¥811.] 
was the son and hetr of Robert Langrishe, 
esq. of Knocktopher; was sworn of the 
privy council, appointed a commissioner of 
revenue, and created a baronet by letters 
patent January 24,1777. Sir Hercules mar- 
ried Hannah, second daughter and co-heiress 
of Robert Myhill, esq. and sister of the late 
Marchioness of Ely, and had issue, 1. Robert, 
Member for Knocktopher, married Anne, 
daughter of Bellingham Boyle, grand-daugh- 
ter of Lord Primate Hoadly. 2. James. 3. 
Mary Jane, married James Wilson, of Par- 
sonstown, in the county of Wicklow, esq. 
4. Elizabeth, married the Rev. Christopher 
Robinson, son of Christopher Robinson, a 
Judge of the Court of King’s Bench. Sir 
Hercules is succeeded in title and estate by his 
eldest son, now Sir Robert Langrishe, bart. 
Sir Hercules enjoyed the friendship of Burke ; 
and his ¢¢ Letters on the State of the Irish 
Catholics” are addressed to the Faronet. 
* At Lough Swilly, on board H. M. S. Sal- 
danha, which he commanded, Captain John 
Stuart, son of the late Sir Charles S. K-B. 
He was some time flag-captain to Sir R. Bick- 
@rton, in the Mediterranean. 
DEATHS ABROAD. 
" On the 10th of June, at Vizagapatam, in 
Monthly Commercial Report. 
397 
the prime of life, the Rev. Augustus Deg 
Granges, English Missionary, (who left his 
residence at Gosport, seven years since) be- 
loved and regretted by all who knew him, 
Europeans and natives. He manifested great 
devoutness to God, and intense application 
and unwearied perseverance in the discharge 
of his sacred*functions. Among other labours, 
the benefits.of which, we trust, will by no 
means cease with his valuable life, he was 
particularly engaged, with thé assistance of a 
learned Bramin convert, in translating the 
New Testament into Telinga; a work for 
which he was well qualified, by a critical 
knowledge of the Greek, and a considerab’e 
acquaintance with the Telinga languages, no 
less than by heartfelt experience of the power 
of the gospel of Christ unto salvation. 
At the house of her grandson, in Nassauy 
New Providence, in the 91st year of her age, 
the Hon. Anne Lovisa Moreton, widow of 
the late Hon. Charles Moreton, (who was 
the youngest son of Matthew, the first Lord 
Ducie) and materoal grandmother of Henry 
Moreton Dyer, esq. Judge of the Vice Ade 
miralty Court of the Bahama Islands. 
RS RS a 
BRITISH TRADE 
MONTHLY COMMERCIAL REPORT. 
AND Manouractures.—The Honourable the East-India Company 
have declared for sale, the undermentioned goods, viz. 
Medy Bonet ot cece 42 
300,000 
— Congou and Campoi... 4,300 000 
— Pekoe and Souchong.-. 80,000 
= Singlo and Twankey.. 800,000 ° 
— Hyson skm.....-..- 60,000 
= Hyson ......-.- seas) S2605060 
Total 5,500,000 Ibs. net,on Wednesday June 5, 1811. 
- Prompt the 30th of August following. 
The manufacteries of Manchester, Nottingham, Birmingham, &c. &c. continue, we are 
sorry to say, in the same state as reported by us in our last. 
The sugar market has rather 
advanced in prices, and good Jamaica’s may be quoted at 67s. to 80s. per cwt..5 those of the 
other islands from 60s. to 70s. per cwt. Rum, Jamaica, exclusive of duty and excise, sells 
at 4s. 10d. to 6s. 5d. per gallon; Leeward Island ditto, at 4s. 4d. to 4s. 10d. per ditto. 
Coffee from 60s. to 80s. per cwt. ; West India Cotton-wool, from is 2d, to 1s. 8d. per Ib. 
The East India Company declare for sale on the 8th of May, prompt the 9th of August 
following, 2301 bags of pepper (prize of the Goeda Vresv,) dye-stuffs, cotton-wool, and 
all articles used in the manufactories are at mere nominal prices, owing to the present stage 
nation of trade in Lancashire and its neighbourhood, and likely to continue so, until we 
shall have foreign markets open for our cotton goods, &c. ; 
France.—The German mails, lately arrived, have opened so far an intercourse with 
this country, for money negotiation, but the restrictions are so rig-d on the Continent, that 
it is dangerous to risk either the drawing or excepting bills between the two countries, and 
in consequence thereof little or nothing is done in that way. By these mails, we are ine 
formed that the ports of Bordeaux, &c. &c. are full of wines, brandies, &c. and no port 
open to receive them, although offered at very low prices. All other kind of commerce 
is totally extinct in France, and their fabricated paper money bear an enormous discount. 
PortTucar.—The accounts of the last mail from Lisbon, fully informs us of this coun- 
try being at length completely cleared of the French, by the allied armies, and that in 
Sonsequence of it, the paper-money bears mow only a discount of 2 per cent, which 
Montury Maa, No, 212. E afew 
