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The Office of Allegheny County Medical Examiner investigates cases of persons who die within Allegheny County, Pennsylvania from criminal violence by casualty or by suicide, when unattended by a physician; under correctional custody or any other suspicious or unusual manner. The office's jurisdiction includes the city of Pittsburgh and its ...
George Smith Good was born April 10, 1844, [10] in Turbotville, Pennsylvania, as the youngest son of nine children born to George Good and Mary Smith Good. [11] He received a common school education and enrolled in Dickinson Seminary [12] where his education was interrupted by the United States Civil War.
November 28, 1980. Designated PHLF. 1970 [2] Dixmont State Hospital (originally the Department of the Insane in the Western Pennsylvania Hospital of Pittsburgh[3]) was a hospital located northwest of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Built in 1862, Dixmont was once a state-of-the-art institution known for its highly self-sufficient and park-like campus ...
Robert Ward Duggan (January 27, 1926 – March 5, 1974) [1] served as Allegheny County District Attorney in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania for a decade, from January 1964 until his shooting death under mysterious circumstances in March 1974. He had been under investigation by then- United States District Attorney Richard Thornburgh for corruption. [2][3]
Designated PHLF. 1988 [3] Allegheny Cemetery is one of the largest and oldest burial grounds in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It is a historic rural cemetery. [4] The non-sectarian, wooded hillside park is located at 4734 Butler Street in the Lawrenceville neighborhood, and bounded by the Bloomfield, Garfield, and Stanton Heights areas.
John Darragh. 1817–1825. Federalist. Appointed by City Council, formerly president of the bank of Pittsburgh. 3. John M. Snowden. 1825–1828. Democratic-Republican, Jacksonian. Appointed by City Council, formerly president of the bank of Pittsburgh and county treasurer, edited the Pittsburgh Mercury.
National Cemetery of the Alleghenies. The National Cemetery of the Alleghenies covers 292 acres (118 ha) in Cecil Township, Washington County, Pennsylvania approximately 20 miles (30 km) southwest of Pittsburgh. The cemetery was dedicated on October 9, 2005 by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs ' National Cemetery Administration ...
5 (stepchildren) Alma mater. Slippery Rock College. Thomas J. Foerster (April 17, 1927 – January 11, 2000) was an American Democratic politician. Foerster held a variety of political positions in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, and was seen as one of the last "machine" politicians from the area. [by whom?]