94 
Inn, to Miss Langdon, only daughter of the 
Rey. Mr. L. rector of Montacute. 
At Clifton, William Payne, esq. to Fanny, 
enly daughter of Robert Adair, esq. 
At East Pennard, Mr. Gawthorp, surgeon 
and: apothecary, of Bristol, to Catherine, 
youngest daughter of Wm. Phelps, esq. 
Died: } At Park Hill House, Clifton, Mrs, 
Panter, of Newent, Glocestershire. 
At Honey. Hall House, Congresbury, Miss 
M.. Knight, second daughter of John K. esq. 
At Bridgewater, Phabe, rélict of Mr. Jo- 
sith, Bryant, and only daughter of Capel 
Tripp, esq. of Shipton Mallett. 
At Butleigh Wootton, aged 103, Ann Gill, 
who retained her faculties nearly to the last. 
At Bath, Wm. Mure, esq. second son of 
the late Hutchinson M. esq. of Saxham, Suf- 
folk.— Mss. Aspinall, wife of John B. A. esq, 
of Liverpool. —Mrs. Colhoun, wife of 
€, esq.—Mrs. Davies, relict of Wm. D. esq. 
ef Combe Grove, 74.—Mrs. Hannah Gill, 
velict of Mr. David G, of Bristol, 85.—Mrs, 
Hole, relict of Wm. H. esq. banker, of Bris- 
rol, 74.—Mrs. Uhthoff, wife of Joshua U. 
e3q.—Mrs. Beresford, 84.—Mrs. Baldwell, 
@5.—Mrs. Saver, sister of the late Lady 
Deune, 79.—Ralph Brown Wylde Brown, 
esy. of Caughley, Shropshire.—Colonel Ar- 
chur Blennerhassett, of Arabella, county 
Kerry, where he possessed extensive influ- 
ence. He formerly commanded one of the 
Yrish Fencible regiments, and has been twice 
a representative for Kerry in the Irish parlia- 
ment.” By his death Arthur Blennerhassett, 
esq. of Elmgrove, near Tralee, receives an 
Encrease of fortune of 3000]. per annum. 
At Bristol, Mr. John Stephens, 76.—Miss 
cobs, grand-daughter of Mr. J. solicitor. 
At Clifton, Miss Maria Wilkinson. 
DORSETSHIRE. 
Married] At Dorchester, Mr. Churcher, 
ef the Victua)ling Office, Portsmouth, to 
Miss Lege. 
At Weymouth, Isaac Toogood Coward, 
esq. to Charlotte, daughter of the late Henry 
Wise, esq. of Caldicot, Monmouthshire. 
Died.| At Haydon, near Sherborne, Mrs. 
Preston, relict of Mr. Jaines P. 
At Charldon Herring, Mr. George White. 
At Dorchester, Mrs Barnard, 
DEVONSHIRE. 
The Duke of Bedford is building a most 
splendid cottage, for bis occasional residence, 
in the romantic neighbourhood of Milron 
Abbot, very near the Tamar, and not far dis- 
tant from Tavistock, to the no small gratifi- 
cation of his tenantry and the inhabitants 
around. ; 
Married.} At Sidmouth, Mr. Hayman, of 
Axminster, surgeon, to Miss Perham, eldest 
daughter of the late John P. esq. } 
At Exeter, Mr. Gain, veterinaty surgeon 
ef the Oth Light Dragoons, to Miss Brake.— 
Lieut. Samuel Greenway, R.N. to Miss 
Tucker, daughter of the late Mr. T. of Ho- 
piton. 
At Northam, Francis Stanfe], esq: captain 
Dorset—Devon— Cornwall. 
[Feb. 1, 
in the royal navy, to Elizabeth, second 
daughter of Robert Barton, esq. of Burrough. - 
House, and captain of H.M.S. York. 
Died.] At Torquay, Miss Pepper, only. 
daughter of Michael P. esq. of Bigod, Es~- 
sex, 26. ‘ 
At Totnes, Elizabeth, wife of Edward 
Howard, esq. youngest son of Henry H. esq. 
of Glossop, Derbyshire. 
At Exmouth, Charlotte, eldest daughter of 
the Rev. Thomas Holmes, of Bungay, Suf- 
folk, 17. 
At Budleigh, Mrs. Walkey, wife of Sa- 
muel W. esq. 
At Plymouth, Mr. Collins, superintending 
master at that port.—Mrs. Grigg, 95.—R. 
Birdwood, esq. an alderman of this corpora- 
tion. 
At Lympstone, the lady of Sir William 
Forbes, of Pitsligo, bart. 
Near Totnes, Mrs. Flemick, wife of the 
Rev. Mr. F. 
At Hill’s Court, near Exeter, Thomas 
Johnson, esq. 73. : 
At Ottery, St. Mary, Mrs. Smerdon, relict 
of the Rey. Fulwood S. vicar of that place. 
At Exeter, Mr. John Stone, the oldest 
tradesman in that city, 95.—Miss Patch. 
In his 60th year, at his house in Bedford Cir- 
cus, Bartholomew Parr, M D. Fellow of the 
Royal Societies of London and Edinburgh, 
and senior physician to the Devon and Exeter 
hospital. Dr. Parr was an eminent leader of 
the medical profession. His extended career | 
was brilliant and successful: acute in me- 
dical perception, decisive and correct in prace . 
tice; his active mind penetrated’ the hidden | 
recesses of science: his literary ardour sur- , 
passed the accustomed bounds of human in- 
dustry. Not only in anatomy and medicine, 
but in the studies of natural history, che- 
mistry, general literature, and criticism, his 
numerous publications decidedly confirm the 
fertility of his genius. In private life, his 
temper was conciliating, his deportment un- 
ostentatious : his professional humanity to the 
poor, gratuitous and unbounded. ‘Towards 
his medical competitors his conduct was un- 
deviatingly candid and liberal. His loss will 
be long and severely felt by those whom his 
judicious treatment has frequently raised from 
the bed of sickness, and who now live to de- 
plore the loss of a valued friend and a skilful 
medical practitioner. 
CORNWALL. 
Married] At St. Columb, Mr. Rose- 
warne, surgeon, of Wadebridge, to Miss 
Patty Hicks, sister of Capt. H. of the Cornish 
militia. 
At Falmouth, Mr. Green, methodist 
preacher, to Miss Leggo. 
The Rev. Canon Howell, of Gluvias, to 
Miss Richards, sister of Wm. R. esq. of 
Penryn. 
At Redruth, Mr. John Haye, of Haye, 
near Callington, to Miss Davey, eldest daugh~ 
ter of Capt. D. F 
Died.] At Falmouth, aged 35, Wm. Cam- 
acn 
