Were your inlaws outlaws? Many researchers are surprised to find their ancestors were not always perfectly law-abiding, while others may be surprised to find that a descendant of a transported convict became an enforcer of the law. In this collection, we cover ancestors on both sides.
- Wanted in Dublin, 1694
- Capt. William Kidd, Pirate
- Virginia Sheriffs, 1699
- Virginia Sheriffs, 1700
- Virginia Sheriffs, 1701
- Massachusetts Bay Justiciary Nominations, 1702
- Massachusetts Bay Justiciary Nominations, County of Barnstable, 1702
- Virginia Sheriffs, 1702
- Yorkshire Convicted Papists, 1708 (Hang East Wapentake)
- Yorkshire Convicted Papists, 1716 (Birdforth and Allertonshire Wapentakes)
- Yorkshire Convicted Papists, 1716 (Bulmer Wapentake)
- Yorkshire Convicted Papists, 1716 (Gilling West Wapentake)
- Yorkshire Convicted Papists, 1716 (Hang West Wapentake)
- Yorkshire Convicted Papists, 1716 (Langbaurgh Wapentake)
- Yorkshire Convicted Papists, 1716 (Rydale, Pickering Lyth, and Whitby Strand Wapentakes)
- US Marshals, Arizona Territory, 1864 – 1912
- Assistant U.S. Attorneys, South Carolina 1871-1884
- Federal Officers for the Judicial District of South Carolina 1871-1884
- Convicts to Virginia, 1633 to 1638
- Virginia Loyal Address of the Justices and Officers, Military and Civil, of Lancaster County, 1701/2
- Virginia Loyal Address of the Justices of the Peace, Officers of the Court and Militia Officers for James City County, 1702
- Virginia Loyal Address of the Magistrates and Freeholders of New Kent County, 1701/2
- Virginia Loyal Address of the Magistrates and Grand Jury of Charles City County, 1702
- Penitentiary of Georgia, 1850
- Penitentiary of Georgia, 1860 (A through K)