228 



PREFERMENTS, MARRIAGES, &C. 



Alston, Bsuti — At Newent, by the Venerable 

 Archdeacon Onslow, Mr. John Charles 

 Cooke, surgeon, to Mary Newton Bishop, 

 youngest daughter of Mrs. Beale, of Bury 

 Hill, and grand-daughter of the late J. N. 

 Morse, Esq. all of Newent. — At St. James's 

 Church, Westminster, by the Rev. T. G. 

 Ward, Dugdale Stratford Dugdale, of Meri- 

 vale, in the county of Warwick, Esq. to 

 Lady Sykes, widow of Sir Mark Mastcrman 

 Sykes, of Stedmore, in the county of York, 

 Bart.— At St. Phillip's, Birmingham, Mr. 

 William Amos, of Calthorpe-street, in that 

 town (son of Samuel Amos, Esq. of Eve- 

 sham), to Helen, daughter of Mr. Wadaell, 

 of New-street, Birmingham. — At Claincs, 

 Worcestershire, by the Rev. Harcourt Aid- 

 ham, Mr. W. Burman, jun. of Stratford-on- 

 Avon, to Charlotte, youngest daughter of 

 the late John Fox, Esq. of Worcester. — 

 At Tunbridge Wells, Thomas Henry, Lord 

 Dalzell, eldest son of the Earl of Carnwaths. 



to Maria, relict of Blatchford, Esq. and 



daughter of the quondam celebrated Irish 

 orator Grattan. — At Weyhill, by the Rev, 

 Francis Courtenay, Edward Harrison, Esq. 

 of Southampton, to Miss Caroline Courtenay, 

 of the same place. 



BIRTHS. 



At Cheltenham, the lady of Sir W. Majo- 

 ribanks, Bart, of a daughter.— The lady of 

 the Rev. Humphrey Pountney, of St. John's 

 Church, Wolverhampton, of a son. — At 

 Studley Castle, Mrs. HolyoakeGoodritke, of 

 a daughter.— At Corfton Vicarage, Salop, 

 the lady of the Rev.T.Rocke, of a daughter. 

 — The lady of the Rev. George Norman, 

 M.A., Head Master of the Fne Grammar 

 School, Stafford, of a daughter.— At Oxen- 

 hall, Gloucestershire, the lady of R. Foley 

 Onslow, Esq. of a daughter. 



DIED. 



At Blount's Court, near Henley-upon- 

 Thames, in his 34th year, the Right Hon. 

 Charles Viscount Dungarvan, eldest son of 

 the Earl of Cork and Orrery.— At Windsor 

 Castle, in his 64th year. Sir John Barton, 

 Treasurer to the Queen.— In his 65th year, 

 the Rev. Richard Yates, D. D., Rector of 

 Ashen, Essex, and for 36 years one of the 

 Chaplains of Chelsea Hospital.— At Alver- 

 stoke Rectory, Gosport, her Royal Highness 

 Donna Francisca, wife of Don Carlos, of 

 Spain. Her illness was a bilious attack, 

 ■which lasted but a few days, and ended in 

 inflammation. — Of cholera, at RosstreVor, 

 in the county of Down, after an illness of 

 thirty hours, in his 69th year, the Hon. 

 Richard Jebb, second Justice of the Court 

 of King's Bench, in Ireland. — At Beaufort 

 Hou«e, Gloucester, after a lingering illness, 

 Edward Howell, Esq. of Taynton, Glouces- 

 tershire, in the 68th year of his age. — At 

 Washington, United States, aged 78, 

 Thomas Law, Esq. brother to the late, and 

 uncle to the present. Lord Ellenborongh. 

