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302. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, Allegheny County
303. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, Beaver County
304. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, Bradford County
305. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, Bucks County
306. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, Butler County
307. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, Centre County
308. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, Columbia County
309. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, Crawford County
310. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, Erie County
311. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, Huntingdon County
312. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, Indiana County
313. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, Lancaster County
314. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, Lehigh County
315. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, Mercer County
316. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, Northumberland County
317. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, Susquehanna County
318. Pennsylvania 1815 Coroner, York County
319. Pennsylvania 1816 Coroner, Bedford County
320. Pennsylvania 1816 Coroner, Cambria County
321. Pennsylvania 1816 Coroner, Columbia County
322. Pennsylvania 1816 Coroner, Cumberland County
323. Pennsylvania 1816 Coroner, Dauphin County
324. Pennsylvania 1816 Coroner, Delaware County
325. Pennsylvania 1816 Coroner, Lebanon County
326. Pennsylvania 1816 Coroner, Luzerne County
327. Pennsylvania 1816 Coroner, Lycoming County
328. Pennsylvania 1816 Coroner, Montgomery County
329. Pennsylvania 1816 Coroner, Somerset County
330. Pennsylvania 1816 Coroner, Tioga County
331. Pennsylvania 1816 Coroner, Union County
332. Pennsylvania 1816 Coroner, Wayne County
333. Pennsylvania 1817 Auditor, Mifflin County
334. Pennsylvania 1817 Coroner, Armstrong County
335. Pennsylvania 1817 Coroner, Berks County
336. Pennsylvania 1817 Coroner, Chester County
337. Pennsylvania 1817 Coroner, Fayette County
338. Pennsylvania 1817 Coroner, Franklin County
339. Pennsylvania 1817 Coroner, Lehigh County
340. Pennsylvania 1817 Coroner, Northampton County
341. Pennsylvania 1817 Coroner, Pike County
342. Pennsylvania 1817 Coroner, Schuylkill County
343. Pennsylvania 1817 Coroner, Washington County
344. Pennsylvania 1817 Coroner, Westmoreland County
345. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Adams County
346. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Allegheny County
347. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Beaver County
348. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Bedford County
349. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Bradford County
350. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Bucks County
351. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Butler County
352. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Centre and Clearfield Counties
353. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Columbia County
354. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Crawford County
355. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Dauphin County
356. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Erie County
357. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Huntingdon County
358. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Indiana and Jefferson Counties
359. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Lancaster County
360. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Lehigh County
361. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Mercer County
362. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Northumberland County
363. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Susquehanna County
364. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, Tioga County
365. Pennsylvania 1818 Coroner, York County
366. Pennsylvania 1819 Commissioner, Luzerne County
367. Pennsylvania 1819 Coroner, Cumberland County
368. Pennsylvania 1819 Coroner, Delaware County
369. Pennsylvania 1819 Coroner, Lebanon County
370. Pennsylvania 1819 Coroner, Montgomery County
371. Pennsylvania 1819 Coroner, Somerset County
372. Pennsylvania 1819 Coroner, Union County
373. Pennsylvania 1819 Coroner, Warren County
374. Pennsylvania 1819 Coroner, Wayne County
375. Pennsylvania 1820 Coroner, Berks County
376. Pennsylvania 1820 Coroner, Chester County
377. Pennsylvania 1820 Coroner, Franklin County
378. Pennsylvania 1820 Coroner, Mifflin County
379. Pennsylvania 1820 Coroner, Montgomery County
380. Pennsylvania 1820 Coroner, Northampton County
381. Pennsylvania 1820 Coroner, Perry County
382. Pennsylvania 1820 Coroner, Philadelphia City and Philadelphia County
383. Pennsylvania 1820 Coroner, Washington County
384. Pennsylvania 1820 Coroner, Westmoreland County
385. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, Adams County
386. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, Allegheny County
387. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, Beaver County
388. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, Bedford County
389. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, Bradford County
390. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, Bucks County
391. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, Butler County
392. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, Dauphin County
393. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, Erie County
394. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, Huntingdon County
395. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, Lancaster County
396. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, Lehigh County
397. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, Mercer County
398. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, Northumberland County
399. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, Susquehanna County
400. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, York County
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Although it generally disappears from the narratives of American history once the seat of national government departs Philadelphia in 1800, Pennsylvania was quite simply the ground floor of American democracy. The Keystone State produced no Jeffersons or Adamses, and its only president (James Buchanan) ranks comfortably in the bottom three, but this was the state where democratic politics, American-style, was invented. Given that Pennsylvania had early America's least stratified, most ethnically diverse electorate and most consistently liberal suffrage requirements, it should come as no surprise that such long-term features of American democracy as the political party, the presidential campaign, the nominating convention, and the partisan newspaper all started here.
