1822.] 
In Gower-street, 76, 
Reareley. 
At Ealing, the Rev. Colston Carr, L.B. 
In Dnke-street, Manchester-square, 34, 
Louisa Anne, wife of W. Trower, esq. of 
Calcutta. 
At Brompton, 18, Miss Jessy Philadel- 
phia, eldest daughter of Major Gen. Sir T. 
S. Beckwith. 
At Kensington, Mrs. Frost, 
At Maize-hill, Greenwich, Mrs. Collins. 
In Great Russell-street, Bioomsbury, 
Ann, relict of the Rev. Thomas Hirst, 
At Ray House, Woodford, after a lin- 
gering illuess, 18, Harry, third son of J. 
V. Parrier, esq. 
In the Edgware-road, Wm. Greene, esq. 
surgeon, R.N. 
At Grove Hill, Camberwell, 10, the 
eldest daughter of William Morgan, esq. 
In Half Moon-street, the wife of G. F. 
Lockley, esq. 
In Hatton Garden, 77, John Willan, 
esq. who, for several past years, devoted a 
mind, formed for vigorous enterprize, to 
the management of a most extensive and 
lucrative trade, as a carrier and mail 
contractor. 
Suddenly, Lady Frances Pratt, the eldest 
daughter of the Marqnis Camden. At 
three o'clock the young lady was seized 
with a shivering fit, supposed to liave been 
caused by her having walked in the gar- 
den with thin shoes. A _ physician at- 
tended, and, having prescribed the proper 
remedy, his patient seemed perfectly 
recovered, but the fit returned, and at six 
the lady expired. 
At Ealing Common, 82, Peter Le 
Cornue, esq. 
At Great Burstead, 103, John Kirkham, 
Lately, at Milton-house, near Peterbo- 
rough, 74, Charlotte Countess of Fitzwilliam. 
Her ladyship was the youngest daughter 
of William, second Earl of Besborough, 
by Caroline Cavendish, eldest danghter of 
William, third Duke of Devonshire. She 
was married to Earl Fitzwilliam in 1770, 
and had issue only one child, Charles 
Viscount Milton, m.p. for Yorkshire. ‘The 
death of her ladyship is deeply felt by all 
with whom she was connected. She was 
a friend to the distressed, and a liberal 
benefactress to the poor. 
In the Grove, Hackney, 80, Mr, Joseph 
Spurrell, respected and regretted by all 
who knew him. 
In York Buildings, New Road, Dr. 
Robert Gordon, late physician to the forces, 
and deputy inspector of hospitals. 
In Great Surrey-street, Anne, the wife 
of Mr. Thomas Walls, jun, 
In Broad-court, Long-Acre, 35, Mrs. 
Whitaker. 
At Portpool-lane, 17, Miss Mary-Ann 
Sager, of a consumption. Her amiable 
disposition and fascinating manners en- 
deared her to an extensive circle of friends 
Mrs. Isabella 
Deaths in and near London. 87 
and relations, who will long lave cause to 
lament her loss, 
At Forty-hill, Enfield, William Beckett, 
esq. 65. His loss will be long regretted 
by his numerous family, and by the neigh- 
bourhood in which he-lived, as in his 
public and private capacity he was useful 
by his advice and assistance to all around 
him. His whole conduct was governed 
by principles of charity, and might be 
said to exemplify that noblest work of 
God, an honest man. 
At Walton-upon-Thames, 13, Elizabeth 
Mary Beresford, second daughter of the 
Hon. and Rev. W. and Lady Anna 
Beresford, and grand-daughter to the late 
Arehbishop of Taam. 
39, Mr. Richard Munn, of Great Russell- 
street, Covent-garden, accidentally drown- 
ed in the Canal, near Holloway. He was 
a man of strict integrity, and is consider- 
ably regretted by a numerous circle of 
friends. 
After a long and painful illness, 19, 
Mary, the third daughter of Mr. George 
Graham, of Prospect-place, Southwark, 
solicitor. 
At Walthamstow, 62, Hannah, wife of 
Mr. John Corbyn, of Holborn, sincerely 
regretted by an affectionate family. 
In Hyde-street, Bloomsbury, 47, John 
Emery, esq. of Covent Garden Theatre. 
He was born at Sunderland, Durham, in 
1777, and was educated at Ecclesfield, in 
the West Riding of Yorkshire, where he 
acquired that knowledge of the dialect 
whic? obtained for him so much celebrity. 
He may be said to have been born an ac- 
tor, both his parents having followed that 
oecupation with some degree of provincial 
fame. Dis father designed him for the 
orchestra; but, aspiring to the honours of 
the stage, he laid aside the fiddle for the 
notes of dramatic applause, which he ob- 
tained on his first. appearance in Crazy, 
(Peeping Tom,) at the Brighton Theatre. 
He afterwards joined the York company, 
under the eccentric Tate Wilkinson, who 
spoke of him as “a great actor ;” which 
opinion was confirmed by a London audi- 
ence, on his first appearance at Covent Gar- 
den Theatre in the year 1798, on which 
occasion he selected the very opposite cha= 
racters of Frank Oatland, in A Cure for the 
Heart-Ache, and Lovezold, iy the farce of 
the Miser, in both of which parts he 
obtained great applause. The superior 
talents of this gentleman as an actor 
were universally admired by all lovers 
of the drama, In his own immediate line 
of acting, viz. the Yorkshire rustic, he 
was without an equal. He possessed ex- 
cellent natural abilities, was a good mnsi- 
cian, anda tolerable artist. To his duty 
imhis profession he was most strictly atten- 
tive ; so much so, that when dining in pub- 
lic, or in the society of his friends, and the 
time drew near for his attendance at the 
theatre, 
