612 



Chronology, Marriages, and Deaths. 



[Nov. 



burn annexed. Rev. J. Holme, to perpe- 

 tual Curacy of Low Harrowgate, York. 

 Rev. J. W. Dew, to perpetual Curacy of 

 St. James, Halifax. Rev. W. L. Town- 

 send, to be Chaplain to Earl of Craven. 

 Rev. B. Vale, to perpetual Curacy of St. 



Peter, Stoke-upon-Trent, Stafford. Rev. 

 M. Randall, to be Chaplain to Manchester 

 Collegiate Church Rev. L. Ripley, to be 

 Second Master of Durham Grammar School, 

 and Rev. R. W. Kerby, Head Master of 

 Wymondham Free Grammar School. 



CHRONOLOGY, MARRIAGES, DEATHS, ETC. 



CHRONOLOGY. 



Sept. 24. At a meeting of the Common 

 Council of the city, a series of motions was 

 made to congratulate the municipality of 

 Paris and the French nation on the success 

 of the late revolution, which were negatived 

 by nearly two to one. 



27. A meeting took place at Kennington 

 Common, of the middle and working classes 

 of London, for addressing the French peo- 

 ple on their revolution, and to address his 

 Majesty on the present distressed state of 

 the country, when resolutions were passed 

 for those purposes. 



The celebrated De Potter, who had 

 been banished by the former government at 

 Brussels for 8 years for a libel, returned 

 there, and nominated one of the Provisional 

 Government. 



29. Alderman Key elected Lord Mayor 

 of London. 



30. Intelligence from Cassel states that 

 the Elector, in compliance with the de- 

 mands of his subjects, assembled in large 

 bodies, has convoked the Estates for reviv- 

 ing the ancient free institutions of the 

 Electorate. 



Oct. 5. A meeting held in London, con- 

 voked by Mr. Owen, at which a resolution 

 was passed to petition the King and Par- 

 liament for a repeal of all the taxes on the 

 periodical press, and for every facility to 

 the diffusion of opinions. 



8. The punishment of death abolished in 

 France by the Chamber of Deputies. 



'10. News arrived from America with 

 information of the opening of the Welland 

 Canal, by which the hitherto insurmounta- 

 ble barrier of the Niagara is overcome ; 

 "the Erie waters now mingle with those 

 of Ontario, and to the 800 miles of coast 

 which we had access, 1000 more are now 

 added." American Papers. 



11. By the official statement of the Re- 

 venue of the past year and quarter, it 

 appears that the deficiency on the latter, 

 ended 10th October, 1830, as compared 

 with the corresponding quarter of 1829, is 

 188,834/. On the year ended 10th October, 

 1830, as compared with the year ended 10th 

 October, 1829, it is 943,756^. 



13. By accounts laid before the French 

 legislature, by the King, Oct. 9, " it ap- 

 pears," says his Majesty, " that more than 

 500 orphans, 300 widows, and more than 

 300 fathers, have been deprived of their 

 parents, husbands, and children ; more than 



311 persons have been mutilated, and more 

 than 3,564 wounded, in the recent revolu- 

 tion. The law settles a pension of 500 

 francs on the widows of citizens killed in 

 the latter end of July. Their children 

 under 7 years of age shall be entitled to a 

 pension of 250 francs, and above 7 "P to 

 18 they shall receive the advantages of a 

 liberal education. The fathers and mothers 

 above 60, who have lost their children, shall 

 receive a pension of 300 francs. Those 

 whose wounds render them incapable of 

 continuing their professions shall be en- 

 titled to live at the Invalids, or to the 

 pension of the Invalids. Those whose 

 wounds will not prevent them from con- 

 tinuing their former labours, shall receive 

 an indemnity." 



16. Charles X. and suite left Lulworth 

 Castle for Edinburgh. 



18. Proclamation issued by the Lord 

 Lieutenant of Ireland, for suppressing 

 " The Irish Society for Legal and Legis- 

 " lative Relief, or the Anti-Union Associa- 

 " tion." 



20. His Majesty Charles X., and the 

 Due de Bordeaux and suite, arrived at 

 Edinburgh, and repaired to Holyrood 

 House. 



26. The Imperial Parliament assembled 

 at Westminster. 



MARRIAGES. 



Captain Rowley, son of Sir W. Rowley, 

 bart., to the Hon. Maria Louisa Vanneck, 

 only daughter of Lord Huntingfield. C. 

 Chichester, esq., to Miss Caroline Manners 

 Sutton, daughter of late Archbishop of 

 Canterbury. Lieut. -Col. Knollys, to Eliza- 

 beth, daughter of Sir J. St Aubyn, bart 

 Sir Codrington Edmund Carnington, M. P., 

 to Mary Ann, daughter of J. Capel, esq., 

 M.P. Hon. Captain G. L. Vaughan, second 

 son of Earl Lisburne, to Mary Josephine 

 Roache, daughter of H. O'Shea, esq., Ma- 

 drid W. J. Goodeve, esq., to Lady Fran- 

 ces Jemima Erskine, sister to Earl of Mar. 

 At St. Mary's, Bryanstone-square, the 

 very Rev. Dr. W. Cockbuin, Dean of 

 York, to Margaret Emma, only daughter 

 of late Col. Pearse of Kensington, and 

 grand-daughter of late Rev. Dr. J. D. 

 Thomas W. Webb Follett, esq., to Jane 

 Mary, eldest daughter of late Sir Hardinge 

 Giffard. 



DEATHS. 

 The Duke of Atholl, 76 Mary Cathe- 



