep moving to different premises, or install managers, or is there more than one William? The warehouse at Topping Wharf has the address 3-11 Tooley Street in the 1846 PO Directory.

Other examples of available insurance records include:

  • Redstone’s booklets on Bristol and Somerset Insurance Policy Holders 1714-1731.
  • Dickenson’s analysis of probate inventories and insurance records for the woollen and worsted industries in Yorkshire.
  • Stanley Chapman’s work on Devon fire insurance records of inventories of merchants’ and manufacturers’ property 1726-1770.
  • Over 300 Sun Fire Insurance Office Claims (1770-1788) are at the Society of Genealogists and an index of names, occupations and locations by county, together with examples, is given by Lawson-Edwards (Sun Fire Insurance Office Claims 1770-1788. Genealogists’ Magazine Vol. 18 #4, page 192-201, 1975).

To locate policies not at Guildhall consult the index of agents in Cockerell and Green who also give the addresses of firms so you can contact them directly.

Hawkings (Fire Insurance Records for Family and Local Historians, 2003) has written a guide for family and local historians and he estimates that by the end of the 18th century one third of tradesmen were insured by either the Sun or the Royal Exchange companies. Further details on the format and use of fire policy registers is given by Thomas (Fire Insurance Policy Registers. #19 in Short Guides to Records edited by Lionel M. Munby, 1972), and Blake (Archive Alphabet: F is for Fire Insurance Records. Practical Family History #7, page 7-8.) who notes other indexes and has examples. Camp’s 2003 article (“An Accidental Fire Happened…” Fire Insurance Policies and Claims. Family Tree Magazine Vol. 19 #6, page 26-28) is excellent on history and examples.


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Information in this Wiki page is excerpted from the online course English: Taxes, Lists, Business, Electoral and Insurance Records offered by The International Institute of Genealogical Studies. To learn more about this course or other courses available from the Institute, see our website. We can be contacted at wiki@genealogicalstudies.com

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