PREFERMENTS, iMARRIAGES, &C. 



153 



daughter of the late Joseph Yorke, Esq. of 

 Forthampton Court.— At St. Georpe's, Han- 

 over-square, William Brougham, Esq. M. P., 

 only brother of the Lord Chancellor, to 

 Emily Frances, only daughter of Sir Charles 

 William Taylor, Bart. HoUycombe, Sussex. 

 — At Biddenden, Kent, William Whateley, 

 Esq. Barrister-at-Law, to Elizabeth, eldest 

 daughter of the Rev. Dr. Nares, and relict 

 of the late Lord Henry Spencer Churchill. — 

 At Cheltenham, James Home, Esq. of Cum- 

 berland-street, Portraan-square, to Louisa, 

 eldest daughter of the late Charles Whalley, 

 Esq, of Calcutta.— At Preston, near Ciren- 

 cester, Robert Maurice Bonner Maurice, 

 Esq. of Bodynfol, Montgomeryshire, to 

 Judith, eldest daughter of the Rev. H. 

 Cripps, vicar of Preston and Stonehouse, 

 Somersetshire. 



BIRTHS. 



At Leamington, Warvrick shire, the lady 

 of Captain Pulteney, 12th Lancers, of a 

 daughter.— At the Briars, Monmouthshire, 

 the lady of Captain Newall, of a son.— At 

 Fownhope, Herefordshire, the lady of F. G. 

 Freeman, Esq. of a son.— At Stottesdon Vi- 

 carage, Worcestershire, the Lady of the Rev. 

 R. Williams, of a daughter. — At Pirton Rec- 

 tory, Worcestershire, the lady of the Rev. 

 W. Lister Isaac, of a daughter. 



DIED. 



The Marchioness of Headfort, at her resi- 

 dence, Cumberland Terrace, Regent's Park. 

 — At Monmouth, Amy Anne, wife of James 

 Palmer Budd, Esq. of Swansea, Glamorgan- 

 shire. — At Willoughby, Warwickshire, in 

 the 86th year of his age, the Rev. Nathaniel 

 Bridges, D. D., for many years Incumbent 

 of Willoughby and Hatton ; also Lecturer of 

 St. Nicholas and St. Mary Redcliffe, Bristol. 

 — At Bath, J. Vaughan, Esq. late of Over 

 Court, Gloucester.— At Aqualate Park, Staf- 

 fordshire, Francis Wedge, Esq. in the 83rd 

 year of his age. — At his seat, Rendcomb 

 Park, In the 60th year of his age. Sir Berke- 

 ley William Guise, Bart., in the Commission 

 of the Peace, and in Parliament the confi- 

 dential Representative of the County of 

 Gloucester for nearly twenty-four years. — 

 In Clarges-street, after ten days' illness, 

 Lord James Fitzroy, youngest son of the 

 Duke of Grafton, aged 30. — At Boulogne- 

 sur-mer, in her 88th year, the Dowager 

 Lady Lake, relict of the late Sir James 

 Winter Lake, Bart.— At the Parks, Great 

 Malvern, Worcestershire, aged 82, Sir Ro- 

 bert Wilmot, Bart, of Osmaston, in the 

 county of Derby. He is succeeded in his 

 title and estates by his eldest son. Sir Robert 

 Wilmot Horton, Governor of Ceylon. — The 

 late Baronet has left two daughters married 

 to the present Earl of Kcnmare and Lieute- 

 nant-General Sir Richard Church. — At Tor- 

 point House, Cornwall, the Rev. C. Shipley, 

 Rector of Mappowder, Dorsetshire, son of 

 the late Dean of St. Asaph. — At Shrewsbury, 

 Miss Curwen, youngest daughter of the 

 late J. C. Curwen, Esq. M. P.— At his resi- 

 dence. Great Alne Lodge, near Alcester, Ste- 

 phen Barber, Esq. in the 76th year of his 

 age.— At Chillington, in the 10th year of 

 his age, Charles Orville, the second son of 

 the late John Mytton, Esq. of Halston.— 



At his Lordship's house, Arlington-street, 

 St. James's, the Right Hon. Earl Bathurst. 

