1811.] 
At Retford. Mrs. Brumby. 
At East Bridgford, Mrs. Challands. 
At Barnston, Mrs. Phillips. 
At Burton on the Woulds, Mr. Thomas 
Buck. 
‘At Newark, Mr. Salmon.—“ary Anh, 
second daughter of the late Mr. Clark, of the 
Castle and Falcon, 20.—Mrs Brough, retict 
of Job B. esq. 86 ; 
- At Beeston, Mrs. Bigsby, wife of the Rev. 
Mr. B. 
At Averham, near Newark, Mrs. Calvert, 
29. 
At Syerston, Mr. Shaw. 
At Elton, Rebecca, daughter of Mrs. Mann, 
By: 
At Lenton, Mr. Robert Hopkin. 
At Colwick, near Nottingham, Samuel 
Bluckner, 89. He served during the rebel- 
Jion in £745, in the Duke of Kingston’s light 
horse, and is supposed to have been the last 
gurvivor of that celebrated regiment. 
LINCOLNSHIRE. 
Married] -At Langton, near Wragby, 
William Cropper, esq. of Cadeby House, to 
Miss Farr, of Strubby. 
At Louth, Captain Hudlestone, of Thorne, 
to Miss Ablewhite.—Mr. Robinson, of Hull, 
to Mary, daughter of T. Blythe, esq. 
At Sleaford, Mr. William Fuller, of Lon- 
don, to Susan, daughter of Mr. William 
Harrison 
At Friestorn, Mr. James Wheldale, of 
Frampton, to Miss Coupland, daughter of 
John G. gent. 
_ At Addlethurpe in the Marsh, Mr, Tonge, 
surgeon, of Alford, to Miss Howard. 
Died.}. At Lincoln, ia the county prison, 
Mr. R. Dowes, late of Mumby Chapel, near 
Alford, 84.—Mirs. Burton, 60. 
At Louth, Mrs. Kennet, a maiden lady, 
datighter of the late Edward B. esq. of Ked- 
dington:—Mrs. Hudson. 
At Gainsbro’, Mrs. Cook, wife of Captain 
John C. of the Mary sloup, Lynn trader, 68. 
—Mr, ‘Thomas Butterworth, 77.—Mrs. 
Hebson, wife of Mr. H. 
At Holbeach, Mrs. Barker, wife of Joseph 
B. esq. 30 —Miss Esler. —Mr. Wm. Brown, 
Mr, Maning.—Mr. R. Fawsett, surgeon, 
At Edenham, Mr. Greenberry, 87. 
At Somersby, Mary, daughter of the Tate’ 
Rev. Mr. Burton, 44. 
At Horncastle, William, eldest son of Mr. 
Trevor, surgeon, 22. 
At Brigg, Mrs. Elizabeth Burton, 74. 
At Coliyweston, Mr. Francis Freeman, 
re fae ; 
’ At Hundleby, Mr John Cooke. 
At Spiisby, Mr. Joba Barrow. 
At Friskney, My Samuel Broomfeld. 
At Stamford, Mr. Benjamin Howes, of 
King’s Cliffe. 
At Frith Bank, near Boston, Mrs, C:up- 
jand. 
At Somercotes, Mr. Orby, farmep. 
Lincolnshire—Lercestershire. 
‘ alloy of vanity or ostentation, 
385 
At Pickworth Lodge, near Stamford, Mae 
ria, eldest daughter of Mr. Deacon, 21, 
Mrs. La Your, wife of the Rev. Peniston 
La T. rector of Boothby Graflue. : ‘ 
At Morton, Mr. W. Girdley, 63. 
At Langtoft, near Deeping, Mr. Johan 
Craddock, jun. He had for some days’ la- 
boured under’a quinsey in his throat, which, 
had been relieved by an operation pefformed 
by a surgeon on the preceding day ; but by 
the imprudent recommendation of his friends, 
he was induced to take a quantity of spirits 
anda large piece of opium at night, with a 
view, as they imagined, of producing sleep ; 
profound stupor succeeded, and the poor min 
met a premature death by the fatal but too 
frequent practice of administering opiam in 
all cases of pain or sickness, by people wha 
are ignorant of its dangerous consequetces. 
LET€ESTERSHIRE. 
Married.] At Peatling Parva, Mr. Thomas 
Woodcock, of Gilmorton, to Miss Ann Rey- 
nolds, eldest daughter of Mr. R. of Ashby 
Lodze. 
At Loughborough, Mr. Johnson, of Seas 
grave, to Miss Cragg. 
At Ashby Magna, M. Moore, esq. of Sys- 
ton, to Miss Cooper. 
At Leicester, Mr. Thompson, of Notting+ 
ham, to Mrs. Pick. 
Died.| At Colorton, Mrs. Stinson. 
At Peckleton, Mrs. Wood, wife of the 
Rev. Mr. W. rector of that parish. f 
At Leicester, Mr. James Staples, keeper 
of the county gaol, 57.—-Mrs. Mason.—Mr. 
John Elton, 55 —Joseph, youngest soa of 
Samuel Lawson, esq. vf Nottingham.—Sa- 
muel, third son of Mr, Jobn Lomas, 23.—~ 
Mr. Joseph Brown.—Simeon, youngest son’ 
of Mr. Robert Brewin, 19.—Mr. 5. Simons, 
sen. many years huntsman to the Leicester 
harriers. —Mr. Dixon, 79. 
At Loughborough, Mis. Gilliver. 
At Hose, Mr. Henry Shilcock. 
At Sutton Bonnington, Mrs. Orme. 
At Hinckley, Mrs. Allsop, wife of Mr, 
Daniel A. : 
At Barrow upon Soar, Mr. Wright. 
‘Inthe 91st year of her age, Lucy, daughter 
of the Rev. John Atchison, of Leicester. 
Her literary acquisitions, which were very © 
uncommon for her sex, were mixed with no * 
OF that suze- 
riorily y of which her friends were proud, she 
herseif’ appeared to be unconscious. Her 
manners were so unpretending, and her con- 
versation so far from béing obcrusive, that it 
required a length of acquaintance, and a* 
degree of intimacy, to discover and appre- 
ciate the extent and solidity of her intel- 
lectual merits. But, respectable as’she was in 
her talents and literary attainments, she was 
still more amiadle in her temperand moral 
disposition. She was not so much to be admired 
for a well cultivated understanding, as to be 
beloved and approved fyr am unsophisticated 
hear’, 
