Records of the Livery Companies of London are one of the greatest archival
treasures of the world. Dating from the late medieval period to the present,
they provide a mass of information on innumerable subjects. For the family
historian, they can provide an immense amount of genealogical and biographical
details on members.
The Abstracts provide information from the apprenticeship records of a number
of the livery companies selected because the records generally give good
genealogical detail, principally, the name, parish and occupation of the
apprentice's father. For a given livery company, the abstracts will generally
end about 1800 or later, depending on the coverage of the manuscript volume
containing that year. In some cases records cease before 1800.
Over 100,000 of these record abstracts are contained in the database,
with over 300,000 names indexed: apprentices, their parent, and
masters. In nearly every case, the father (more rarely the mother)
of the apprentice is given, with their place of residence - which
can be anywhere in the British Isles or overseas.
In early records, persons who belonged to a given livery company would
generally practice the trade to which that Company referred, but after about
1650, it became more and more common (until in some companies virtually
universal) that members practised another trade altogether. Searchers,
therefore, even if they know the occupation of the subject of interest, may not
be able to find the right livery company to search at all easily.