i 
1808.] Marriages and Deaths inand near London. 
Cooper, of Yetminster, Dorsst, to Miss 
Bacon. 
At St. Pancras, W. C. Richardson, esq. 
youngest son of John. R. esq. of Bridge End, 
Glamorgan, to Marianne, only daughter of 
J. Walker, esq. of Conway-street, Fitzroy~ 
square, i 
At Battersea, William Saunders, esq. of 
Battersea Rise, to Maria, eldest daughter of 
S. Rolleston, esq. of Arlington-street. 
Thomas Willson, esq. of Folcy-place, to 
Miss Mary Agn Ince, of America-square, 
youngest, daughter of the late William 1, esq. 
ef Hornsey. 
At St. George’s, Hanover-square, Sir Jolin 
Gore, R. N. to Miss Montague, eldest daugh- 
ter of Admiral Montague, commander in chief 
at Portsmouth. 
Mr. Richard Winstanley, of King-street, 
to Mary Jane, eldest daughter of the late 
Mr. Henry Winstanley, of Cheapside. 
At Newington, Mr. Samuel Bickley,. to 
Eliza Agnes Wallace only daughter of Sir 
Thomas Wallace. 
DIED. ; 
At his house near Blackfriar’s Road, Mr, 
Bartheleman, the celebrated performer on the 
violin. He particularly excelled as a solo 
performer of Corelli’s music. fe 
In Cripplegate Work-house, Mrs. Mary 
Carey, 108. 
_- At Walthamstow, Solomon Barent Gompertz, 
° esa70, 
_ At the St. 
~ Mr.Stewart. 
_ Athis father’s house, in Lower Grosvenor- 
_ street, Lieutenant-General Churchill, who 
‘signalized himself in somany engagements in 
Flanders, and in St. Domingo, where he had 
achief command for many years. 
' Lady Diana Beauclerc, sister of the Duke of 
Marlborough, and of the Countess Dowager 
of Pembroke. Her ladyship was first cousin 
to Aubrey, fifth Duke of St. Alban’s, father 
of the present Duke, and of Lord William, the 
present High Sheriff for the county of Lin- 
colo.;. She was, first married in 1757, to 
Frederick St, John, Lord Viscount Boling- 
broke, from whom she was divorced in 1768, 
and married, secondly, in 1768, the Hon, 
Topham, Beauclerc, (son of Lord Sydney B. 
and grandson of the first Duke of St. Alban’s} 
-well known by his intimacy with Dr. Johnson, 
Edmund Burke, and other men of learning 
_* and genius of his time, He dicd.in March 
4780. 
Mr. Pym, one of the store-keepers in 
the Tower. He wa8 opening a Joop-hole, to 
» take in. bedding; above the small armory, 
when a sudden gust of wind took the doors, 
_ which precipitated him upwards of ninety 
fect, and he was/killed on the spot. He had 
Served in the American war, and was taken 
with General Burgoyne 5 he afterwards was 
put.on board the Ville.de Paris, when Count 
de Grasse ofiered him a valuable consideration 
_ to enter into the French sevice, which he 
- Montury Mag,, No. i765. er 
James’s Hotel, Jermyn-street, 
177 
refused; in consequence of which, the Count 
behaved to him in the mast friendly manner, 
until the time he was retaken by the late 
Lord Rodney. 
At Isleworth, Zulia, second daughter of 
My. A. Cherry, of the Swansea Theatre, 18, 
In Little Alie Street, Goodman’s Fields, 
Mr. onas, formerly head cashier to Abraham 
Goldsmid, esq. 
In Percy Street, Bedford Square, Hobe 
Crompton, esq. 28 years of his Majesty’s cuss , 
toms, 60. 
At Camberwell, Leonard Lefewre, esq. 
Facoh Wrench, esq. second senior commone 
councilman to the city of London, 70, 
In Marsham Street, Westminster, Mrse 
Eaststaff 
&e the house of his brother, the Hom 
William Maule, in Spring-Garden, the Hons 
Henry Ramsay. This amiable young gentle- 
man was in the naval service of the India 
Company ; and when last in China was drawn 
into 2 duel witha brother officer, in which he 
received a wound in the head, chat on his re- 
turn to England required the operation of the 
trépan. It was performed by Mr, Home, with 
every \prospect of success, but inflammation 
ensued, and baffled all medical sIcill. § 
In Bedford-row, Thomas Astley Mabere 
ley, eSq- 
In Weymouth-street, Portland Place, Thos 
mas Place, esq. 
At Stoke Newington, T. Compton, esq. 
Av Poplar, Miss Eliza Sberwood, eldest 
daughter of the late Captain S. of the East 
India Company’s service. : 
In St, James’s-street, Mrs, Brasdenell, wie 
dow of Lieutenant+Ceneral B,° s 
In Cheapside, Miss ‘Harrison, of Stubb 
House, Durham. 
At his house, at Islington, Foon Fonesy 
esq. aged 71, formerly an eminent optician im 
Holborn, from whence he had retired nearly 
sixteen years. 
At her house at Epsom, Mrs. Hodgson, relict 
of the late Robert, Hodgson, eng, formerly a 
captain .in;the ist regiment of Dragoon 
Guards, . Captain, H.. was) at the, battle. of 
Minden, with Lord George Sackville. Mrs, 
H. was first married to Thomas Wintering~ 
ham, esq. descended from the same ancestor 
in the reign of Elizabeth, with the late Sir 
Clifton W. She was of the respectable family, 
of the Halls, at Colchester, and nearly ree 
lated to the late Rey. John Halls. The bulk 
of her fortune she bequeathed to Mz, Broway. 
a near kinsman.of hen first husband. 
In Tooley-street, after a few days illness, 
in, consequente of the eruption of a blood~. 
vessel, Mr. Richard Edginson, jun. aged 275 
Till within a short period or his death, he re- 
sided at Abingdon, in’ Berkshire, of which 
place he was.a native; but, some peculiar 
circumstafices obliged him to settle in Lon- 
don tor the convenience of business; and it 
was amid the exertions necessarily accasioued 
by his removal, ghat the fatal event tools 
Aa y place, 