 He was also brother to the Lord Bishop 

 of Bath and Wells.— At Portland House, 

 Bristol, in the prime of life, Maria, the 

 beloved wife of Alfred Ricketts, Esq.— At 

 Longdon Heath, Upton-upon-Severn, Wor- 

 cestershire, in her 90th year, Mrs. Clarke.— 

 AtSeacombe, in the 9th year of his age, 

 Henry, third son of the late John Mytton, 

 Esq. of Halston, Shropshire.— At his seat, 

 Beddington Park, in the county of Surrey, 



Admiral Sir Benjamin Hallowell Carew, 

 G.C.B., in the 74th year of his age.— In 

 Hereford, aged 25, Mrs. Aveline, relict of the 

 late Capt. Aveline, of the 8th Native Madras 

 Infantry. — In London, of malignant cholera, 

 J P. Sarel, Esq. of the Inner Temple, bar- 

 rister-at-law, aged 32. — In his 62nd year, at 

 his house at Poswick Lodge, Herefordshire, 

 J. Jennings, Esq. sincerely lamented. — In 

 his 80th year, Mr. W. H.Parker, for many 

 years a respectable printer and bookseller of 

 Hereford. — At Wyesham, Mr. T. Pritchard, 

 aged 76 ; for many years a worthy and re- 

 spectable, and, at the time of his death, the 

 oldest burgess of the borough of Monmouth. 

 — At Aijersychan, Monmouthshire, at the 

 advanced age of 92, Mrs. Eleanor Brown, 

 leaving behind her three generations. — Aged 

 71, Mr. William Thomas, surgeon, of Prin- 

 cess-street, Shrewsbury.— At Stroud, very 

 suddenly, Mr. N.Mills, surgeon. — In London, 

 aged 80, G. Clymer, Esq. late of Philadelphia, 

 the inventor of the Columbian Printing 

 Press. — Mr. John Downing, of Blakeley 

 Hall, near Oldbury, aged 59. — In the Isle of 

 Wight, in his 6lst year, John Mills, Esq. of 

 Stratford-upon-Avon. — At Coleford, Frome, 

 Somersetshire, aged 23, a few days after the 

 birth of a son, who survives her, Helen 

 Maria, wife of the Rev. G. W. Newnham, 

 and youngest daughter of the late Rev. W. 

 Heath, of Inkberrow, Worcestershire. — In 

 the 20th year of his age, Mr. James Teverill 

 Goodman, son of Mr. John Goodman, of the 

 Bath-road, Worcester. — At his house in 

 Abingdon-street, Mr. Telford, the eminent 

 civil engineer, in his 79th year. — At South 

 Hamlet House, Gloucester, aged one year 

 and nine months, John de Wilton Roche, 

 youngest son of Lieutenant-Colonel Thack- 

 well.— At Paris, Colonel Richard Sutton, 

 Count Clonard, aged 75. Col. Sutton was a 

 native of Wexford, and served many years 

 in the Irish Brigade of France, and having 

 emigrated with the Bourbon Princes at the 

 French Revolution, entered the British 

 service. His brother (also Count Clonard) 

 commanded the frigate which accompanied 

 that of La Perouse in his last and fatal 

 voyage, and shared his fate. — At Leeds, 

 from the rupture of a blood-vessel, Colonel 

 Sir Michael M'Creagh, C.B., K.C.H., and 

 K.C.T.S., Inspecting Field Officer of the 

 Northern Recruiting District, in the 49th 

 year of his age.— Aged 32, Isabella, wife of 

 Mr. J. H. Beilby, of Birmingham.— At his 

 house in Russell-square, after a luigering 

 illness. Sir Charles Flower, Bart, in the 72nd 

 year of his age. — At St. John's, Worcester, 

 much esteemed by all who knew her, Sarah, 

 youngest daughter of the late Robt. Har- 

 rison, Esq. of that city.— At Rio Janeiro, 

 after a protracted illness. Rear Admiral Sir 

 Michael Seymour, Bart. K.C.B. and Com- 

 mander-in-Chief of the Naval Forces in the 

 South Seas, in the 66th year of his age.— In 

 the 76th year of liis age, at Poltimore House, 

 near Exeter, the Rev. Richard Warwick 

 Bampfylile, Rector of Poltimore, brother of 

 the late Sir Charles W. Bamdfylcle, Bart., 

 and uncle to the present Lord Poltimore. — 

 At Perdiswell Cottage, near Worcester, in 

 the 57th year of his age, William Raphael 

 Eginton, Esq. — At Gottingen, the celebrated 

 astronomer, Harding, who discovered the 

 planet Juno —In Norfolk-street, Strand, 

 James Waddell, Esq. R.N., F.R.S.L,, in hia 

 47th year. 