Pennsylvania's fractious political history begins with the conflict over the state's ultraradical constitution of 1776. Written under the direct influence of Thomas Paine and the plebeian and middle-class militiamen who spearheaded Pennsylvania's belated independence movement, the 1776 constitution dispensed with the classical republican ideal of "mixed government" and vested nearly all power in a unicameral assembly elected under conditions of almost universal white manhood suffrage. That is, all "freemen" aged twenty-one or older who paid taxes or whose father paid taxes could vote and hold office. The legislature was constitutionally required to meet with its doors open to the public at all times. There was no upper house to check the people's annually elected representatives, and a chief executive called the president was elected by the legislature and had no veto power. The constitution would be enforced not by unelected judges but, rather, by a popularly elected Council of Censors that would convene to revise the constitution every seven years.
Bitter divisions over the constitution of 1776 and its radically democratic ideals defined the first party battle in Pennsylvania state politics and formed the backdrop for all further developments, as Philadelphia radicals and their rural allies tried to keep the state's uniquely democratic and egalitarian revolutionary legacy alive and others tried to curb or squelch it. No one dared to attack democracy or equality in principle, but many of Philadelphia's most prominent and erudite men, including Dr. Benjamin Rush, Judge James Wilson, and Chief Justice Thomas McKean, became harsh detractors of the 1776 constitution, pushing for a more conservative and conventional government with a bicameral legislature, a stronger executive, and a more independent judiciary. After more than a decade of opposition, these so-called Republicans finally succeeded in getting the new state constitution they wanted in 1790; many were also strong supporters of the new, less democratic federal Constitution that was written in Philadelphia. The radicals who defended the original document were known as Constitutionalists, a confusing appellation because many Pennsylvania Constitutionalists leaned against the generally antidemocratic federal Constitution.
The 1790 constitution created an assembly with annual terms and a state Senate whose members were elected to four-year terms. The old state "presidency" was replaced with a governor who was elected by the people every three years and had both the authority to veto legislation and the power to appoint an extensive array of state and county officials, right down to local recorders of deeds and justices of the peace. Judges in the expanded state court system were appointed by the governor and served for life ("during good behavior"). Although many Constitutionalists continued to prefer the old system, conflicts over the state government died down during the nine-year governorship of Thomas Mifflin, a popular war hero generally supported by all factions. Increasingly, over Mifflin's term, the real power accumulated in the hands of his right-hand man, Secretary of the Commonwealth Alexander J. Dallas, an ambitious lawyer recently emigrated from Jamaica.
Dallas was deeply involved in the emergence of the new political division that emerged in the 1790s, this time stemming from Philadelphia's status as the seat of national government. The "national" political controversies that broke out in the Cabinet and the Congress between Thomas Jefferson, Alexander Hamilton, and their followers were also local ones in Philadelphia as they spilled out into the streets and the press. The nascent national political parties (the Federalists who supported Hamilton's policies and thought of themselves more as friends of the government than as a party per se, and the Jeffersonian opposition who usually referred to themselves as Republicans but were often referred to by their enemies as "democrats or "Jacobins") battled over Philadelphia's Bank of the United States and fought for public approbation through Philadelphia newspapers that circulated nationally. When Citizen Edmond Genêt arrived and sparked the formation of the Democratic-Republican Societies, Philadelphia had the largest and most active ones.
