H.R. Oswald | |
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Born | Henry Robert Oswald 8 February 1852 Trichnopoly, Madras Presidency |
Died | 1940 Salisbury, Wiltshire, England |
Nationality | British |
Occupation(s) | Medical Doctor and Barrister of Law |
Known for | Coroner of London |
Henry Robert Oswald M.D., M.B., C.M., (8 February 1852 [1] – 1940 [2]) was a British barrister and coroner. He was president of the Coroners' Society of England and Wales.
Oswald was born on 8 February 1852 in Trichnopoly, Madras, India, the son of Surgeon General H.R. Oswald who was serving in the Indian Army. [2] He was privately educated in the Isle of Man and later Edgbaston, Birmingham, before moving on to the Royal High School, Edinburgh. [2] Oswald originally intended to enter the Indian Civil Service but changed his mind and studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh. [2] He then went into practice as a medical doctor, achieving his MD from the University of Edinburgh in 1881. [3] Then, in 1890 he entered the Middle Temple to train as a barrister, being called to the bar in 1894. [2]
Oswald became the deputy-coroner in the Central and Western districts of London, and later in the South-Western and Kingston districts. [2] In 1902 he became the coroner for the South-Eastern district. He moved to the Western district in 1919, a post he held until he retired in 1930. [2]
Oswald presided over between 20,000 and 30,000 inquests. [2] Among the notable ones were the first inquest about death from a motor car (1904), [4] a case involving Ronald True, [4] the death of Freda Kempton from a drug overdose in which the dealer Brilliant Chang was implicated (1922), [5] and deaths caused by the 1928 Thames flood of London. [6]
His reminiscences were published in 1936 by Stanley Paul as Memoirs of a London County Coroner.
Oswald married twice, firstly to Jean Moir-Byres with whom he had a daughter. Jean died in 1907. He married again in 1908 to Ethel Mary Cundell. [2] Oswald died in early 1940 in the Salisbury district of Wiltshire.
H.R. Oswald | |
---|---|
Born | Henry Robert Oswald 8 February 1852 Trichnopoly, Madras Presidency |
Died | 1940 Salisbury, Wiltshire, England |
Nationality | British |
Occupation(s) | Medical Doctor and Barrister of Law |
Known for | Coroner of London |
Henry Robert Oswald M.D., M.B., C.M., (8 February 1852 [1] – 1940 [2]) was a British barrister and coroner. He was president of the Coroners' Society of England and Wales.
Oswald was born on 8 February 1852 in Trichnopoly, Madras, India, the son of Surgeon General H.R. Oswald who was serving in the Indian Army. [2] He was privately educated in the Isle of Man and later Edgbaston, Birmingham, before moving on to the Royal High School, Edinburgh. [2] Oswald originally intended to enter the Indian Civil Service but changed his mind and studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh. [2] He then went into practice as a medical doctor, achieving his MD from the University of Edinburgh in 1881. [3] Then, in 1890 he entered the Middle Temple to train as a barrister, being called to the bar in 1894. [2]
Oswald became the deputy-coroner in the Central and Western districts of London, and later in the South-Western and Kingston districts. [2] In 1902 he became the coroner for the South-Eastern district. He moved to the Western district in 1919, a post he held until he retired in 1930. [2]
Oswald presided over between 20,000 and 30,000 inquests. [2] Among the notable ones were the first inquest about death from a motor car (1904), [4] a case involving Ronald True, [4] the death of Freda Kempton from a drug overdose in which the dealer Brilliant Chang was implicated (1922), [5] and deaths caused by the 1928 Thames flood of London. [6]
His reminiscences were published in 1936 by Stanley Paul as Memoirs of a London County Coroner.
Oswald married twice, firstly to Jean Moir-Byres with whom he had a daughter. Jean died in 1907. He married again in 1908 to Ethel Mary Cundell. [2] Oswald died in early 1940 in the Salisbury district of Wiltshire.