Editor's Note: The following are two of more than 100 record types cited in Hidden
Sources: Family History in Unlikely Places, by Laura Szucs Pfeiffer.
Body Transit Records
In an effort to stem the spread of communicable diseases, local
governments in many states required that bodies arriving in their
jurisdiction be registered. The resulting records cover a large
number of individuals.
As B-Ann Moorhouse, CG, FGBS, suggested in an article in The NYG&B
Newsletter (Moorhouse, 1992), "The Board of Health of the City of
New York required that any body arriving in Manhattan via ship,
train, or even local ferry be registered. Thus, the vacationer who
died out West and whose body was being shipped back for burial in
Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, the New Jersey resident or Staten
Island housewife whose body was being shipped across the river for
burial in upstate New York, the Civil War soldier and sailor whose
bodies were being shipped back to New England for burial, all were
registered with the City." Moorhouse also notes that the
registrations also applied to bodies being shipped in the opposite
direction. An example given in this article is that of the transit of
Abraham Lincoln, whose body passed through New York City on 24 April
1865. Biographical information included in the Lincoln record
includes his age (52 years, 2 months), nativity (Kentucky), place of
death (Washington, DC), date of death (15 April 1865), disease
(pistol shot), place of interment (Springfield, Ill.), and name and
address of person having charge of the body (P. Relyea).
Bodies in Transit, the records for New York City covering the years
1859 to 1894, have been microfilmed and are available at the
Municipal Archives of the City of New York, and through the Family
History Library. Body transit records are also available for a number
of other locations. Transit permits may also be interfiled with death
records in the place where the burial took place.
Selected Reading
Moorehouse, B-Ann. "Little-Publicized New York City Sources." The
NYG& B Newsletter. New York: New York Genealogical and Biographical
Society (Summer 1992, p. 11).
[For more on burial and transit permits, see George
Morgan's article "Using Burial Permits as Resources" in the
Ancestry.com Library.]
Coroner's Inquests
Although coroners are often associated with murder, their records
should not be overlooked. A coroner may have been called in to
investigate deaths occurring under the following circumstances:
accident, suicide, sudden death when in apparent good health,
unattended by a licensed physician at time of death, suspicious or
unusual causes, poisoning or adverse reaction to drugs or alcohol,
disease constituting a threat to public health, employment related
illness or injury, during medical diagnostic or therapeutic
procedures, in any prison or penal institution or while in police
custody, dead on arrival at hospital, unclaimed bodies, any body
brought into a new medico-legal jurisdiction without proper medical
certification, or any body to be cremated, dissected, or buried at
sea.
As with most records, the contents and condition of an individual's
inquest file may vary greatly from county to county, and even from
year to year.
Many inquest files contain sworn statements made by family and
friends of the deceased and any other witnesses present at the time
of death or when a body was discovered. A 1935 Chicago inquest, for
example, included a form requesting the full name of the deceased
along with the person's address, age, sex, marital status, color,
birthplace, length of residence in the United States, length of
residence in the city, occupation, employer, past occupation, wages
or salary due, amount of life insurance and to whom it was payable,
value of personal and real estate property, level of education,
number of dependents, and 10 questions regarding the decedent's
physical and mental health at the time of death.
Personnel in the county coroner's office should be able to provide
information on the location of files.
Selected Reading
Naanes, Ted, and Loretto Dennis Szucs. "Dead Men Do Tell Tales." Ancestry Magazine 12 (2) (Mar-Apr 1994): 6.
Roebuck, Haywood. "North Carolina Colonial Coroners' Inquests, 1738-75." North Carolina Genealogical Society Journal 1 (1975): 11-37.
Scott, Kenneth. Coroners' Reports, New York City, 1843-49. New York: New York Genealogical and Biographical Society, 1991.
Laura Szucs Pfeiffer, author of the book Hidden Sources: Family History in Unlikely Places, has been actively involved in researching her own family history for 10 years and is also currently working on her husband's family. Laura was also involved in the compilation of Family History Made Easy (Ancestry,
1998), They Became Americans: Finding Naturalization Records and
Ethnic Origins (Ancestry, 1997), and The Ancestry Family
Historian's Address Book (Ancestry, 1997).