As the epicenter of national political conflict, Philadelphia, followed by the rest of the state, led the nation in the development of party politics. Republican John Swanwick won one of the first clearly party-contested congressional elections in 1794, and a coterie of Philadelphians led by Clerk of the House of Representatives John Beckley and the Aurora newspaper mounted the first serious popular presidential campaign, for Thomas Jefferson, in 1796, carrying the state and almost the election for the opposition leader.
The Jeffersonian Republicans finally took power in the state in 1799, when Chief Justice McKean beat Federalist James Ross of Pittsburgh in the race to succeed Mifflin. A key factor in McKean's victory was the swing of many German Lutheran voters away from the Federalists in the wake of the offensive Direct Tax of 1798 (called the "Window Tax" for the one of the methods that assessors used to determine a taxpayer's wealth) and the overzealous, xenophobic suppression of Fries's Rebellion in the German areas of eastern Pennsylvania.
The Federalists remained competitive in certain areas of the state (especially the southeast) through the 1820s, but after 1799 they were reduced to playing spoiler or kingmaker in statewide elections. In 1800, Federalists in the state Senate prevented Pennsylvania from holding a popular presidential election at all, so certain were they of losing again. Luckily for the Federalists, the majority Republicans (increasingly either adding "Democratic" to their name after 1800 or switching to "Democrat") were plagued by factionalism. The old divide between Constitutionalists and Republicans reemerged with a vengeance after 1802, as radicals led by Aurora editor and Irish political refugee William Duane and Congressman Michael Leib clashed with McKean over impeachments and reforms of the court system and constitution designed to help more litigants avoid the need to hire lawyers, make judges more democratically accountable, and reduce the governor's appointment powers. McKean's vetoes of the reform legislation and his widely reported remarks about the "clodpoles and ignoramuses" who supported the reforms led to an 1805 reelection challenge by Speaker of the House Simon Snyder, a German of rural working-class roots who became the state's most popular political figure in the early nineteenth century. McKean barely won the 1805 election, but only by gaining support from Federalists and a breakaway faction of so-called "Constitutional Republicans." They were led by Alexander Dallas and consisted mostly of wealthier men, attorneys, and officeholders grown conservative in power and restive under the "tyranny of printers" such as Duane. The Aurora labeled the schismatics Quids, meaning "a hermaphrodite thing, partaking of two characters, and yet having neither!"
In 1808, all the Republicans united behind Snyder, who trounced James Ross in a campaign managed by Snyder's friend, editor John Binns of the Democratic Press, an immigrant radical like Duane but much more ideologically flexible. Relations cooled quickly between Duane's Philadelphia radicals and the more rural Snyderites, amid disagreements over the Republican establishment's increasing enthusiasm for banks and other economic development schemes that "Old School" Democrats such as Duane considered corrupt unless tightly controlled. The "New School" of Binns's Snyderites, allied with Dallas's Quids, dominated the state during most of the War of 1812 era and won recognition from the James Madison administration as the regular Democratic-Republican organization in Pennsylvania. The Old School men even cooperated with certain Federalists for a time in efforts to replace Madison with De Witt Clinton in the presidential election of 1812. Trying to break the New School's stranglehold on offices and patronage, Duane's Old School repeatedly challenged the prevailing legislative caucus system of nominating candidates for high office. The caucus was especially aberrant in Pennsylvania, where local public meetings had been the major form of party nominations since the 1790s.
The Old School Democrats' anti-caucus campaign finally met with some success after the War of 1812 during the misnamed Era of Good Feeling. A group of Old School men and disaffected Federalists meeting as "Independent Republicans" held Pennsylvania's first two-party conventions at Carlisle in 1816 and 1817 and nominated Joseph Hiester, who narrowly lost to the New School's man William Findlay, state treasurer under Snyder but a creature of the state's burgeoning business interests. Financial scandals in Findlay's administration, together with the Panic of 1819, enabled the Old School to run Hiester successfully in 1820. Thanks to a generational turnover in leadership, the regular, New School Democrats were increasingly known as the "Family" party after the three Philadelphia brothers-in-law who were its leaders: Postmaster Richard Bache, leading attorney Thomas Sergeant, and Alexander Dallas's son, future Vice President George Mifflin Dallas.
