Coroners' Records
Contents
Coroners records
What will I find?
Deaths are usually reported to a coroner if they are sudden, by the police or a doctor
The coroner will seek to establish a medical cause of death, sometimes by conducting a post mortem. The coroner may decide the death was of natural causes, if not he will order an inquest. An Inquest is a fact finding enquiry - who died where and when and how the death arose.
The Coroner then prepares a report (the Coroners Report). The Coroner has a legal obligation to retain all files for 15 years - individual Coroners then decide what happens to them after that, which will account for regional variations in survival.
If it is not known which coroner dealt with a death, it will normally be mentioned on the death certificate. Every coroner keeps an index of all deaths reported to him or her, and so should be able to confirm whether a particular death was dealt with by their office.
The current coroner should know which archive service (i.e. town, county, national) would have been involved.
An applicant will need the current coroner's permission to have access to the report, unless it is more than 75 years old.
Inquest Papers (75 year rule), Inquest registers (open access) and the post mortem File (kept for 15 years and often destroyed). - this needs sorting.