,350 



Marriages Deaths Provincial Occurrences. [MARCH, 



, leyi 2nd son of Lord Wharncliffe, to 

 Lady Emmiline Charlotte Elizabeth 

 M miners, 2nd daughter of Duke of Rut- 

 land. Rev. S. Douglas, son. of Rear 

 Admiral Douglas, to Maria Edith, 



' daughter of W. Parish, esq. 



HOME DEATHS. 



At Cricket, St. Thomas, Viscountess 

 Bridport, 85. At Bath, Rear Admiral 

 Sir Edward Berry, Bart Hon. Chris- 

 tiana Phillippa Maria Rolle, youngest 

 sister to Lord Rolle. In Hartley St., 

 Lady Earle,77 Sir John Perring.'Bart. 

 Harriet Louisa, daughter of Right 

 lion. R. W. Horton. Richard Paul 

 Jodrell, esq., 86, formerly M. P. for Sea- 

 ford. At Hastings, Hon. F.W.Robin- 

 son, son of Lord Grantham, and nephew 

 to Earl Enniskillen and Viscount Gode- 

 rich Thomas Hope, esq., the opulent 

 Dutch merchant, and reputed author of 

 Aiuistatius, &c. At Hough, Rev. R. 

 Hill, 86, uncle to Lord Hill, and brother 

 to Rev Rowland Hill. Lady Isabella 

 .Anne Kingscote, daughter of Duke of 

 Beaufort. At Woolwich, Lady Robe. 

 At Bath, Rev. Dr. Trail, 85 ; he suc- 

 ceeded Dr. R. Simson, the editor of Eu- 

 clid and the Loci of Apoilonius, as Pro- 

 fessor of Mathematics in Glasgow, and 

 married Lady Francis Charteria, aunt 

 to Earl of - Wemyss. Lieut.-General 

 Aylmer. At Eastnor Castle, Countess 

 "Somers. Mr. G. Bloomfield, 84, bro- 

 ther to Robert Bloomfield the poet, and 

 himself the author of many merited 

 compositions. In Regent's Park, Capt. 



P. Heywood, R. N. ; in 1702, then 

 being a midshipman, he had been 45 

 days under sentence of death, concern- 

 ing the Bounty mutiny ; and pardoned 

 by the King, and possessing great ta- 

 lent he rose rapidly in the service. At 

 Skreens, T. G. Bramston, esq., late 

 M. P. Essex. Catherine, relict of Vice 

 Admiral Sir R. Grindall, In Dublin, 

 Archdeacon Smyth. At Oxford, Lord 

 Conyers Osborne, 2nd son of Duke of 

 Leeds. At St. James's Palace, Hon. 

 Anne Boscawen, daughter of General 

 Boscawen. At Leamington., Harriet, 

 widow of General Scott. 



MARRIAGES ABROAD. 



At Vienna, Prince de Metternich, to 

 the Countess Melanie Zichy. At Flo- 

 rence, T. Page, esq., to Susanna, eldest 

 daughter of the Hon. Colonel de Courcy, 

 and niece to Lord Kinsale. 



DEATHS ABROAD. 



In India, Hon. Lady Rum bold .Her 

 Royal Highness Louisa, Landgravine of 

 Sclileswig-HoLstein. and grand-daughter 

 to George II. In the hospital .of New 

 York, the son of the celebrated Marmon- 

 tel, in extreme distress and destitution. 

 In India, Capt. C. Holroyd, 2nd son of 

 Sir George Sowley Holroyd, late one of 

 the King's Bench Judges. At Munich, 

 Hon. Margaret Erskihe, second daugh- 

 ter of Lord Erskine, Minister at the 

 Court of Bavaria. At San Pedro, Colum- 

 bia, General Bolivar, the Liberator of 

 Columbia. 



MONTHLY PROVINCIAL OCCURRENCES. 



; NORTHUMBERLAND. A great 

 act of justice is about to be performed 

 in behalf of the poor brethren of the 

 Hospital of St. Mary the Virgin. At a 

 late special meeting of the Common 

 Council at Newcastle, it was resolved to 

 apply for an act of parliament during 

 the present session, to confirm the va- 

 lidity of the existing leases, whose le- 

 gality was previously doubted ; to place 

 the immense property belonging to this 

 charity, on a more secure and equitable 

 basis, and to distribute the profits of it 

 according to the intentions of the found- 

 ers. The brethren will not only receive 

 the proportion of the rentals to which 

 they are justly entitled, but a new cha- 

 pel will be erected out of the funds of 

 the hospital, and the master will be re- 

 quired to perform divine service, as 

 originally contemplated, in return for 

 his income. 



GLOUCESTERSHIRE. The se- 

 cond annual meeting of the Bristol Hor- 

 ticultural and Botanical Society, was 

 lately held, when the report of the com- 



mittee, which, after alluding to the 

 pleasure they felt in witnessing, in an 

 establishment of only two years' stand- 

 ing, the happy progress it had made 

 towards perfection, and the full accom- 

 plishment of all the objects which the 

 founders and supporters had in contem- 

 plation, observed, that the object of the 

 association was not simply that of amus- 

 ing the fancy, innocent as the idea, 

 might be, but substantially to promote 

 the welfare, encourage the industy, and 

 ultimately benefit the whole body of 

 the community. 



HANTS. A numerous and respect- 

 able meeting of the inhabitants of Win- 

 chester and suburbs, was lately held at 

 the Guildhall, to take into consideration 

 the propriety of petitioning Parliament 

 on Reform, when several resolutions 

 were moved and carried unanimously : 

 the first states, that this meeting is 

 deeply convinced of the necessity, jus- 

 tice, and expediency of a Reform in 

 Parliament, a Reform by which the 

 House of Commons may be rendered a 



