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The Delaware County Office of the Medical Examiner is the office responsible for the investigation of all unnatural deaths in Delaware County, Pennsylvania (not purely from natural causes) and natural deaths where there is no treating doctor or which occur suddenly outside a medical institution. Prior to 1979, the office was known as the ...
Delaware County, colloquially referred to as Delco, [2] is a county in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.With a population of 576,830 as of the 2020 census, [3] it is the fifth-most populous county in Pennsylvania and the third-smallest in area.
St. David's Episcopal Church (Radnor, Pennsylvania) St. John's Church (Concord, Pennsylvania) St. Martin's Church (Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania) St. Paul's Church (Chester, Pennsylvania) St. Thomas the Apostle Church (Glen Mills) Siloam United Methodist Church; Springfield Friends Meeting House
Timothy Boyce, head of Delaware County’s Office of Emergency Services has been placed on leave since April 26 after he was accused of sexual harassment and abuse against employees.
David C. Rodeman. David Charles Rodeman, 39, of Kennewick, died Dec. 14 in Kennewick. He was born in Kennewick and was a lifelong Tri-Cities resident.
Har Jehuda Cemetery (Hebrew: בית קברות הר יהודה), or Har Judo for short, is a Jewish cemetery located in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania. It is currently home to more than 20,000 burials. It is located along Naylor's Run Creek along the border between Upper Darby and Haverford Townships. [1]
Concord Township is located in southwestern Delaware County and is bordered by Chadds Ford Township to the west, Thornbury Township to the north, Chester Heights to the east and Bethel Township to the southeast. A portion of the southern border of the township sits along the border-arc between Pennsylvania and Delaware known as the 12-mile circle.
Henry Graham Ashmead (June 30, 1838 – November 27, 1920) was an American historian, journalist, and chronicler of Delaware County, Pennsylvania. His History of Delaware County, Pennsylvania (1884) is one of the classic texts of southeastern Pennsylvania history.
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