1808.] 
bides three squares. There are already built 
a miarket-place, and elega’ t market-heuse; a 
large church, two excellent inns, and up- 
wards of a handred houses. A weekly mar- 
ket 1s. estaclished, with an arinual fair, and 
races; The houses are all built of grey gra- 
nite, and covered with blue slate. The 
ground it stands on, with some hundreds of 
acres adjoining, was gained from the sea by 
embanking in 1800. 4 Embanking eight 
years 2go 1860 acres of land from the sea; 
the greater part of which lets from thirty to 
forty shillings per acre. 5: Another embank- 
nyent ig begun, of shore-lan¢s, contiguous, 
that will gain 3,500 acres of equal-value, 
which, when finished, will be the noblest 
thing of the kind hitherto undertaken in 
Britain. An iron rail-way will be placed on 
the top of the embankment, which will con- 
nect the counties of Merioneth and Carnat- 
von, before separated by this oozy iblet of the 
seai. 6° Irrigating and loading a large propor- 
tion of the land gained from the sea. 7. Plant- 
ing several hundreds of acres of rocky spots and 
“mountainous steeps ; a work annually proceed- 
ing. So repid-has been the growth of these plan- 
tations, that the parts first planted-are al- 
ready worth from 601: to 100! an acre. A 
large nursery is established near the town, 
and considerable tracts of mountain are every 
year inclosed, and covered with larco. The 
Scarcity ‘of wood in this part of Wales, and 
the importance of Yns-Congor harbour, will 
render such plantations of great value ina 
very-few years. 9. Establishing a complete 
Woollen manusactory on the estate, and in the 
town an improved tan-work, in which the 
tormentil is used. 10. To these may be 
added, the building of an elegant villa, ina 
style, the simplicity of which corresponds 
with the nature of the scenery around it, 
The disposition also of the extensive grounds, 
the views from and round which, for several 
miles, are among the most singular and ro- 
mantic in Wales. These public improve- 
™Ments are widely felt by the adjoining coun- 
ties, and when the harbour and new reads are 
finished (for which Mr. M. has obtained se- 
parate acts of Parliament), the influx of 
wealth into chis part of North Wales will to- 
tally alter and improve the condition of its 
inhabitants. 
IRELAND. 
Married-} | In Dublin, Major L’Estrange, 
of the King’s County militia, to Miss Jane 
Jackson, second daughter of the late Colonel 
_ J. of Prospect-house, county of Mayo. 
At Glanmire, county of Cork, James Ca+ 
Sey, esq. of Blossom-prove, to Miss Chatter- 
ton, daughter of the Jate Thomas C. esq. 
At Toome chutch, in the county of Li- 
merick, Vere Dawson Hunt, esq of Cappagh, ° 
county of Tipperary, to Miss Holmes, daugh- 
ter of the late Philip Holmes, esq. of Mill- 
brook, in the said county. ; 
Monwury Mac., No. 175, 
Irelands 
“193 
Died?] At Clonakilty, county of Cork, 
Townsend Beamish, esq. 
At Dingle, county of Kerry, Lieut. T. 
Eagar, of the royal navy. The public and 
private life of this young gentlemun created 
universal tespect, love, and esteem. His 
bravery was evinced on the most perilous ser= 
vices; he fought, and he bled for his coun- 
try, and he participated in his country’s tri- 
umphs. He served four years on board the 
flag ship of the immortal Hero of the Nile. 
At Roscrea,Christopher Downer, esq M.D, - 
At Crotto, county vf Kerry, Miss Pone 
sonby, eldest daughterof Major Ponsonby. 
In Dublin, Mr. James Vallance, books 
seller, 74. ’ 
At Glencullen, near Killernan, in the 
county of Dublin, aged 109 years, 3 months, 
and 17 days, Valentine Walsh, farmer. This 
venerable patriarch was a keen sportsmany 
and a joyiai companion, much attached to his 
native whiskey, of which he drank regularly 
two quarts every day in grog, util a weele 
before his death. 
At Kilkenny, Lieutenant-general Eyre 
Power ‘Trench, brother tu the late Earl of 
Clancarty, 60. He entered early in life inte 
the army, of which he was upwards of forty 
years an ornament. He served in America - 
during the whole of the unfortunate war with” 
that country; and raised, at his own expences 
the 102d regiment of foot. He was appoint= 
ed, in the first instance, to the command of 
the second battalion of the 27th regiment 3 
soon after of the 5th garrison battalion 3 and he 
died in the command df the West India regime 
ment. Whe rank of brigadier-general was 
conferred upon him in ‘the year 1795; im 
17.98, he was appointed a major-general, and 
in- 1805, a lieutenant-general. General 
Trench’ commanded in Connaught, his na- 
tive province, in the years 1798 and 1799, 
where his vigilance and~humanity were obe 
jects of admiration and gratitude, 
At Ballyhack, in the county of Wexford, 
William Lambert, esq. 
At Ballygurteen, in the county of ‘Kile 
kenny, at the extraordinary age of 110 years: 
during the lapse of which he never experia 
enced one hour’s sickness, Dennis Carroll, 
farmer; he vecained- the full possession of his 
facultizs to his last Moments. 
At Feltrim, Lady Tyrawley. Her death 
was occasioned by a scarlet fever, caught from ~ 
a child brought into the house, belonging to 
one of the servants. Her ladyship was daugh- 
ter and heiress of the late Mr. Levinge, and 
niece to the Jate Dr. Marlay, the admired 
Bishop of Waterford. The estates devolve te 
a son of Lord Granard. ; 
At the seat of his nephew, General Cock- 
burne, near Bray, Andrew Caldwell, esq. & | 
gentleman of extensive learning, of refined 
taste, of great elegance and suavity of mans 
ners, and of a feeling heart. He was born in 
Dublin, but received his education in Glas- 
Cc £0Ws 
