Xlii PROCEEDINGS OE THE 



of the Linnean Society in 1813, and died at Exeter on the 30th of 

 June last year, at the age of 73. 



Samuel Holker Haslam, Esq., became a Eellow of the Linnean 

 Society in 1836. He was warmly attached to literary and scientific 

 pursuits, spoke fluently both French and German, was conversant 

 with Italian, and made considerable collections of plants and insects, 

 both of which he presented, about two years ago, to the Natural 

 History Society of Kendal. He died at his residence, Woodhouse, 

 Milnthorpe, Westmoreland, on the 13th of April in the present 

 year. 



Henry Jenner, Esq., M.D., was the son of the Rev. Henry 

 Jenner, M.A., Eector of Bockhampton in Gloucestershire, and 

 Domestic Chaplain to the Earl of Aylesbury. In 1783 he was 

 apprenticed to his uncle, the celebrated Dr. Edward Jenner, and 

 being of an inquiring disposition and greatly attached to natural 

 history, assisted him, not only in his professional avocations, 

 but also in his natural-history studies. In this way he took a 

 share in the investigation in relation to the Habits of the Quckoo, 

 published by his uncle in the 'Philosophical Transactions' for 

 1788. He became a Eellow of the Linnean Society in 1799, and 

 had consequently been a Member for the long period of 57 years. 

 His death took place in March of the present year at Berkeley, 

 in Gloucestershire, where he had continued to reside. 



Joseph Neeld, Esq., F.S.A., of Grittleton, in the county of 

 Wilts, a Deputy-Lieutenant of Wiltshire, M.P. for the borough of 

 Chippenham, and High-Steward of Malmesbury, was a grand- 

 nephew of the late Philip Bundell, of Ludgate Hill, at whose 

 death in 1827 he became possessed, as residuary legatee, of 

 property little short of a million sterling. In the subsequent 

 year he purchased the estate of Grittleton, to which he has since 

 made large additions, of which Mr. Britton has lately given a par- 

 ticular account. A new mansion, on a scale and of a character fitted 

 to rank with the most magnificent seats in the country, is in pro- 

 gress of erection; the farm-houses, cottages, and churches have been 

 rebuilt, and the whole domain has been placed under a general 

 system of amelioration and improved cultivation. In Parliament, 

 Mr. Neeld was a steady supporter of the Conservative party : he 

 married, in 1831, a sister of the present Earl of Shaftesbury, but 

 having no issue, his great estates devolve upon his brother John. 

 He became a Eellow of the Linnean Society in 1829, and died on 

 the 24th of March in the present year, at the age of 67. 



Bear-Admiral the Hon. William Henry Percy, sixth son of Alger- 



