plain 260 Marriages and Deaths in and near London. [April 1 a 
At St. Luke’s, Thomas Perronet Thomp- 
son, Jate governor of Sierra Leone, to Ann 
Elizabeth, daughter of the Rev. Thomas 
Barker, of York.—Witliam Mann, esq. to 
Miss Matilda Milne, of Finsbury-place. 
' At Tottenham, the Rev. Guy Bryan, to 
‘Selina, third daughter of John Wilmot, esq. 
of Bruce Castle. 
« “At Sihoréditch, Mr. George Tatlock, of 
Milk-street; Cheapside, to Ann, daughter of 
Charles Lilly, esq. of Coventry. 
| At Aldgate, S.S. Hall, esq. of the Circus, 
‘Minories, to Miss De Bie, of the Grove, 
Stratford, Essex. , / 
* At Lambeth, Robert Lloyd, esq. to Ann, 
second daughter of the Rev. Edward Ri- 
chards, of Llangwm, Denbighshire. —Samuel 
Gower Poole, .esq. of Chelsea, to Helen, 
daughter Of C. C. Hall, esq: of Raleigh 
House, Brixton. : 
At Edmonton, Joseph Wright, esq. of Al- 
germanbury, to Charlotte, eldest daughter of 
William Hodgson, esq. 
"Mr. Rowland Rouse, of Market Harbo- 
yough, Leicestershire, to Miss M. B. Sturges, 
daughter of the Rev. Joseph S. senior, of 
Wappenham, Northan)ptonthire. 
At Hackney, Mr. Geil, of Eastbourne, 
Sussex, solicitor, to Miss Gill, 
At St. Andrew’s, Holborn, Colonel Cowell, 
to Mrs. Whitehorne, widow of Counsellor W. 
of Jataica, 
_ At St. George’s, Bloomsbury, Fortunatus 
Dwarris, esq. of the Middle Temple, to Miss 
Brereton, of Bernard-street, Russel square. 
Att Sr. James’s, Lieut. Col. Watts, barrack- 
master at Chatham, to Miss Chapman, of 
Sloane-street. 
’ At Mary-le-bone, Major-general Rey- 
nolds, to Mary, eldest daughter of John 
Hunter, esq, his Majesty’s consul-general in 
Spain.—The Rev. Henry Townsend, son of 
Gore T. esq. of Honington Hall, Warwick= 
shire, to Catharine Anne, second daughter of 
Augustus Pechell, esq. of Portnian-square. 
—Augustus Bayson, esq. of Nelson-square, 
to Miss Elizabeth. Chambers, of Charlotte- 
street, Portland-place.—-Colonel Jones, of 
the 18th light dragoons, to Antonia, young- 
ést daughter of the ‘late Henry Swinburne, 
€3q, of Hamsterly, Durham. 
At St. Panctas, Colone] Boyce, of the. 
Bombay establishment, to Miss Ann Aldous, 
of Fitzroy-street.—Danicl Lambert, jun. esq. 
of Martin’s-lane, Cannon-street, to -Chris- 
tiana, daughter of William Taylor, esq. of 
the Terrace, Tottenham-court-road. 
“At St. George's, Hanover-square, Wil- 
liam Peere Williams, esq. only son of Ad- 
miral W. to Miss Blencowe, eldest daughter 
of R. W. B. esq. of Darlington, Northamp- 
tonshire,—Robert Chester Cooper, esq. of 
Lewes, Sussex, to Careline, third daughter 
of the late George Shum, esq. 
’ At St. Bride’s, Flect-streety Mr.- Thomas 
Derry, of Dorset-street, to Mary, youngest 
daughter of Joshua Hobbs, esq. of Cheshunty 
CTLs, ; 
2 
DIED. 
At the age of 76, his grace the Duke of 
Graftou, chancellor of Cambridge, recorder 
of Coventry and Thetford, &c. Scc.—Of this 
nobleman a full account is given in another part 
of this Nusler. } 
At his house in Duval’s-lane, near Horns 
sey, after a short illness, in the 63th year of 
his age, Mr. Fokn Leech, formerly an emi- 
nent leather seller on Snow-hill. He was @ 
man much and deservedly respected in all 
the relative situations of life, and he has left 
a widow and seven children to lament the 
loss of the best of husbands, and most tender 
of parents. Asa man, he possessed from 
nature first-rate talents; read much; his 
judgment in most cases was correct, which 
induced him to select the most valuable and 
important parts of what came under his con- 
sideration and perusal; and a considerable 
originality of thought, and a great inde- 
peudance of mind, which taught him to 
despise where conviction was insufficient, 
though this doubtless made him enemies. 
arnongst men who implicitly received other's 
opinions without examination in matters of 
religion and civil policy, but it is a conduct, 
which, as lovers of truth, we must adniire. 
These qualifications in Mr. Leech, mace him 
a rationally agreeable original, and instructive 
and eloguent in conversation. 
In a coach, on his return from the house 
of a friend, (supposed by the rupture of a 
blood vessel) Richard Dalton, esq. of Camber- 
well, in the 53d year of his age, a native of 
Wigton, in Cumberland, and date a partner 
in the stationary business of Messrs. Wright, 
and Gill, Abchurch-lane, London, and 
latterly assosiated with the Messrs. Ma Se 
His disposition was so modest an 2 
tiring, chat no one*knew the ‘of his 
character, who was not intimately ac- 
quainted with him. He has been repeat- 
edly solicited by the inhabitants: of the 
ward in which his house of business stood’ 
to be their alderman, which he as constantly 
declined, from a love of books and retirement, 
and a contempt of civic-honours; for, having 
been the partner of two gentlemen who had 
served the office of Lord Mayor of London, 
he had seen too much of the office to induce 
him to covet it. His manners were modest 
and’unassuming 3 no one ever saw him pay 
court to a rich or powerful man} no one ever 
heard him converse with one in humble life, 
but with respectful attention. His mind 
was stored with various reading, and he united, 
in a degree almost utiexampled, the most 
correct and measured understanding, with the 
kindest and most benevoient heart. 
eIn Great Ormond-street, Afrs. Thornton, 
relict of Godfrey T. esq. of Moggerhanger 
House, Bedfordshire. 
In Duke-street, Portland-place, Soba Tare 
rant, esq. late of Chancery-lane. 
In Lower Grosvenor-street, 2drs. Molyneus,y 
sister of sir Francis 'M. 
At his father’s, near Upper George-strect, 
Portman- 
Fl 
‘ 
i 
