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Death Inquisition Taken at the Dwelling House of Nicolas Keeter, in
Rochester, 1751
Ulster County Ss:
Inquisition Indented taken at the Dwelling House of Nicolas
Keeter, in
Rochester in ye County of Ulster aforesaid and Province of New York, the
Seventeenth Day of September and in the year of our Lord Christ, One thousand
Seven hundred and Fifty-One,
by Martin Bogart, Coroner, and Jacobus Depuy, Thomas van de Marken, Peter
Hendrickse, Johannes Davids, Jacobus Depuy Jun. Frederick Shonigh, Johannes
Hendrickse, Hendrick Krom, Joris Middagh, Ephraim Chambers, Adam Rauch, Jacobus
Hendrickse, Patrick Dover & Jacobus Quick, Jurors: Who being Sworn on the
Holy Evangelist of Almighty God - Say that Petrus Oosterhout, now dead was, on
the Sixteenth, Inst. Falling a Tree, Whereon was a Dead limb or bough, which by
the Falling of said tree broke off and Fell on the said Petrus Oosterhout and
caused his Death, according to the best of their knowledge & further say
not: In Testimony whereof the said Coroner as well as the said Jurors have there
unto set their hands and Seals the Day and Year first above Written -
| Johannes Hendrickse |
|
| Hendrick Krom |
Marten Bogart |
| Joris Middaugh |
Jacobus Deprue |
| Empraim Chambers |
Petrus
Hendrickse
his
mark |
| Adam Raush |
Johannyes Davyds |
|
Jacobus
Hendrickse
his
mark |
Jacobus Depuy Jun. |
|
Patrick
Dover
his
mark |
Frederig Shonig |
|
Jacobus
Quick
his
mark |
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Note:
The purpose of a death inquisition or Coroner’s Inquest was to determine
the cause of any unnatural death. The hearings, organized by the Coroner, could
be held anywhere. After his own examination, the Coroner empaneled a jury of
between nine and fifteen jurors from the community to view the body and
help determine the cause of the death. Here, it was determined that Petrus
Oosterhout was hit by a limb that fell from a tree he was cutting. Coroners’
records are among the most fascinating, not so much for their morbidity, but how
they indicate the variety of causes of death over time. Other inquests in the
collection show a variety of causes: explosions in graining mills; powder blasts
at quarries; horse and wagon accidents; and in one case, sleepwalking off a
sloop anchored in the Rondout Bay. Also of interest, is the handwriting skills
of the jurors as revealed in their signatures; five of whom could not write
their names, but only make their mark.
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