1831.] 



Chronology Ma rriages Deaths. 



237 



for 10 years' good behaviour, himself in 

 500., and 2 securities of 250. each. 



11. Prince of Orange published 

 a proclamation, in London, to the Belgic 

 Nation. 



15. Old Bailey Sessions ended, 

 when 4 prisoners received sentence of 

 death, 47 were transported, and several 

 imprisoned. 



18. Messrs. O'Connell, Lawless, 

 and others, ordered into custody at Dub- 

 lin by the Lord Lieutenant, on a charge 

 of conspiracy, and admitted to bail. 



MARRIAGES. 



At the King's Palace, Brighton, Lord 

 Falkland, to Miss Fitzclarence. W. R. 

 Courtenay, esq., to Lady Eliz. Fortes- 

 cue, daughter of Lord Fortescue. Lieut. 

 E. F. Wills, to Louisa, daughter of Sir 

 C. W. Bampfylde, bart E. H. Cole, 

 esq., to Mary, widow of Lord S. H. 

 Moore. At Warwick Castle Chapel, J. 

 Neeld, esq., M.P., to Lady C. M. A. 

 Cooper, daughter of the Earl of Shaftes- 

 bury. At Craigsend, Lord John Camp- 

 bell, to Miss Anne Colquhoun Cunning- 

 ham. Rev. J. James, to Miss Wilber- 

 force. S. Newbery, esq., to Fanny, 

 eldest daughter of Lieut. -Colonel Le 

 Blanc. 



DEATHS. 



Lady Louisa Mary Lennox, aged 92, 

 widow of the late Lord George Lennox, 

 and grandmother of the present Duke of 

 Richmond ; she had been upwards of 50 

 years on the Pension List ! At Derby, 

 'W. Strutt, esq., F.R.S., 75. In Bed- 

 ford-row, T. Davison, esq., 65. At 

 Norwich, J. Gurney, esq., 75. In Gros- 

 venor-square, the Marchioness of Ayles- 

 bury. In Stanhope-street, Hon. Eliza- 

 beth Mary Poyntz, wife of W. S. Poyntz, 

 esq. Catherine, wife of Sir J. Murray, 

 bart. Hon. Philip Roper, 94, uncle of 

 Lord Teynham. At Halifax, John 

 Logan, 105, commonly called " Old 

 Logan " He was born in Montrose, 

 Sept. 1726. He has lived in five kings' 

 reigns 50 years were spent in the ser- 

 vice of his country, in England, Ireland, 



and the West Indies 19 years he be- 

 longed to the 20th Cameronian reg , 

 23 years to the 32d reg. of foot, 3 years 

 to the 83d reg., and 5 years to the Bre- 

 dalline Fencibles. Of the last regiment 

 he was drum-major. This long service 

 was rewarded with a pension of Is. 1 l^d. 

 per day. He has been twice married, and 

 has been the father of 32 children 8 by 

 his former, and 24 by his second wife. 

 His last child was born when . Logan 

 was in his 77th year. R. Clarke, esq. 

 93, Chamberlain of London. At 

 St. Leonard's, G. J. Wood, esq. At 

 Broughton, Alice Quainton, 100. James 

 Blackstone, esq., son of the celebrated 

 Justice Blackstone. Viscountess Mas- 

 sareene. Charlotte, Baroness de Roos. 

 Mrs. Ford, 86, mother to the Duchess 

 of Cannizzarro Hon. Louisa King, 19, 

 daughter of Lord Lorton. Sir C. J. 

 Smith, bart. Sir T. Frankland, bart., 

 81 The Bishop of Cork. At Edin- 

 burgh, Henry Mackenzie, esq., author 

 of " The Mirror," &c. Viscount Sid- 

 ney. F. Canning, esq Hon. Charlotte 

 Grimstone. In Berkeley- square, Ellen, 

 wife of T. Legh, esq., M.P. This was 

 the lady about whom so much interest 

 was excited, in consequence of her abduc- 

 tion by Mr. E. G. Wakefield. 



MARRIAGES ABROAD. 



At Munich, at the house of His Ma- 

 jesty's Envoy Extraordinary, Henry 

 Francis Howard, esq., to the Hon. Se- 

 villa Erskine, fourth daughter of Lord 

 Erskine. At the Hague, P. F. Tinne, 

 esq., to Henriette, eldest daughter of 

 the late Vice-admiral Baron de Capel- 

 len. 



DEATHS ABROAD. 



At Paris, Mr. J. Donaldson, from 

 disease brought on by over exertion and 

 fatigue in the late revolution. He was 

 a native of Glasgow, and well known as 

 the author of the " Eventful Life of a 

 Soldier," and " Scenes and Sketches of 

 a Soldier's Life in Ireland." At Trini- 

 dad, Mme. Gollivette, 116 At Paris, 

 Mme. de Genlis, 86. 



MONTHLY PROVINCIAL OCCURRENCES. 



NORTHUMBERLAND. The 



trustees of the Savings' Bank establish 

 ed at Newcastle-upon-Tyne state, their 

 receipts up to Nov. 20, to have amounted 

 to 231,945. 7s. 3d, paid in by 4,063 

 depositors, and 12 charitable, and 80 

 friendly societies The moral advan- 

 tages of these institutions in raising the 

 character and increasing the comforts 

 of the poor are incalculable. In Eng- 

 land, Wales, and Ireland (for Scotland 

 makes no return to the National Debt 



Office) there are 487 Savings' Banks, 

 in which the number of depositors 

 is 403,712; the amount of deposits 

 13,523,428. ; of these depositors more 

 than half the number, or 203,691, have 

 deposits under 20. each, or on the 

 average 7- 4s. 5<|d. ; there are also 

 4,549 Friendly Societies, having de- 

 posits to the amount of 747,124. or on 

 the average 164. 4s. 9d. each, and 1,684 

 Charitable Societies. The total num- 

 ber of accounts is 40y,945, and the 



