eam ae aaa aaa a as 
. 
18t1.] 
den Nield, esq. of Antigua, one of the King’s 
' Counsel for the Leeward Islands, and son of 
James N. esq. of Chelsea,—Mrs. Cameron, 
“wife of Lieut. Col. C. of the 79th foot.—-Mr. 
John Tresidder, attorney, 57.—Mrs. Peniton, 
wife of Mr. P. of the Duke’s Head Inn.— 
Mr. Samuel Watson, 51.—-Mrs. Elizabeth 
' Hancock, 60. 
At Penzance, Mrs. Elizabeth Honey- 
church, 100. 
At Padstow, Mrs. Peter, wife of Capt. 
* Joseph P. 
At Bodmin, Mrs. Bligh. 
At St. Columb, Mr. James Dennis, 88. 
At Stratton, Mr. Tuke, surgeon and apo- 
* thecary. 
__. At Flushing, Mrs. Stevens, widow of Capt. 
S. late of the Princess Amelia packet. 
At St. Ives, the Rey. L. Morgan, lecturer 
of that place. 
At Scilly, James Allen Gorse, esq. sur- 
geon of the quarantine establishment there. 
~ At St. Erme, Miss Clavinia Trounce, 
niece to S. Jago, esq. 
At Bosvige, near Truro, aged 76, Mr. Gil- 
‘bert Hele Chilcott. He had been the land- 
steward of Francis Gregor, esq. the late coun. 
"ty member, for upwards of twenty years, and 
‘had filled the same situation to the present 
“Sir Christopher Hawkins, bart. his father, 
“and grandfather, for more than half acentury ; 
“the latter of whom appointed him one of the 
guardians of his infant children. In his cha- 
racter as agent he united a zeal the most fer- 
vent for the benefit of his principals, to an 
unwearied diligence and unsullied integrity. 
His merits will be inferred, on considering 
the length of his services, and the confidence 
reposed in him by his employers. 
At the Lodge, near Penzance, in her 
70th year, Mrs. Catharine Tremenheer, 
relict of Mr. William T. of that town, who 
was a lineal descendant of the person that en- 
dowed that chapel, and one of the most an- 
‘cient families of this county, the name being 
deducible frum the ‘Cornish language. She 
‘was the daughter of the late Rev. Walter 
Borlase, L.L. D. of Castlehorneck, (elder bro- 
ther of the historian) and was nearly fifty 
years vicar of Penzance. She bore a painful 
illness with the same serenity, composure, 
and resignation to the will of the Almighty, 
that had conspicuously marked her ,character 
through a long life. Her piety was not a cold 
or a passive principle: not obtrusive, but zea- 
lous; not ostensive, but earnest: nor were 
other less important christian duties neglect- 
ed in the practice: a cheerful benignity shed 
a mild lustre over her character, giving a 
double value :o her acts of kindness to the 
poor, and the regret of a numerous circle of 
‘relations, friends, and acquaintance, testify 
the warm regard in which she was held, by 
those who were most capable of appreciating 
her worth, and her virtues. She died sur- 
3 
“ 
Wales. 
95 
rounded by her numerous family, having re- 
tained her senses to the last; exerting them, 
while yet the lamp of life was glimmering, 
in blessing her children and in prayer, till it 
ceased, when it may be truly said she fell 
asleep in the Lord. 
; WALES. 
A groat of Edward IV. a small crucifix, 
and the Virgin and Child, of a composition 
unknown, resembling plaster of Paris, but 
harder, were found a few days since, among 
the ruins of Oystermouth Castle, near Swan- 
sea. Onthe back of the crucifix were some 
characters in the form of the old Norman 
french. 
A signal station has lately been established 
at Holyiead, by several merchants of Liver- 
pool, through which will be communicated 
the earliest intelligence of their vessels 
having passed the Head, either outward,or 
homeward bound. 
The Rev. Edward Hughes, Caerwys, in 
Flintshire, and the Rev. Walter Davies, of 
Manafon, in Montgomeryshire, have each 
been presented with an elegant silver cup, .as 
a compliment for their poems on the Jubilee, 
recited at St. Asaph, on the- fourth of last 
June. 
Married.] At Llandilo-vawr, Wm. Tho- 
mas, esq. of Pentre-Parr, eldest son of D. 
Thomas, esq. of Glanrwth, to Miss Davies, 
only daughter of Mrs. D. of Love Lodge, 
near Llandilo. 
At St. Dogmels, Capt. Thomas Francis, 
of the brig Catherine, of Fishguard, to Miss 
Mary Edwards, of Pentood, Pembrokeshire. 
At Carmarthen, Mr. Jones, quarter-mas- 
ter in the 3d regiment Carmarthenshire Lo- 
cal Militia, to Miss Margaret Reynolds. 
At Carmarthen, Captain Howell, of Bryn- 
nevl, to Miss Aun Thomas. 
At Langattock, Crickhowell, Joseph Bai- 
ley, of Cyfarthfa, esq. to Maria, fourth 
daughter of Joseph Latham, esq. of Beaufort. 
At Swansea, William Edward Powell, 
esq. of Nanteos, Cardiganshire, to Laura 
Edwyna, eldest daughter of James Phelp, 
esq. of Cottrell House, Glamorganshire, 
and Coston House, Leicestershire. 
Died] At Landaff-Court, near Cardiff, 
Catherine Diana, wife of John Richards, esq. 
and second daughter of thg late Rebest Jones, 
of Fonmon Castle, esq 
Aged 77 years, the Rev. Robert. Rickards, 
vicar of Llantrissent, Glamorganshire, 
At Carmarthen, Mr. John Jones, clerk 
to Thomas Lewis, esq. solicitor Llans- 
pilo; which office he filled with scrupulous 
integrity.—-Mrs, Downes. 
At Dolvelly, the Rev. E. Vaughan Evans, 
curate of Meliden, near St. Asaph. 
At .Coalbrook, near Abergavenny, (the 
seat of his brother) William Ferdinand Hun- 
Bury Williams, esq. a gentieman universally 
beloved and respected, 
ear 
ey 
