servant [S] 1 [S] n[Act of Parliament:?]...if any Master becomes insolvent the Servants he has employ'd in the Fisherys have a prior claim to the Oil, Blubber and Fish to satisfy their Wages, ...PRINTED ITEM DNE-cit22 July 68 W. J. KIRWINUsed I and SupUsed I and SupUsed IFISHERY SERVANT, FISHING ~ . Cp DIETER, wages-servant, summer servants, servant passengers, shareman, seruants.The source is listed as [1794] 1968 THOMAS 170 in DNE
servant [S] 1 [S] nThe fishing servants are shipped now [May],PRINTED ITEM DNE-citWK 4/12/69 JH ...
servant [S] 1 [S] nAfter 1789 servants on ships became fewer, dropping from 4,799 to 2,438 in 1792...
servant [S] 1 [S] nAdde vnto them the families or seruants of diuers Owners and Masters of such sh...
servant [S] 1 [S] n. . . it would be advisable that the passage-money . . . to be deducted out of ...
servant [S] 1 [S] nAll the men engaged in the fishery are not fishing on their own account; some ar...
servant [S] 1 [S] nA [merchant] who employed a large number of servants usually had a cook and a bu...
servant [S] 1 [S] nFemales engaged as servants in the fishery or as Passengers between Newfoundland...
servant [S] 1 [S] nIt is said that the wages-servant in the fishery runs no such risk as the sharem...
servant [S] 1 [S] nThese were for the most part, either young men who came over as Servants and nev...
servant [S] 1 [S] nPreference to be given to the Natives, and next, to Planters, who have resided a...
servant [S] 1 [S] nThey are the men of the south coast, whose ancestors were expelled from Placenti...
servant [S] 1 [S] n. . were it not for the scarcity of Servants those Trades, might be improved to ...
servant [S] 1 [S] n. . . and liberty to go on shore on any part of _Newfoundland_, or any of the sa...
servant [S] 1 [S] nUsed I and SupUsed I and SupNot usedFISHERY SERVANT, FISHING ~ . Cp DIETER, wage...
servant [S] 1 [S] nAnd that any Aduenturer shall not onely haue his equall part...which may be yee...
servant [S] 1 [S] nThe fishing servants are shipped now [May],PRINTED ITEM DNE-citWK 4/12/69 JH ...
servant [S] 1 [S] nAfter 1789 servants on ships became fewer, dropping from 4,799 to 2,438 in 1792...
servant [S] 1 [S] nAdde vnto them the families or seruants of diuers Owners and Masters of such sh...
servant [S] 1 [S] n. . . it would be advisable that the passage-money . . . to be deducted out of ...
servant [S] 1 [S] nAll the men engaged in the fishery are not fishing on their own account; some ar...
servant [S] 1 [S] nA [merchant] who employed a large number of servants usually had a cook and a bu...
servant [S] 1 [S] nFemales engaged as servants in the fishery or as Passengers between Newfoundland...
servant [S] 1 [S] nIt is said that the wages-servant in the fishery runs no such risk as the sharem...
servant [S] 1 [S] nThese were for the most part, either young men who came over as Servants and nev...
servant [S] 1 [S] nPreference to be given to the Natives, and next, to Planters, who have resided a...
servant [S] 1 [S] nThey are the men of the south coast, whose ancestors were expelled from Placenti...
servant [S] 1 [S] n. . were it not for the scarcity of Servants those Trades, might be improved to ...
servant [S] 1 [S] n. . . and liberty to go on shore on any part of _Newfoundland_, or any of the sa...
servant [S] 1 [S] nUsed I and SupUsed I and SupNot usedFISHERY SERVANT, FISHING ~ . Cp DIETER, wage...
servant [S] 1 [S] nAnd that any Aduenturer shall not onely haue his equall part...which may be yee...
servant [S] 1 [S] nThe fishing servants are shipped now [May],PRINTED ITEM DNE-citWK 4/12/69 JH ...
servant [S] 1 [S] nAfter 1789 servants on ships became fewer, dropping from 4,799 to 2,438 in 1792...
servant [S] 1 [S] nAdde vnto them the families or seruants of diuers Owners and Masters of such sh...