1822. Dbaths in and near London. 467 
At East-hill, Wandsworth, 55;° Mr. J. In Acton-place, Kingsland-road, Mary, 
Smedley. i Lew wife of Johu Gant, esq. 
Rear- Admiral John Spratt Rainier, much 
distinguished’ by! his command im the In- 
dian ocean, dint 
‘In King’s-road, Chelsea; 75, Mr, James 
Colvill. wid : 
In Leicester.square, T. Mackenzie, esq. 
M.P, for Ross-shire, 
» At Great: Holland, Essex, R. Jones, esq. 
late of Mansion-house-street. 
At Limehouse, Mr. John Tebbutt, jun. 
ship-builder. — > - > 
~ In’ 'Chureh-row, Limehouse, 79, Mrs. 
Batson. widow of Robert B. esq. 
In Boswell-court, 78, Richard Wood- 
deson,LL.v; Bencher of the Middle ‘Tem- 
ple, Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford, 
formerly Vinerian Professor of the Laws 
of England, and a Commissioner of 
Bankrupts. 
At Tonbridge Wells, 56, Samuel Rhodes, 
esq. of Islington, an opulent farmer and 
dairyman. 
» In'Pall Mall, Miss. C. Hayes, daughter 
of the late B. H. esq. of Cork. 
At Wimbledon house, Lady Beaumaurice, 
wife of Sir Wm. B, bart. 
In Wimpole-street, Henrietta, daughter 
of the late Sir E. Knatchbull, bart. 
‘At Isleworth, Robert Price, esq. late of 
Old Change. j 
At Edmonton, 73, Mr. L. Vulliamy. 
K. Berry, esq. son of the late Bennis B. 
esq. of Dover-street. suit 
Suddenly, at  Bradston-bsook, | near 
Guildford, 69, Mary, widow of the late T. 
Gibson, esq. 
In Welbeck-street, 73, Mrs. Henrietta 
Pauncefort, of Great Brickhill Manor, 
Bucks, relict of P. P. esq. : 
After a long illness, Sarah Hodgson, 
‘youngest daughter of the late George. H. 
esq. coroner for Middlesex. 
At Walworth, 85, T. Stringer, esq. for- 
merly of his Majesty's Customs. 
In Park-street, Grosvenor-square, 24, 
Miss Ann Allen. : 
At Stepney, 50, Thomas Carwardine, esq. 
late of Earl’s Colne Priory,. Essex. 
At Peckham, 48, Brown French, esq. « 
‘In Baker-street, Portman-square, Chris- 
tiana, wife’ of W.'Greenwood, .esq. of 
Brookwood-park, Hants. 
| At Kentish-town, Mrs. Susannah . Price, 
of Old Fish-street, Doctors’ Commons. | - 
' At Hammersmith, Miss. Lawrence, 
_ In Jermyn-street, St. James’s, Mrs. 
Mark Klyne, jun. 
In Cheapside, 84, Mrs, E. Ganting. 
~ In Walbrook, Sarih, widow of Ay W. 
Rutherford, esq: of Stamford-hill. 
In Astley’s-row, Islington, 70, Mr. A. 
Western. 
in Upper Charlottestreet, | Fitzroy- 
square, 55, Sumuel John Symons Trickey, 
€3q» 
At Putney, Jane, wife of the Rev. W. 
Carmall.... . 
At, Lambeth, 72, Caroline, wife of Wil- 
liam Manners, esq. ¥ 
At Highgate, in the prime of life, 
George Longman, esq. an eminent stationer 
in the Old Bailey, of the firm of Longman 
and Dickenson.. He was the son of the 
late Mr. T. Longman, of Paternoster-row, 
brother of Mr. T. N. Longman, the pre- 
sent distinguished bookseller, and member 
for. Maidstone in two Parliaments, in 
which he supported Whig principles. The 
proximate cause of his death was a fall 
from his horse, though he had previously 
injured his health by too close am attention 
to business. : . 
In Nelson-square, after a protracted ill- 
ness, which she bore with exemplary for- 
titude, aged 42, Mury Frances, wife of Sir 
Charles Aldis. ‘The remains of this much- 
respected lady were deposited in the vault 
of Christ-church, Surrey, attended by her 
son, as chief mourner, and a few select 
friends; among whom were Sir Lumley 
St. George Skeffington, bart. Dr. Uwins, 
William Godwin, esq. James Woodham, 
esq. &c. Lady Aldis possessed great per- 
sonal charms, was very accomplished, and 
of prepossessing manners, Though her 
figure was pelite, and every way. feminine, 
yet her mind was completely masculine; 
and she at all times preferred the instruc- 
tive conversation of well-informed men to 
the light and trifling discourse which she 
too frequently met with among her own 
sex. Her ladyship was married to Sir 
Charles in 1800, by whom she had several 
children ; one ouly survives, the son before 
mentioned, 
In Upper Gloucester-street, Regent'’s- 
park, 70, Mr, John Debrett, formerly an 
eminent bookseller in Piccadilly, and. edi- 
tor of the works called “ Debrett’s Peer- 
age” and “ Baronetage.” He had been 
for some time in.a declining. state of 
health, and was found dead in his arm- 
chair at the side of his bed. Mr. Debrett’s 
shop, when in the zenith of his prosperity, 
was much. eelebrated as the resort of the 
leading Whig noblemen and gentlemen, 
who there spent a portion of the morning 
in discussing theevents of the time. He 
had full opportunity of acquiring a large 
fortune; but, from. too much confidence 
in those about him, an easiness of temper, 
and without a sufficient portion of careful 
worldJy wisdom, he did) not turn it to. the 
best account. He was a kind, good-natured, 
friendly man, who experienced the vicissi- 
tudes of life with fortitude,—who never 
made an enemy, and who died without 
having forfeited a friend. peer 
In Mead Row, Lambeth, James Sowerby, 
esq. F.L 5+ Mr. Sowerby was originally a 
teacher 
