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England (Counties as in 1851-1901) => England => London and Middlesex => Topic started by: Sam Jones on Thursday 02 November 17 16:41 GMT (UK)
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Hi all,
The death certificate of my 3x great grandfather Charles Ayres states that he was a railway passenger guard, who sadly died after a fall from an engine plate. The date of death is 4th Nov 1907, and the informant is the Coroner for Westminster. An inquest date of 7th November 1907 is given.
This is the first inquest I've come across in my research, and so would appreciate any advice regarding next steps.
Regards
Sam
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Hi,
I'd start with emailing Westminster Archives to ask if they hold any Inquest files giving them details (name person, date of Inquest etc.).
A newspaper search might yield a report of the proceedings.
Good Luck!
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Not looking good for South Westminster...
Westminster (South Westminster)
1760-1880 at Westminster Abbey Muniment Room
The years 1760-1799 can be viewed online at www.londonlives.org/browse.jsp
1881-April 1944 not extant – records destroyed
http://www.rootschat.com/links/01kzq/
Paddington or Marylebone look more hopeful though. Can you pinpoint a bit more where your chap met his end?
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Thanks both of you for the replies:
Hi,
I'd start with emailing Westminster Archives to ask if they hold any Inquest files giving them details (name person, date of Inquest etc.).
A newspaper search might yield a report of the proceedings.
Good Luck!
I shall send an email their way today, hopefully they can point me in the right direction. So far newspaper searches are coming up empty but I will continue on.
Not looking good for South Westminster...
Westminster (South Westminster)
1760-1880 at Westminster Abbey Muniment Room
The years 1760-1799 can be viewed online at www.londonlives.org/browse.jsp
1881-April 1944 not extant – records destroyed
http://www.rootschat.com/links/01kzq/
Paddington or Marylebone look more hopeful though. Can you pinpoint a bit more where your chap met his end?
Charles was 58 when he died, and was living in Battersea. Railway records state that he was employed by the London, Brighton and South Coast Railway at the time, and that the accident may have happened close to Battersea as well. However he was taken to St George's Hospital, Hanover Square which is where the death is registered.
Hope this helps.
Regards
Sam
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Thanks Sam
The unfortunate thing about St George's Hanover Square is that it's not in Paddington or Marylebone
You'll not find a lot of London newspapers online but Westminster Archives itself has, I'm told, a good selection, so it'd be worth asking them about that more than the actual inquest records themselves
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Thanks Sam
The unfortunate thing about St George's Hanover Square is that it's not in Paddington or Marylebone
You'll not find a lot of London newspapers online but Westminster Archives itself has, I'm told, a good selection, so it'd be worth asking them about that more than the actual inquest records themselves
That's unfortunate, but thanks for clarifying. I've just sent the Westminster Archives an e-mail inquiring about their newspaper archives.
Regards
Sam
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I'll be at Westminster next week if you need me to look at anything specific they tell you about.