592 
' At St. George’s, Southwark, Thomas Lan-’ 
caster, esq. of High-stfeet, to Miss fane™ 
Brookes, of White-street, Borough. ‘ 
At St. Botolphs, Bishopsgate, Reginald’ 
Graham, esq. 
daughter of Dr. Dennison, of “Broad street 
Buildings. ' ' 
At St. James’s, Clerkenwell, Mr. W. Joy, 
bookseller, of Ave Maria lane, to Miss Mar 
, Redman, of Newark-upon. Trent. > 
At St. George’s, Bloomsbury, Lieutenant- 
Colonel Knight, of Barrels, Wrrwickshire, to 
Miss J, Boulton, daughter of H. B. esq. of 
Thorncroft, Surry. 
At Hackney, Mr. Francis Wakefield, jun. 
of Nottingham, to Elizabeth, youngest daugh- 
ter of the late Mr. Gilbert W. " { 
At St. Dunstan's, Captain J. Brady, of the 
royal navy, fo Miss'Lloyd, of Trewern, Den- 
bighshire. Ul 
» DIED, 
In Old’ Montague-street, 
Mr. Sohn Crudipton, merchant, 
. In Little James-street, Bedford-row, Ar. 
3m. Badcock; midshipman belonging to the 
Stately, 16. He was the eldest son of the 
fate’ Wiliam B. esq. by Sophia, daughter of 
Richard Cumberland, esq. 
At Muswell Hill, Dfrs.' Norris, wife of 
Thomas N. esy. 68. 
© In King’s- road, Bedford-row, Mark Sprott, 
Whitechapel, 
Bq; 
In Ely place, Mrsi Fobnson, 69. 
- Mrs. Bromiey, wife of Warner B. esq. of 
Islington-green, and Gray’s-inn. 
In Basinghall-street, Ars. Frances Mary 
‘Fones, wife’ of Mr. James Jones, jun. mer- 
chant. She was daughter of Robert Lovett, 
esq. late commissioner of Revenue in Ireland, 
and niece of Sir) Jonathan Lovett, bart. of 
Luscombe; Bucks. 
At Wood’s Hotel, Panton-square, D. New- 
ton, esq. late captain in the 7th West India 
regiment. 
In King-street, Covent-garden, David Da- 
wieS, Sq. : 
In Vhornhaugh:street, Fobn Gibson, esq. 
late of Calcutta. 
George Meadows Barry, esq. late of Hales- 
worth, Suffolk. ; 
At his house in Hertford«treet, May Fair, 
the Ear! of Liverpool, of whom a full account 
will be given in our next Number. 
At Teddington, Viscount Aghrim, Baron of 
Ballymore, 66. He is succeeded in his titles 
and “estates by Frederic, Viscount Aghrim. 
His lordship married Anne Elizabeth Chris- 
tine, Baroness De Tuill de Scerosberkin, by 
whom he has Jeft several children. - 
At'Newmarket, in his 77th year, Thomas 
Panton, sq. brother to the late Duchess Dow- 
ager of Ancasterj and uncle to the Countess 
of Cholmondeley and Lady Gwydir.» He was 
one of the oldest members on the turf, and 
lately married Miss Gubbins, of Bath, but has 
left no issue; -- Ris immense property, subject 
toa settlement of 50001. a year on Mrs. Pan- 
ulwich, to Louisa, second’ 
Marriages and Deaths in ‘and near London. , (Jam. ty 
ton; descends ‘to his two nieces: above-men- 
tioned. ak yf Al eeiD ti 
At his seat, ‘Wardour Castle, Wiltshire, 
Henry, Lord. Artindell, Baron’ of Wardour,. 
Count of the Moly Roman Empire. His lord= 
ship was born in 1740, and succeeded to the 
honours and estates of his father in 41758. 
Seven years afterwards he “married Mary,’ 
daughter of Benedict Conquest, esq. by whom 
he had three daughters, the eldest and young- 
eést of whom are dead} the survivor, Eleanor 
Mary, in 4786, became the wife of Lord Clif- 
ford. Being a Roman: Catholic, his lordship 
never.took the oaths, or his seat, in the house 
of peers. A few years since as the ancient 
family seat was falling into decay, Lord Arun- 
dell erected a mansion in its immediate vicie 
nity on a noble and extensive scale; but the 
expence incufred in this undertaking, tended 
not a little to embarrass his fortune. He is 
succeeded in his title by his first cousin, 
James Everard Arundell, esq. of Immham Hall, 
in the county of Lincoln, i 
In Chapel-street, May Fair, Hago Meynell, 
esq. so well known on the turf, and in all the 
fashionable circles, for half a century past, at 
the age of 61 years. He had been repeatedly 
attacked by paralytic strokes, during the last . 
two or three years. He has left a large pro-. 
perty. 
At Enfield, Thomas Sfones, esq. formerly of 
Radcliffe Highway. Mr. Jones, for many 
years carried on a very extensive correspon- 
dence in the chemical Jine throughout Ea- 
rope. By a very close and laborious attention 
to “business,. he acquired a considerable pro- 
perty, which for some years past he has been 
enjoying in an agreeable retitement.- He 
was a native of Merionethshire, and served his 
apprenticeship in Chester, and for his strength 
of judgment,- engaging manners, and aJmost 
inimitable integrity, will long be remembered 
with affection and esteem. 
In Bartlett’s- buildings, Holborn, ohn 
Browning, esq. eldest son of the Rev. Dr. B. 
and fellow-of King’s College, Cambridge, 23, 
In Ticchfieid-street, Madame Farry, relict 
of General Francis J. Commandant of the 
Royal Military College, at Wycombe. She 
was a native of Posen, in Poland, and*fre- 
quently amused. her friends by relating anec- 
dotes of the Bonaparte family, one of ‘whom 
she employed as a mahtua-maker during her 
_residence.at Paris. 
At his seat, Hawkestone, Shropshire; 
Sir Richard. Hill, bart. 75. This gentleman 
was descended. from a family of considerable 
antiquity, in the county of Salop, which can 
be traced upto the time of Edward Il. Row- 
land was the first honored with a patent of 
baronetage in. 1726. He afterwards ‘repre- 
sented the city of Litchfield in Parliament, 
and had a large family, consisting of ten 
children, the eldest of whom. Richard,’ was 
born in 1733. He was educated at’ West 
minster school, and. afterwards admitted ds 
~gentleman commoner of Magdalen College, 
Oxford 5 