Left leaderless by Hiester's distaste for party politicking and Duane's financial collapse, the remnants of the Old School (including Duane's son and other Aurora veterans) could not prevent the Family's return to power in 1823. Yet that same year, they were crucial to the surprise launch of Andrew Jackson's presidential candidacy by a political convention in Harrisburg that upset the Family's plan to throw the state behind John C. Calhoun. The next decade saw a vicious factional battle for the mantle of Pennsylvania Jacksonianism that the Family, or "Eleventh-Hour Men," eventually won.
Bibliography
- Baumann, Roland M.
"John Swanwick: Spokesman for 'Merchant Republicanism' in Philadelphia, 1790–98." Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 97 (April 1973): 131–182. - Brunhouse, Robert L.
The Counter-Revolution in Pennsylvania, 1776–1790. Harrisburg: Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, 1971. - Ferguson, Robert J.
Early Western Pennsylvania Politics. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1938. - Higginbotham, Sanford W.
The Keystone in the Democratic Arch: Pennsylvania Politics, 1800–1816. Harrisburg: Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, 1952. - Kehl, James A.
Ill Feeling in the Era of Good Feeling: Western Pennsylvania Political Battles, 1815–1825. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1956. - Keller, Kenneth W.
"Cultural Conflict in Early Nineteenth-Century Pennsylvania Politics." Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 110 (1986): 509–530. - Klein, Philip Shriver.
Pennsylvania Politics, 1817–1832: A Game Without Rules. Philadelphia: Historical Society of Pennsylvania, 1940. - Koschnik, Albrecht.
"The Democratic Societies of Philadelphia and the Limits of the American Public Sphere, Circa 1793–1795." William and Mary Quarterly, 3rd series 58(3) (July 2001): 615–636. - Miller, Randall M. and William Pencak, eds.
Pennsylvania: A History of the Commonwealth. University Park and Harrisburg: Pennsylvania State University Press and Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, 2002. (Columbus: Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society, 1941-44). - Newman, Paul Douglas.
Fries's Rebellion: The Enduring Struggle for the American Revolution. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004. - Pasley, Jeffrey L.
"'A Journeyman, Either in Law or Politics': John Beckley and the Social Origins of Political Campaigning." Journal of the Early Republic, 16(4) (Winter 1996): 531–569. - Pasley, Jeffrey L.
"The Tyranny of Printers": Newspaper Politics in the Early American Republic. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 2001. - Phillips, Kim T.
"Democrats of the Old School in the Era of Good Feelings." Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, 95 (July 1971): 363–382. - ________.
"The Pennsylvania Origins of the Jackson Movement." Political Science Quarterly, 91(3) (Fall 1976): 489–508. - ________.
"William Duane, Philadelphia's Democratic Republicans, and the Origins of Modern Politics." Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 101 (1977): 365–387. - Phillips, Kim Tousley.
"William Duane, Revolutionary Editor." Ph.D. dissertation, University of California, Berkeley, 1968. - Sapio, Victor A.
Pennsylvania and the War of 1812. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1970. - Shankman, Andrew.
Crucible of American Democracy: The Struggle to Fuse Egalitarianism and Capitalism in Jeffersonian Pennsylvania. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2004. - Slaughter, Thomas P.
The Whiskey Rebellion: Frontier Epilogue to the American Revolution. New York: Oxford University Press, 1986. - Tagg, James D.
Benjamin Franklin Bache and the Philadelphia "Aurora." Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1991. - Tinkcom, Harry Marlin.
The Republicans and the Federalists in Pennsylvania, 1790–1801: A Study in National Stimulus and Local Response. Harrisburg: Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, 1950.
Coroner
Coroner: An officer of a county, district or municipality (formally also of the royal household), originally charged with maintaining the rights of the private property of the crown; in modern times his chief function is to hold inquests on the bodies of those supposed to have died by violence or accident.
Oxford English Dictionary
1787 - 1824: Delaware, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennyslvania
Office Scope: County / District (some combined counties within Ohio and Pennsylvania)
Role Scope: County / District (some combined counties within Ohio and Pennsylvania)