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Office
Coroner
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District
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1 - 16 of 16
2. Pennsylvania 1802 Coroner, Armstrong and Westmoreland Counties
3. Ohio 1804 Coroner, Adams and Scioto Counties
4. Pennsylvania 1804 Coroner, Lycoming County
5. Pennsylvania 1807 Coroner, Lycoming and Potter Counties
6. Pennsylvania 1808 Coroner, Venango and Warren Counties
7. Pennsylvania 1809 Coroner, Centre and Clearfield Counties
8. Pennsylvania 1811 Coroner, Philadelphia City and Philadelphia County
9. Pennsylvania 1811 Coroner, Venango and Warren Counties
10. Pennsylvania 1817 Coroner, Philadelphia City and Philadelphia County
11. Pennsylvania 1817 Coroner, Venango and Warren County
12. Pennsylvania 1819 Coroner, Centre and Clearfield Counties
13. Pennsylvania 1819 Coroner, Lycoming, McKean and Potter Counties
14. Pennsylvania 1821 Coroner, Indiana and Jefferson Counties
15. Pennsylvania 1822 Coroner, Centre and Clearfield Counties
16. Pennsylvania 1824 Coroner, Indiana and Jefferson Counties
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)