476 
es.) At Holmer Lodge, near Here- 
ford, Elizabeth, wife of J. Rogers, esq.— 
At Hereford, 23, Miss I. 
Newburns, Bromyard, Mr, Edw. James.— 
At Ross, 78, the Rev. T. King. —At the 
Parsonage-house, Upton Bishop, 84, Mrs. 
Prosser.—At Ross, 79, Mrs. Phillipps, mo- 
ther of the Rev. Dr. Phillipps, of Whit- 
church, Herefordshire.—In a field near his 
residence at Ross, Lieut. Simpkins, r.v.— 
At Holme Lodge, Elizabeth, wife of Capt. 
Rogers. 
GLOUCESTER AND MONMOUTH. 
Lately, the gardener employed in the 
shrubberies of Marl Hill, the seat of R. 
Capper, esq., dug up a small coin, about the 
size of an old farthing, which on inspection 
proved to be a piece of money coined in 
Cheltenham upwards of two centuries ago. 
On one side is inscribed round the edge, 
*¢ John Moxon,’’ and in the centre, “ His 
halfe-penny,’? and on the reverse, “ In 
Cheltenham, 1567,’ and in the centre the 
initials, “J..M.’ It is in perfect pre- 
servation. 
Married.| “At Bristol, the Rey. H. E. 
Shew, a.z., of Worcester college, Oxford, 
to Elizabeth, daughter of C. L. Harford, 
esq., of Clifton.—The Rev. J. Saunders, 
to Mrs. Protheroe, widow of T. Protheroe, 
esq., of Usk.—The Rev. T. Whitts, of 
Tiverton, Devon, to Miss Veryurd, of 
Bristol.— Wm. Cox, esq., of the Mount, 
Tnchbrook, Gloucestershire, to Ellen, only 
child of Nath, Clarkson, esq.—At Bod- 
dington, T. Neale, esq, of Lincoln’s-inn, 
to Miss Blagdon, of Northcote-house, 
Devon.— At Stratton, J. Cripps, esq., to 
Miss E. A. Cooke, of Lodgemore.— At 
Avening, the Rey. H. Newbury, of Hug- 
born, Berks, to Miss E. Day, of Nails- 
worth,— At Cheltenham, Mr. D. Eich- 
baum, to Miss J. W. Griesbach. ~J. Spen- 
cer, esq., of QOak-hill, Somerset, to Mrs. 
C. Llewellyn, late of Preston.—At Framp- 
ton, R. Tucker, esq., of Winterbourne- 
house, to Miss M. A. Parker, of Frampton 
Terrace.—[ At Wandsworth, Surrey, H. Da- 
vis, esq, of Monmouth, to Mary Ann, 
daughter of the Rev. T. Birch, of New- 
land, Gloucester.|—Edwin Mutlow, esq., 
surgeon, of Tewkesbury, to Mary, second 
daughter of T. P. White, esq 
Died.| At Clifton, Miss Jane Copper.— 
At Clifton-bill, T. Powell, esq.—At the 
Hotwells,y Mrs. Ann Orde, sister of the 
late, and aunt to the present, Lord Bolton. 
At Clifton, Mary, wife of R. E. Case, 
esq., of Bristol—At Bristol, 17, Sarah, 
daughter of the late G. James, esq., of 
Clirow, Radnorshire.—Miss K. Ludlow.— 
Mr. C. Hooper.—Miss Clarke, of the So- 
ciety of Friends.—Sir J. B. Lamb, Bart. 
82, Mrs. Dunbar.—Mr. T.. Brock. 
OXFORDSHIRE. 
The Roman discoverers at. Wiggington, 
mentioned at p. 380 of our last, have been 
further successful in disinterring various 
brass coins of the lower empire, none of 
Oxfordshire, Buckinghamslire and Berkshire, &c. ° 
Gwalter.— At 
[Dees :t; 
which are however in a fine state of preser- 
vation, although curious. 
Niarried.| At Aston Rowant, the Hon. 
Wm. Rodney, to Eliza Anne, youngest 
daughter of the late T. Brown, esq—Mr. 
Robert Hawks, of Cheltenham, to Sarah, 
second daughter) of Mr. Geo, Fisher, of 
St. Ebbe’s. 
BUCKINGHAMSHIRE AND BERKSHIRE. 
Married.] Pascoe St. Leger Grenfell, 
esq., of Taplow-house, to Catharine Anne, 
eldest daughter of Jas, Du Pre, esq., of 
Wilton Park, Bucks. 
Died.| 88, Lieut. Wm. Brown, on the 
retired list of the late Royal Invalids, and 
one of his Majesty’s Poor Knights of the 
Windsor. In consequence of a wound re- 
ceived in Germany early in the Seven Years’ 
war, when serving as a volunteer in the 
20th regt., he suffered amputation of a leg, 
Notwithstanding this privation, he was ac- 
tively employed in America during the 
whole of the revolutionary war, was present 
at the siege of Charlestown, Bermuda, and 
various other actions, and was twice wound- 
ed.—Lately, at Ivinghoe Aston, Bucks, 
97, Mrs. James, widow of the late Mr. Jno. 
James, farmer. She was mother of 17 
children, nine of whom survive her; the 
eldest 78, and the youngest 52. She was 
carried to the grave by six of her grandsons, 
the pall being supported by six of her 
grand..daugbters, -She has left a numerous 
progeny, the amount of which, including 
children, grand-children, great grand-chil.. 
dren, and great great grand-children we 
hear, exceeds 100.—88, Elizabeth, _ re- 
lict of _Robert Ashfield.—Reading, Mrs, 
Lamb, wife of Mr. J. G. Lamb.— Windsor, 
58, Mr. Wm. Grey, one of the lay-clerks 
of St. George’s chapel. 
HERTFORD AND BEDFORD. 
Married.] St. Mary’s, Bedford, John 
Amery, esq. to Anna Dorothy, eldest daugh- 
ter of W. Foster, esq. of the same place. 
Died.) At Bedford, 21, William Henry; se- 
condson of Mr. Alderman Wing.— At Pot- 
ton, of a general paralysis, 72, Mrs. Rugely, 
sole heiress of the late William Payne, gent. 
of Biggleswade, and relict of Matthew 
Rugely, esq.— Mrs. Sarah Kenyon, of Sal- 
ford, 30, widow of the late Rev. Robert 
Kenyon. 
~ 
NORTHAMPTON. 
Married.] At Daventry, E.S. Burton, esq. 
to Anna Maria, eldest daughter of the late. 
C. Watkins, esq.—At Weston on the Wel- 
land, Mr. G. Smith of Nottingham, to Miss 
S. Talbot, of Morton on Welland.—Lieut. 
Williams, 44th regt., to Anne, daughter of 
John Bruton, esq. of Houghton-house, 
Northampton. 
Died.]| An interesting funeral lately took 
place at Wittering, a village three miles 
south of Stamford. The individual whose 
remains were consigned to the earth was in 
life no less a personage than Henry Boswell, 
well known as the father or king of the gip- 
sles resorting to that part of the one 
The 
