The 
National Archives are introducing a new "
Discovery" service for searching their records and are asking for people to try out the Beta version and let them know what you think of them, I don't have time to do a complete test but a search for "Hemel Hempstead revealed 1458 records including the following:
Reference: HO 47/6/20 
Description:
Report of Alexander Thomson on 1 collective petition (10 
people, including John Wheeldon, rector, the churchwardens and overseers of the 
poor, from Wheathampstead in Hertfordshire) on behalf of Thomas Smith alias 
Cockle, a "little" farmer, of Wheathampstead, convicted at the Hertfordshire 
Assizes, for stealing 5 ewe sheep, value £4, and 3 lambs, value 20/-, property 
of Thomas Fellows the elder, a farmer at Hemel Hempstead. Evidences supplied by 
Thomas Fellows the elder, Thomas Fellows junior, the prosecutor's son; Richard 
Gaddesden, Henry Randall, Thomas House and the prisoner. It was claimed that the 
stolen property had turned up at Tuddington Fair in December 1786. Mention is 
made of Tuddington, Dunstable and Kingsworth. Grounds for clemency: has a wife 
and 5 young children, first offence and was a hard worker. Initial sentence: 
death. Recommendation: no mercy. Folios 85-89. See also HO 47/6/14 folios 
55-56.
Date: 1787 Mar 31
Related Material: See also HO 
47/6/14 folios 55-56. 
Let me know, with a comment to this message, if you find anything interesting using the new service.
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