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2. Ohio 1803 Coroner, Fairfield County
3. Ohio 1803 Coroner, Hamilton County
4. Ohio 1803 Coroner, Montgomery County
5. Ohio 1803 Coroner, Ross County
6. Ohio 1803 Coroner, Washington County
7. Ohio 1804 Coroner, Adams and Scioto Counties
8. Ohio 1804 Coroner, Belmont County
9. Ohio 1804 Coroner, Clermont County
10. Ohio 1804 Coroner, Hamilton County
11. Ohio 1804 Coroner, Ross County
12. Ohio 1804 Coroner, Washington County
13. Ohio 1805 Coroner, Butler County
14. Ohio 1805 Coroner, Montgomery County
15. Ohio 1805 Coroner, Warren County
16. Ohio 1806 Coroner, Clermont County
17. Ohio 1806 Coroner, Hamilton County
18. Ohio 1806 Coroner, Ross County
19. Ohio 1806 Coroner, Washington County
20. Ohio 1807 Coroner, Highland County
21. Ohio 1807 Coroner, Montgomery County
22. Ohio 1808 Coroner, Clermont County
23. Ohio 1808 Coroner, Delaware County
24. Ohio 1808 Coroner, Knox County
25. Ohio 1808 Coroner, Knox County
26. Ohio 1808 Coroner, Portage County
27. Ohio 1808 Coroner, Ross County
28. Ohio 1809 Coroner, Columbiana County
29. Ohio 1809 Coroner, Highland County
30. Ohio 1809 Coroner, Montgomery County
31. Ohio 1810 Coroner, Hamilton County
32. Ohio 1810 Coroner, Muskingum County
33. Ohio 1810 Coroner, Ross County
34. Ohio 1811 Coroner, Butler County
35. Ohio 1811 Coroner, Columbiana County
36. Ohio 1811 Coroner, Franklin County
37. Ohio 1811 Coroner, Highland County
38. Ohio 1811 Coroner, Knox County
39. Ohio 1811 Coroner, Miami County
40. Ohio 1811 Coroner, Montgomery County
41. Ohio 1811 Coroner, Warren County
42. Ohio 1812 Coroner, Hamilton County
43. Ohio 1812 Coroner, Muskingum County
44. Ohio 1812 Coroner, Pickaway County
45. Ohio 1812 Coroner, Ross County
46. Ohio 1812 Coroner, Trumbull County
47. Ohio 1812 Coroner, Washington County
48. Ohio 1813 Coroner, Ashtabula County
49. Ohio 1813 Coroner, Columbiana County
50. Ohio 1813 Coroner, Hamilton County
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In these years, Ohio changed from a virtually unpeopled frontier area within the Northwest Territory to the fourth most powerful state in federal elections. Its first significant elections were for the lower house of the Territorial Assembly in December 1798. Suffrage was restricted to adult males who owned fifty acres freehold (the most limited franchise in the nation), although Governor Arthur St. Clair extended the vote to those who owned town lots of comparable value. Voting took place viva voce at the county seat, under the supervision of men appointed by the governor, who also determined apportionment and could veto legislation and prorogue (postpone) and dissolve the Assembly. The upper house, the Council, was appointed by the president from a list of names drawn up by the house; Congress appointed the governor on the president's nomination. This authoritarian system was overthrown when Congress passed the Enabling Act of 1802, authorizing the calling of a convention elected virtually on the basis of manhood suffrage.
Ohio became a state in March 1803, operating under the constitution drafted in November 1802. That instrument gave little power or patronage, and no veto, to the governor, who was elected biennially. The all-powerful General Assembly was divided into two chambers: The House was elected annually by county constituencies, and the Senate was elected biennially, half the members each year, in districts made up of one or more counties. There were no property qualifications for membership in the Assembly. Every four years the state took a census of adult males and redistributed legislative seats, and congressional districts were reapportioned each decade immediately after Congress had reapportioned the federal House and electoral college. Beginning with the first presidential election in 1804, the electors were chosen by statewide popular vote. The right to vote was limited to white adult males who had been resident for one year and had paid a tax. However, because the state constitution defined compulsory work on the roads as a tax and all adult males between the ages of 18 and 55 were obliged to work on the roads (or buy a substitute), this amounted to a nearly all-inclusive franchise for white males. From the start, voting was by secret ballot, with ballots deposited in special locked boxes, and whereas under the territory, voters had had to travel to the few county seats to vote, people now voted at a central place in each of the rapidly multiplying townships.
This democratic electoral system produced elections that saw a surprising degree of partisan action and comparatively high—but fluctuating—voter involvement, especially after 1807 when the key elections began to coincide in even years. The Federalist predominance of the territorial period was overthrown in 1802—1803, and the then overwhelmingly dominant Democratic-Republican party soon divided along factional lines, notably over the role of the judiciary. In some parts of the state, the Federalist Party revived after 1807 but suffered a severe decline after 1816. As a consequence, nonpartisan elections became even more common, although old-party considerations operated in some local elections into the 1820s. In 1824 Ohio's first competitive election for the presidency saw turnout surge as voters began giving their allegiance to entirely new political formations.
Bibliography
Annual Report of the Secretary of the State to the Governor of the State of Ohio: including the statistical report to the general assembly for the year 1875. Colombus, OH: Nevins & Myers, State Printers, 1876. (Lists members of the General Assembly and their districts from the formation of the state)- Brown, Jeffrey P. and Andrew R. L. Cayton, eds.
The Pursuit of Public Power: Political Culture in Ohio, 1787–1861. Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, 1994. - Cayton, Andrew R. L.
The Frontier State: Ideology and Politics in the Ohio Country. Kent, OH: Kent State University Press, 1986. - Ohio Historical Society, Ohio Fundamental Documents Searchable Database,
http://www.ohiohistory.org/resource/database/funddocs.html - Ratcliffe, Donald J.
"Voter Turnout in Early Ohio," Journal of the Early Republic, 7 (1987): 223–251. Reprinted in New Perspectives on the Early Republic, ed. Ralph D. Gray and Michael A. Morrison. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1994, pp. 269–297. - ________.
"The Mystery of Ohio's Missing Presidential Election Returns, 1804–1848," Archival Issues: The Journal of the Midwest Archives Conference, 17(2)(1992): 137–144. - ________.
Party Spirit in a Frontier Republic: Democratic Politics in Ohio, 1793–1821. Columbus, OH: Ohio State University Press, 1998. - ________.
The Politics of Long Division: The Birth of the Second Party System in Ohio, 1818–1828. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2000. - ________.
"The Changing Political World of Thomas Worthington." inThe Center of a Great Empire: The Ohio Country in the Early Republic , ed. Andrew R. L. Cayton and Stuart D. Hobbs. Athens: Ohio University Press, 2005, pp. 36–61. - Utter, William T.
The Frontier State, 1803–1825 , 1943 reprint ed. Columbus: Ohio Historical Society, 1968), Vol. 2 of Carl Wittke, ed., A History of the State of Ohio, 6 vols. Columbus: Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society, 1941–1944.
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)