£92 
Married.} At Newland, Mr. John Hay- 
ward, of the Forest, Dean, to Mary, second 
daughter of the late Mr. Sauiuel Jenkins. 
At Westbury upon Trym, Mr. John Bush, 
of Bristol, to Miss H. G. Prideaux, youngest 
daughter of Mr. John P..of Shirelampton. 
At Cheltenham, John William Paxton, 
esq. of the East India Company’s civil service, 
to Frances, second daughter of the late Wil- 
liam Patrickson, esq. 
Died.]. At Gloucester, Mr. John Hutch- 
Sngé; 45.—Mrs. Lane. —Mrs. Miles, mother 
of Mr M. of the Swan and Falcon ion. _ 
At Colford, Mrs. Thomas, wife of the 
Rev. Mr. T. who for many yeats kept the 
Free Grammar School, at Newland, in this 
county Mr John Dew.” 
At Newent, Vir. George Cowles. 
At Slimbridge, Elizabeth Workman, 97. 
At Cheltenham, R. Aiken, esq. 
“At Cirencester, Mr. John Cherriigton! 
At Shardington, Mr. Samuel Harman, 80. 
At Noschleach, Mr. Thomas Ashwin, 64. 
* At Whitcomb court, Mr, Henry Bubb, 
87, 
“At “Tewkesbury, Mr. John Edgecomb. 
Mr: Ormwell Lloyd, a member of the cor- 
poration, and one of the oldest inhabitants of 
the borough. 
“AcTetbury, Mr. Wright. 
~ At Ebley, Elizabeth, third daughter of 
ni John Daniels. 
At Chambers Court, near Tewkesbury, 
John Stone, esq. 
At Uley, Mrs, Sutton, wife of Mr. Septi- 
‘mus Sisurgeon. ~ 
OXFORDSHIRE. 
The workmerf who discovered the Roman 
burial yround’on Beaconsfield farm, have, in 
pursuing their work, arrived at the Roman 
Bath described by Ptott, in his Antiquities of 
Oxiordshire. The bath was always visible, 
but was “considered * asa small stew, walled 
round with rough stone, till the workmen 
discovered the tesselated floor near it. Here 
‘the “Roman ‘tiles and the’ tesselation are 
still in a state of good preservation, although 
. in a wet situation, The oak dug up is sound, 
bleck, and heavy.~ From the present and 
Other'similar places that have been found, and 
“hitherto not noticed, we can trace that the 
Koman stations in the reign of Domitian were, 
‘Wallingford, Bicester, the: Rartons, Great 
Tew, Wigginton, (where some Roman tiles 
aid coins have been found), Swerford, Hook- 
norton (Berry-field fatm), Chipping-Norton, 
Sarsden (probably a chief station), Churchill, 
Chelteniam, Cirencester, and Winchcome. 
Married.| At Glympton Park, Thomas 
Perrott, esq. licutenant-colonel of the Ox- 
fordshire militia, to Miss Davies, only daugh- 
terof the late R. Davies, of Kythebyd, Gla- 
morganshire. 
At Oxford, Captain Hayes of the Royal 
Marines, to Mirgaret, eldest daughter of Jo- 
shua Covke, esq. 
At Witney, Mr, Robert Walsh, bo Miss 
Charloige Clarke, > - 
relict of John B, esq. 
Osfendtchine hanes Gem tford—N orthampton. [April ty 
Dicd.] At Bicester, Miss Reading, late 
post-mistress there. 
At Charlbury, Mr. James Gardner.—Mr. 
John Barrett, late of Queen square, West 
minster. 
At Bloxham, John, youngest son of Mr. J» 
Davis, 20. 
At Wheatley, Mrs, Kennedy, relict of the 
Rev. Mr. K. of Abingdon, 
At Oxford, Mr. Fisher, sen.—Mr. George. 
—Mrs, North.—Mr. W. Mott, upwards of 
20 years canon’s butler, of Christ Church, 67- 
BUCKINGHAMSHIRE. 
Died.] At High Wycombe, Sarah Louisay 
only daughter of the late Captain Charles 
Douglas, R.N. 
At Tyringham, Mrs..Praed, wife of Wil- 
liam P. esq. 
Mr. William Simpson, master of a large 
academy at Prospect Place, near High Wy~ 
combe. He left his residence, without as= 
Signing any reason for so doing ; and ten,days 
afterwards was found by some watermen 
drowned in the Thames, near London Bridge. 
. HERTFORDSHIRE. 
Died.] At Aspeden Hall, Mrs. Boldero, 
|. BEDFORDSHIRE. 
Died.] At Wroxhill Farm, Marston, Eli~ 
zabeth Judith, eldest daughter of Mr. John 
Foster, of Reyton Chapel, Lenham, Roe 
16. : 
NORTHAMPTONSHIRE. 
Married.| At Long Buckby, Mr. B. Pett 
of St. Ive’s, Huntingdonshire, to Miss’ 
Denney, daughter of W. S. Denney, esq. of 
the former place, 
Died. At Peterborough, the Rev. Henry 
Mather Schutz, D.D. rector of Burton Cog- 
gles, Lincolnshire, and of Paston, in this 
county, 80. He was the oldest of the king’s 
chaplains, having been appointed in 1760. 
At Easton, near Stamford, Mr. James 
Woodward.—-Mrs. Bonner, 70. Mr. George 
West, 55. 
At Naseby, Mr. Hart Buck, and a few 
days afterwards, Mrs. B. his wife. 
At Pytchley Lodge, Mr. Luke Nunneley. 
At Northampton, Charles James, youngest 
son of W. Sutton, esq. 23. 
The Rev. John Clarke, master of the free 
grammar school Guilsborough, vicar of Duse 
ton, in this county, and of Weare Under- 
word, Bucks, 87. 
At Kettering, Mr. Jacob Watdoitt aged 87 
years, 27 of which he spent with reputation 
as.a draper at Thrapston. He was the father 
of the town of Kettering. In the year 1745 
he volunteered into the regiment of carbi- 
niers raised by that patriotic nobleman, Johr 
Duke of Montague, and marched with them 
into the north, under the command of Mae 
jor Swinney, to assist in quelling the rebele 
lion ; he is believed to be the last member 
of that respectable corps. About the year 
1777, he'retired from Thrapston and return 
ed to this his native place; after which, he 
married his jhird wife, whem he sprvived 14 
yearsa 