 His death was unaccompanied by pain ; he 

 expired in the bosom of his family, and was 

 perfectly sensible of his approaching disso- 

 lution. His Lordship succeeded to the 

 honours as third Earl Bathurst, Baron Ba- 

 thurst of Battlesden, and Baron Apsley, of 

 Apsley, in the county of Sussex, on the 

 demise of his father, in 1794, and married, 

 in 1789, Lady Georgiana Lennox, sister of 

 the Duke of Richmond, by whom he had 

 issue, 1st, Henry George, Lord Apsley, (now 

 Earl Bathurst :) 2nd, Hon.William Bathurst, 

 Clerk to the Privy Council ; 3rd, Colonel 

 Seymour Bathurst, Treasurer to the Gover- 

 nor of Malta; 4th, Hon. Charles Bathurst, 

 in holy orders, and married to a daughter 

 oftheEavlof Aljingdon; aT)d two daugliters, 

 one of whom is married to the Hon. General 

 Ponsonby. The Noble Earl Entered into 

 office at an early period, and in 1793 was 

 sworn in a Member of the Privy Council ; 

 in 1804 he was appointed Master of the 

 Mint, during Mr. Pitt's Administration, and 

 in I8O7 President of the Board of Trade : in 

 I8O9 his Lordship was Secretary of State for 

 Foreign AflFairs, which he held only a short 

 time. During the Liverpool Administration, 

 his Lordship discharged the duties of Secre- 

 tary of State for the Colonial Department for 

 a period of nearly sixteen years. In 1828 he 

 was appointed President of the Council, 

 which high office he retained till the resig- 

 nation of the Wellington Administration in 

 1 830, since which time he has taken no very 

 prominent part in public affairs. — At Wood- 

 ford House, near Kettering, after an illness 

 of three days, the beautiful Mrs. Arbuthnot, 

 in her 41st year. She was the daughter of 

 the late Hon, Thomas Fane, was married to 

 the Right Hon. Charles Arbuthnot, in 1814, 

 and was placed on the English civil list, by 

 the Duke of Wellington, in 1823, with a 

 pension of 936^. — At Tenby, in his 69th 

 year, Lieutenant-Colonel Elliot Voyle, late 

 of the Bengal Establishment. — In the 31st 

 year of his age, Mr. F. Pierpoint, one of the 

 Aldermen of the Borough of Bridgnorth, 

 and Coroner for the town and liberties of 

 that place. — At Great Malvern, John Pid- 

 cock, of the Pitts, in the county of Staf- 

 ford, Esq. aged 78 years.— Aged 73, Eli- 

 zabeth, the wife of General Meredith, of 

 Monmouth.— General Sir John Doyle, Bart. 

 G. C. B. K. C, Governor of Charlemont, 

 Colonel of the 87th Royal Irish Fusileers. 

 — At Upton-on-Severn, Mr. Richard Clarke, 

 a resident of that place, and for twenty years 

 an officer in the East India Company's Naval 

 Service. — Suddenly, at East Barnet, Herts, 

 Lieutenant-Colonel Sir David Ogilby, of the 

 Honourable East India Company's Service. 

 The above awful and lamentable event was 

 occasioned by the unfortunate gentleman 

 being precipitated from a four-wheeled 

 chaise, whi( h produced instant death. — At 

 Tenby, of spasmodic gout, in his 70th year, 

 Lieut.-Colonel Elliott Poyle, late of the 

 Bengal Establishment.— At Killaloe, Lime- 

 rick, Lord Glent worth, in his 46th year.— 

 At her house in Upper Grosvenor-street, 

 aged 73, Mrs. Diana M. Dowdeswell, daugh- 

 ter of the late Right Hon. William Dowdes- 

 well.— At Streflford, Salop, Mr. Heighway, 

 Coroner for the Southern Division of Salop. 



