Quarter Sessions
Reference: Q/S Catalogue Title: Quarter Sessions Area: Catalogue Category: Public Records Description: Sessions Process Records
Covering Dates: 1596-1971
Catalogue Index
Use and to reveal/hide the structure of the catalogue index (requires Javascript to be enabled in your internet browser options). Click to jump directly to information at a specific level of the catalogue.
- Quarter Sessions
- Calendars of Prisoners: Quarter Sessions (Ref: Q/S/C 1-19)
- Calendars of Prisoners: Assizes (Ref: Q/S/C 20-23)
- Indictment Rolls (Ref: Q/S/I/1-78)
- Indictment Files (Ref: Q/S/I/79-346)
- Indictment Roll Acc: 2971 (Ref: Q/S/I/347)
- Indexes to Indictments (Ref: Q/S/I(IND)/1-2)
- Jury Panels (Ref: Q/S/JS/1-3)
- Abstracts of Orders (Ref: Q/S/OA/1-4)
- Orders of Court (Ref: Q/S/OA/5-9)
- Order Books (Ref: Q/S/OB/1-44)
- Sessions Court Books: First Court (Ref: Q/S/OC/1-9)
- Sessions Court Books: Second Court (Ref: Q/S/OC/10-12)
- Sessions Court Books: Third Court (Ref: Q/S/OC/13-14)
- Sessions Court Books: Fourth Court (Ref: Q/S/OC/15)
- Rough Order Books, 1735 - 1880 (Ref: Q/S/OM/1-38)
- Chairman's Notebooks: First Court (Ref: Q/S/ON/1-4)
- Chairman's Notebooks: Second Court (Ref: Q/S/ON/5)
- Chairman's Notebooks: Third Court (Ref: Q/S/ON/6)
- Chairman's Notebooks: Appeals Court (Ref: Q/S/ON/7-8)
- Process Books (Ref: Q/S/OP/1-3)
- Recognizance Books (Ref: Q/S/R/1-4)
Catalogue Description
This section comprises the records of the Justices assembled in Quarter Sessions as a court of justice.Catalogue Contents
CALENDARS OF PRISONERS, 1867 - 1966
Gives name, previous convictions, age, trade, education (until 1917), committing magistrate, dates of warrant and committal to custody, offence, when tried, verdict, sentence.
INDICTMENTS
These are formal indictments, or presentments, made by the Grand Jury for process to be instigated against the accused, the accused's name and the charge against him are given with sometimes a note of the plea but rarely the judgment. The indictments are recorded on long parchment files and most of the documents usually found with them in other counties, such as recognizances, jury lists, precepts, calendars of prisoners, petitions have not survived in Durham. Process records were recorded in Latin until 1733.
Indictment Rolls, 1596 - 1823
There are many gaps in the series of indictment rolls and few survive for the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. At this period the amount of judicial business in the order books is less and it would seem that more cases were referred to the Assizes instead of being tried at Durham Quarter Sessions. Rolls for 1711 and 1725 include part of the records of the Durham Assizes.
Indictment Files, 1840 - 1968
Files or bundles ofindictments for each sessions on partly printed parchments. Sometimes the plea of the accused and the verdict of the petty (or trial) jury is noted but not the sentence. Some have numbers marked in the corner: these appear to be the numbers of the prisoners in the gaol calendar. From 1965 precepts and jury lists are kept separately (See Q/S/JS). From Easter Sessions 1880 the files for each year were bound as volumes which always begin with the Winter or Epiphany Sessions of that year.
INDEXES TO INDICTMENTS, 1880 - 1926
Ref: Q/S/I(IND)/1JURY PANELS, 1963 - 1971
Precepts to sheriff to summon a jury with duplicated lists of jurors
Abstracts of Orders, 1823 - 1889
These volumes consist of printed leaflets bound into volumes and embody brief abstracts of county orders of public interest.
Printed copies of reports of county officers, committees etc and the court's resolutions concerning them
Ref: Q/S/OA/5MINUTES OF ORDERS
Records were kept of the formal judgements or orders, both judicial and administrative, made by Justices at Quarter Sessions. The main records were the order books or minutes of orders dating from 1616 (Q/S/OB). Judicial orders were written in Latin until 1733 but administrative orders were recorded in English.
From the late seventeenth century the order books were fair copies from rough minute books. The rough minute books survive from 1735 (Q/S/OM). From 1880 judicial process was recorded separately in special court books (Q/S/OC) and the order books were thereafter used only for administrative matters.
Some administrative orders were printed for general circulation and copies of these were bound as abstracts of orders (Q/S/OA).
Process books contain Clerk's memoranda of persons to be arraigned, estreats of fines and forfeited recognizances due to the crown (Q/S/OP).
Order Books, 1616 - 1971
These are registers of proceedings at Quarter Sessions. From the late eighteenth century some volumes contain indexes.
Sessions Court Books, 1880 - 1963
Registers of judicial court proceedings, recording names of justices present, jurors, names of prisoners, offences charged, plea, verdict, sentence. After 1969 this information was recorded in the calendars of prisoners so the series was discontinued
The volumes listed below have been retained as a sample
Ref: Q/S/ON/1Process Books, 1619 - 1778
Memoranda of presentments or indictments and informations presented, forming a record of matters for arraignment. The names, places of residence and occupation of those indicted and the charge are recorded briefly and marginal notes indicate the plea.
RECOGNIZANCES, 1855 - 1949
Recognizance Books, 1881 - 1949
These are lists of recognizances taken in court, recording name and address of principal and of sureties and the date, sum and condition