372 
Jolm Allen, esq. of Leicester-square, to 
Miss Emma Brite lard, of North Brixton, 
Henry Palmer, esq. of Aston-Abbott’s, 
Buckinghamshire, to Miss Mariana Keane, 
of New-street, Spring-gardens. 
H. M. Bunbury, esq. of Old Burlington- 
street, to Miss Alicia Pillie, of Drimcoe, 
Roscommon, 
Thomas Butcher, esq. of Regent-street, 
Pall-mall, to Miss Martha Warren, late of 
Ivy-lane. 
Nich. Harris Nicolas, esq. of: the Inner 
Temple, to Sarah, daughter of the late 
John Davison, esq. of the East India 
House. 
Frederick Thompson, esq. to Miss Ca- 
roline Amelia Callander, of New Caven- 
dish-street. 
Mr. Charles Regnart, jun. of London, 
to. Miss Cornelia Grece, of Chart Lodge, 
Surrey. 
William Greenhill, of Sunbury, to Miss 
Elizabeth Verdon, of Camden-town. 
At Ripley, in Surrey, J. F. Stephens, 
esq. to Sarah, second daughter of the late 
Capt. Henry Roberts, r. n- 
DIED. 
At Upper Tooting; 80, T. Brown, esq. 
In Devonshire-place, Mrs. Helen D' Au- 
bent. 
At Brompton-park, James Vere, esq. of 
the firm of Vere, Lucadou, and Co. bank- 
ers, Lombard-street. 
In London, 57, Mrs, Lucilla Anna Maria 
Graves, daughter of the Rev, Richard G. 
the celebrated author of the “ Spiritual 
Quixotte,” &c. 
At Bromley, Maria, wife of William 
Mann, esq. 
In Seething-lane, 69, the Rev. W. V. 
Treson. 
In Bread-street, 67, Mr. John Sharp. 
At Pentonville, 60, John Leigh, esq. 
In Gloucester-place, New-road, John 
Champain, esq. late of the Bengal civil 
service. 
Mr. Charles Watts, 66, of the Bank of 
England, of which he was one of the most 
respectable clerks. 
In Threadneedle-street, 82, Mr. Joseph 
Pugh. 
In Paternoster-row, 31, Mr. William 
Button, a respectable bookseller, in the 
theological department, and son of the 
Rev. W. Button. 
In the London-road, Southwark, 52, Mr. 
W. H. Pringle. 
At Kennington, 74, Mr. John Haddock. 
At Dorking, 83, Catherine, widow of the 
Rev. Dr. Manning, of Godalming. 
At Belmont-house, Vauxhall, 83, Han- 
nah, widow of W, Pollock, esq. 
In the Strand, Mr. Thomas Grimes,tmany 
years a considerable woo!len-draper. 
. Mr. Richard Stephens Taylor, of Gray’s 
nn. 
In North-street, Westminster, William 
Ellis, esq. 
Deaths in and near London. 
[May 1, 
Joseph Welch, esq. 84, many years de- 
puty of the ward of Candiawiak ” 
e At Pancras, 64, Capt. Thomas Miles, 
. N. 
In Margaret-street, Cavendish square, 
John Dawes, esq. of Highbury, and Char- 
leywood-house, Herts. 
In Vere-street, Robert Still, esq. of East 
Knoyle, Wilts. 
In Little Tower-street, 51, Mr. Stephen 
Osmond. 
In Well-street, Hackney, 56, Mrs. Eliza- 
beth Aldersey. 
In Grosvenor-square, 27, Lady Charlotte, 
daughter of the Earl of Westmoreland. 
in Bear-street, Leicester-fields, 67, Mr. 
William Arrowsmith, much and justly 
lamented, 
In Upper Berkeley-street, Barrington 
Purvis, esq. 
At Chelsea, 21, J, E. Scott, esq. late of 
Ongar. 
At Brighton, at an advanced age, Thos. 
Elam, esq. late of Leicester-square, a jus- 
tice of the peace for Middlesex, 
At Hackney, 45, Mrs, Whitby, formerly 
of Homerton, 
Tn Maddox-street, 54, Mrs. Calemard. 
In Newgate-market, 71, Mrs, Elizabeth 
Boys, deservedly regretted. 
At Hammersmith, 68, R. Radford, esq. 
a justice of the peace. 
In Guildford-street, 63, R. J. Millington, 
esq. many years keeper of the Gray's Inn 
Hotel. 
At Hackney, 44, James Belloncle, esq. 
of an apoplectic fit, late of Dalston. 
In Russell-square, 64, S. Y. Benyon, esq. 
Vice-Chancellor of the Duchy of Lan- 
caster, Recorder of Chester, and His Ma- 
jesty’s Attorney-General for the Chester 
circuit. Mr. Benyon was born at Ashe, 
in Shropshire, and bred a dissenter. In 
polity he was attached to the Whigs, and 
ne was always a steady friend to thie 
civil and religious rights of his country- 
men. He was.a warm admirer of the late 
Sir Samuel Romilly, and zealously advo- 
cated his plans for the reformation of the 
criminal code, and the amelioration of 
prison discipline; and as a judge, in his 
office of Recorder of Chester, he always 
evinced his anxiety to apportion punish- 
ment according to the degree of actual 
rather than technical criminality. Of a 
man of such principles and practices, it is 
difficult to speak in adequate terms of 
praise. 
In Bloomsbury-square, 76, suddenly, in 
his bed, during the night, Sir John Sylvester, 
many years Common Serjeant and Re- 
corder of London, in which capacities the 
sternness of his character, and the unyield- 
ing prejudices of his education, rendered 
him one of the most unpopular men of his 
time. He was the son of a Jew or Por- 
tugnese physician, and ferced himself into 
legal practice by assiduously attending 
the 
