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Online services
Contact
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Mail :
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Plymouth and West Devon Record Office Community Services Department Unit 3 Clare Place Plymouth PL4 0JW |
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Phone :
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01752 305940 |
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Email :
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pwdro@plymouth.gov.uk |
Links
- Devon Record Office
- North Devon Record Office
- Cornwall Record Office
- Somerset Record Office
- Dorset History Centre
- National Archives
- Archive Awareness
- Friends of Devon's Archives
- Commonwealth War Graves Commission
- Hospital Records Database
- South West Image Bank
- Land Registry
- Access To Archives
- Devon Family History Society
- Society of Genealogists
- Ford Park Cemetery Trust
- Heritage Lottery Fund
- Plymouth schools directory
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Coroners' Records
The historic records of Her Majesty's Coroner for Plymouth and South West Devon
History
The office of Coroner in Plymouth can be traced back to a 14th century petition to the King. The petition stated that in matters of law, the people of Plymouth were being inconvenienced by being made to travel six leagues (about twenty miles) to the Abbot's Court at Buckland Abbey. This also applied to "felonies and homicides" because Plymouth had no Coroner. This lead to a charter being granted in 1440 giving the Borough of Plymouth the powers to elect a Coroner.
The Plymouth area has been served by three Coroners, one for each of the three Towns of Plymouth, Devonport and East Stonehouse. The three offices were merged in 1914 with the amalgamation of the three towns. Two Coroners, one for Plymouth district and one for Devonport district operated in tandem until the late 1920s. Areas outside of Plymouth were later added to the Coroner's area of responsibility and the office is now called the Plymouth and South West Devon Coroner.
The Records
We hold Coroners’ records dating back to 1892. The records form a rich source for medical, social and family history, although their contents are necessarily sensitive and to the family and loved ones of the deceased, deeply personal. Records are transferred to to the Record Office annually.
There are three main types of records:
- Coroners' Daily Record Books
- Post Mortem Reports
- Inquest and Post Mortem Information produced at Inquest
Other types of records held include Part A's, administrative records, note books and photographs.





