Virginia Coroners' Inquisitions Records , 1766-1866 for enslaved individuals or free persons of color who died by a sudden, violent, unnatural or suspicious manner, or died without medical attendance.
Information found in the inquisition include the name of the coroner, the names of the jurors, the name and age of the deceased if known, gender and race of the deceased, and when, how, and by what means the deceased came to his or her death. If the
deceased was African American, the inquest would identify the deceased as an enslaved African American or free African American if known. If the deceased was an enslaved African American, the inquest would include, if known, the name of the enslaver and the enslaver’s residence. Information found in the depositions will include the name of the deponent and his or her account of the circumstances that led to the death of the deceased. Unlike many other legal proceedings in Antebellum Virginia, enslaved African
Americans were permitted to provide depositions for Coroners’ Inquisitions.
Data in this collection is drawn directly from the original historical records and may contain terminology which is now deemed offensive.