86 Deaths in and near London 



At GreeiiwicJi, Mrs. Carder. 

 Tn New Palace-jard, 63, Mr. Thomas 



KiU'ick. 



At Enfield, Mrs. Esther Townscnd. 



In Upper North-place, Guildforil-strect, 

 72, Mrs. Elizuhelh Legge. 



At Farnliani, Surrey, Mrs. Priestly 

 Collier. 



Major General W. O, Faucclt, of flie 

 E. I. Co.'s Service, aged 70, and son of 

 llie late Gen. Sir William, f K.n. 



At Feckham, B. H. Smith, fsq. 



At fhi* Albany, tVilliujn Cruise, ' enq. 

 kirrister-at-liiw. 



Ill Great Woodstock-street, Mr. IVil- 

 liain fVhitelntc, a respectable statuary. 



At Mordeu-()ark, Siirrfv, Miss Sarah 

 Adams, late of Haiiipstead. 



Ill Beer-laue, 'I'owei-sireet, 83, Mr. 

 John IJriiikald. 



At Upper Clapton, Jumis Benson, esq. 



At Hampstead, Ann Catherine Lucy. 

 widow of Kcv. Samuel i\Ian Godscliall, of 

 WesloD-lioiise, Surrey. 



In Cainberwcll-sjrove, '22, Robrrt, 

 elilcst son of Robert Metcalf, esq. 



At Islington, 90, Mrs. Coirie, widow of 

 Kiciiai'd C. es(|. 



At tlie Butts, Brentford, James Zln- 

 sau, esq. 



At Limeliousc, Janet, wife of James 

 Walker, esq. 



On board tlie national sliip Bustard, at 

 Jamaica, Cornelius ['luclcer Earl', cs/. son 

 of the late Hamilton Leonard Earle, esq. 



In Cecji-street, Strand, Mrs. Eliza 

 Nathan, author of " Lanjjreath," '* I'lving- 

 lon,'' and many other esteemed works. 



At Kichmonii, James, Earl Curnwallis, 

 Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry, and 

 Dean of Durham, in the 8lst year of his 

 age. He is succeeded in his title and 

 estates by his only son, James Mann, 

 Viscount Broome. 



At Barnes, 79. the Rec. Theophilus 

 Honlbroiikc, i.l.b. f.r.s.e. formerly of St. 

 John's college, Cambridge. He was ac- 

 tive in Ihc pronsDtion of every useful 

 iindertakin;j, and for some time held the 

 office of president of the Literary and 

 Philosophical S ciely of Liverpool. His 

 death is f;enerally lamenled in his private 

 circles for many amiable qualities. 



In a lit of apoplexy, .fonpk Marrijatt, 

 esq. M.P. and the head of a banking firm. 

 He was chairman of the Committee of 

 Underwriters at Lloyd's, and member of 

 jiarliament fi;r Sandwich, a merchant and 

 banker in London, and agent for the 

 island of Grenada. Mr. Marryatt jmjs- 

 sessed a great deal of general information, 

 a clear, powerful, and business-like man- 

 ner of speaking, which gave him great 

 ascendancy in all public meetings con- 

 nected Willi his own pursuits, and pro- 

 cured him an attentive hearing in the 

 House of Commons. He was iu the <J7tU 

 4 



[Feb. I, 



year of his age. Mr. Marryatt invariably 

 took his seat on the lower bench of the 

 ministerial side of the House ; but he 

 was by no means " a thick and thin" 

 Treasury-Bench member. On many 

 mercantile " measures," he differed from 

 those with whom he might be considered 

 as generally acting ; and as fo the " Privi- 

 leges'' of the House, he decidedly took a 

 piipiilar course. — During the discussions 

 respecting the late queen, wlitn Princess 

 of Wales, it may be remembered that the 

 " gallery was cleared," by which means 

 the rofiorters were excluded in common 

 with the strangers. Mr. Mairyatt de- 

 clared, that '' while he held a seat in the 

 House, there should be no debates with 

 closed doors. If others were excluded, 

 to the be it of his ability he would report 

 himself. The nieinbcrs were the repre- 

 sentatives of the people of Rngland, and, 

 as far as he was personallv concerned, the 

 people of England should know what 

 their representatives were doing-" A 

 good report of those proceedings which 

 took place within closed doors appeared 

 in the papers of the next day. 



I'CCtESIASTICAL PROMOTIONS. 



I?ev. G. Smalky, m.a. to the vicarage 

 of Dehenham, Su'tFolk. 



Rev. H. Fardell, to the rectory of Bex- 

 well, Norfolk. 



Kev. L. A.CIerk, B.A. to the perpetual 

 curacy and parish church of Riiniburgh, 

 with that of St. Michael Southelmhain an- 

 nexed, in Siitfolk. 



Rev. J. Foley, m.a. to the rectory of 

 Shrawley. 



Kev. B. Pack, to the rectory and vicar- 

 age of Tiillo«, alias Baltimore, of Ross. 



Rev. W. Read, M.A. to be domestic 

 cha[ilain of t!ie Duke of Clarence. 



Rev. T. Homer has been elected second 

 master of the Grammar School, Sheffield, 



Rev. D. Hatlon appointed chaplain in 

 ordinary to. the king 



Hon. and Rev. W. Annesley, to the 

 vicarage of Sludley, Warwirkshire. 



Rev. J. K. Jameson, to the perpetual 

 curacy of Heywood, Lancashire. 



Rev. r. Aiinisted, b.d to the valuable 

 living of Coikerliam, near Lancaster. 



Rev. R. Moore, to the rectory of Wim- 

 bourne St. Gibs, Dorsetshire. 



Rev. J. L. Hamilton, to the rectory of 

 Ellesboroiigli, Bucks. 



Rev. J. Alay dwell, to the rectory of 

 Boothby Pagnell, Lincolnshire. 



Rev. J. Powell, M.A. appointed lecturer 

 of Mr. Jones's Foundation in Monmouth. 



Rev. G. L.W. Fauquier, jj.a. to the vicar- 

 age of Bacton, Suffolk. 



Rev. E. Postle, b.a, to the rectory of 

 Colney, Norfolk. 



Rev. H. H. IMogg, appointed chaplain 

 to the Marquis of Aylesburv. 



Rev. 



