List of 101 unclaimed estates in Bristol you could inherit if you have these surnames - how to claim

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Here is the most recent list of unclaimed estates in Bristol and how to make a claim if you think you may be entitled to a share of the property.

If you have one of these surnames, you could be about to find yourself much better off after the Treasury released its updated list of unclaimed estates in Bristol. An unclaimed estate happens when someone has passed away without having an effective will in place, with no family coming forward to make a claim.

It means the deceased’s property will become “ownerless property” and will therefore be in possession of the Crown. But within a 12-year period from when the Crown possesses the estate, family members can come forward if they believe they are entitled to a share of the property.

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For unclaimed estates before 1997, the Treasury will allow claims up to 30 years from the date of the person’s death, subject to no interest being paid on the money that is held - if the claim is received after the 12-year period has ended.

Here is the most recent list of unclaimed estates in Bristol and how to make a claim.

Who is entitled to an unclaimed estate?

If someone dies without leaving a valid or effective will the following relatives are entitled to the estate in the following order of priority:

  • Husband, wife or civil partner
  • Children, grandchildren, great grandchildren and so on
  • Mother or father
  • Brothers or sisters who share both the same mother and father, or their children (nieces and nephews)
  • Half brothers or sisters or their children (nieces and nephews of the half blood or their children). ‘Half ’ means they share only one parent with the deceased
  • Grandparents
  • Uncles and aunts or their children (first cousins or their descendants)
  • Half uncles and aunts or their children (first cousins of the half blood or their children). ‘Half’ means they only share one grandparent with the deceased, not both

If you are, for example, a first cousin of the deceased, you would only be entitled to share in the estate if there are no relatives above you in the order of entitlement, for example, a niece or nephew.

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Surnames of the unclaimed properties in Bristol

  1. Alders
  2. Banks
  3. Bauknecht
  4. Bidjikian
  5. Black
  6. Bridges
  7. Brown
  8. Bryant
  9. Campbell
  10. Carpenter
  11. Clark
  12. Cleghorn
  13. Clements
  14. Coles
  15. Collins
  16. Courtice
  17. Cromarty
  18. Cullen
  19. Dallas
  20. Davies
  21. Davies
  22. Davis
  23. Davis
  24. Delahunty
  25. Ellis
  26. Faulkner
  27. Foot
  28. Fox
  29. Gaez
  30. Gardner
  31. Grahame
  32. Green
  33. Greenman
  34. Gwozdzik
  35. Hall
  36. Harvey
  37. Healey
  38. Hirst
  39. Horseman
  40. Hudson
  41. Hunt
  42. James
  43. Johnston
  44. Jones
  45. Kowalski
  46. Leach
  47. Lee
  48. Lewis
  49. Loveridge
  50. Lovett
  51. Luce
  52. Madden
  53. Mann
  54. Marsh
  55. Martin
  56. Mason
  57. McDermott
  58. McKenzie
  59. Messer
  60. Moore
  61. Morgan
  62. Neal
  63. O’Donnell
  64. Panes
  65. Parkhouse
  66. Peterson
  67. Pinder
  68. Pitman-Jones
  69. Reid
  70. Robinson
  71. Rudge
  72. Ryan
  73. Samuda
  74. Saunders
  75. Savage
  76. Silverthorn
  77. Smith
  78. Smith
  79. Staniek
  80. Stevens
  81. Sullivan
  82. Szpak
  83. Taylor
  84. Taylor
  85. Thomas
  86. Thomas
  87. Turner
  88. Tusus-Platis
  89. Venn
  90. Vieke
  91. Walters
  92. Watkins
  93. Weaver
  94. Whitcher
  95. Whitcombe
  96. Whybrow
  97. Wiglasz
  98. Williams
  99. Wilson
  100. Woodley
  101. Wright

How to claim an unclaimed estate

Anyone who believes they might be entitled to a share of an unclaimed estate should contact the Treasury on the Government website.

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