1824, } 
At Islington, G. Bellairs, esq. of Lei- 
cester, to Miss M. Linwood. 
Robert Wilcoxen, of Camberwell, to 
Lucretia, daughter of Thomas Brockel- 
bank, esq., of Deptford. 
- At Wandsworth, Surrey, Henry Davies, 
esq., of Monmouth, to Mary Ann, youngest 
daughter of the late Rev. Thomas Bird, of 
Newland, Gloucestershire. 
In London, Capt. Thomas Davis, of 
Chepstow, to Catherine, second daughter 
of Captain J. Parry, of Carnarvon. — — 
At the chapel of the British Ambassador, 
Paris, Henry R. Bagshawe, esq. second 
son of Sir W. Bagshawe, of the Oaks, Der- 
byshire, to Catherine Elizabeth, eldest 
daughter of John Gunning, esq. late of 
Lower Grosyenor-street. 
At Fulham Church, Robert Mangles, 
esq., of Sunning-hill, Berks, to Charlotte, 
third daughter of Rear Admiral Ross 
Donnelly, of Sussex-house, Hammersmith. 
At St. Mary-la-bonne church, John 
Skelton, esq., of Spanish-town, Jamaica, to 
Elizabeth Jane, only daughter of Colonel 
Pritchard, Royal Artillery. 
Frederick George Vandiest, esq. to Miss 
Cheesewright. The bridegroom is said to 
be the son of a personnage not far removed 
from the succession to the throne of these 
realms. 
At Croydon, the Rey. E. S. Pearne, son 
of the late Dean of Ely, to Georgiana, 
second daughter of George Smith, esq., M.P. 
At St. Andrew’s, Robert Holman, esq., 
to Mary, youngest daughter of the late 
William” Holman, esq., of Hayne-house, 
Whitestone. 
At Richmond, Henry Stanynought, esq., 
to Lucy, second daughter of the late 
Willlam Collins, esq. 
At St. George’s, Queen-square, T. Par- 
sons, esq., of Lisbon, to Miss Gymer, of 
Red Lion-sq. 
DIED. 
The Right Hon. Lady Anne Remmington, 
daughter of the late Earl of Winterton, 
and grand-daughter of Thomas, Lord 
Archer. 
At‘her apartments in the Tower, Mrs. 
Cochrane, wife of Lieut.-Colonel Cochrane 
and daughter of John Wiltshire, esq. of 
Shockerwick. 
At Greenwich, aged 97, Lieut. G. Spear- 
man, ®.N. His commission was dated 
September 8, 1757. 
At Lambeth, Sarah, relict of J. Lopez, 
esq. 
Lieut.-General C. Jeafferson.—The late 
Lieut-General C. Jeafferson entered the ser- 
vice in 1779, in the 18th regiment ; ap- 
pointed in 1779 a Lieutenant in the 86th, 
and promoted to a company in 1783. 
Appointed in 1795 to a company in the 
125th regiment. In 1794 appointed Major 
by brevet, and in 1793 Lieut-Colonel by 
brevet. Received in 1803 the lieut.-colo- 
neley of the 4th battalion of Reserve, and 
in 1805 the third time on half-pay. Ap- 
Marriages and Deaths in and near London. 
471 
pointed in 1808 to a colonelecy; obtained 
in 1811 the rank of Major-General; and 
in 182] that of Lieut.-General. 
In Grenville-street, Brunswick-sq., the 
relict of Thomas Patrick, esq., late of 
Buntingford, Herts. 
Jahn Blaksley, esq., Bishopsgate-street 
within, aged 62. 
In Russell-place, the Rev. Anthony Ste- 
phen Mathew, aged 91, rector of Broughton 
in Northamptonshire, and joint lecturer of 
St. Martin-in-the-Fields, which situation 
he held for sixty years. 
At Islington, aged 71, the Rev. J. F. 
Millward. 
At Stoke Newington, J. Maddor, esq. 
At Greenwich, Mrs. S. Smith, aged 95. 
At Long Ditton, Surrey, G. 4. Wylie, 
esq., of Nottingham-place, Mary-le-bone. 
At the house of S. Smith, esq., M.p. 
Berkely-sq., Major-General T.. Carey, of 
the 3d regiment of guards. 
At Richmond, Mrs. M. Roberts. 
At Camberwell, Jane, wife of R. Rolles- 
ton, esq., aged 71. 
At Hammersmith, aged 47, G. Price, 
esq.) Surgeon. 
At Upper Montague-street, G. F’. Bulke- 
ley, esq. 
After a short illness, James Ludlam, esq., 
of Homerton. 
At Havre, aged 70, 2. C. Dallas, esq., 
He had acquired a respectable, if not a 
distinguished rank, as aman of letters. His 
History of the Marooon war, which ap- 
peared about the year 1797, was much. 
esteemed for the simplicity of its narration,. 
and the authenticity of its details. He was: 
also the author of several novels, which, 
though not the first in that branch of com- 
position, are entitled to a praise not always- 
due to the first, that of softening without 
corrupting the heart. He was a religious. 
and just man; in private and domestic 
intercourse cheerful, pleasing and unaf= 
fected, and his memory will long be en- 
deared to his family and his friends. He 
was followed to the graye by the British 
Consul, and nearly all the respectable inha- 
bitants of the place. His last work, the 
“ Recollections of Lord Byron,” is re~ 
viewed in our proémium. 
At Athens, Lieut. George James Hare, 
H. M.S. Tribune. His remains were in- 
terred in the church of the Greek conyent 
at Pyreus, with all military honours, at- 
tended by the officers and crews of the 
squadron, the governor of Athens, and the 
bishop and clergy. 
At Copenhagen, Mr. Rothe, aged 94, the 
father of the bookselling trade in Den- 
mark, and most probably of Europe.. 
Aged 92, the Duke de Brancas Laura- 
guais, member of the Academy of Sciences, 
Paris. To this nobleman the arts and 
sciences are indebted for the discovery of 
the decomposition of the diamond,, and for 
carrying the manufacture of the porcelain 
to a high degree ef perfection. f 
0 
