1823.] 
esq. of lram-common, to Frances, 
daughter of Thomas Harrison, esq. 
- Mr. T. Bourn, to. Miss Mary Gray, 
both of Hackney. 
DIED. 
In Grafton-street, 71, Benjamin Marshall, 
esq. late of Watling-street. 
In Church-street, Croydon, 
Read, esq. 
In Fleet-street, 83, John Pettit, esq. late 
of Bocking, Essex. 
In Portman-square, the Hon, Mary Pa- 
tience Denny, wite of Anthony D. esq. and 
daughter of the late Lord Collingwood. 
Tn Fleet-street, Mary, widow of Mr. T. 
Gurney, of Peel’s Cottee-house, 
In Little Britain, suddenly, Mr. Boul- 
den, bookbinder, much respected, and 
leaving a large family to lament his loss. 
At Blackheath-hill, 77, Mr. J. Hooker, 
formerley of Bermondsey. 
At Blackheath, 28, Elizabeth, wife of J. 
Armstrong, esq. 
At Windsor, 94, Mrs. A. Cowell, of 
Wigmore-street, Cavendish-square, widow 
of Benjamin C. esq. 
At Hastings, 69, William Coward, esq. 
of Brixton-lodge. 
At Vauxhall, 62, Mrs. Appleton, of Lud- 
gate-hill. 
In Portland-place, the Dowager Lady 
Templeton. 
At Highgate, Ann, daughter of the Rev. 
Dr. Henry Owen, late vicar of Edmonton, 
and many years the respected conductor 
of a juvenile seminary for boys. 
In Tooley-street, 43, Mr. H. Varnhum. 
In. Weymouth-street, Portland-place, 
Mrs. E. Morgan, late of St. Vincent’s. 
In Church-street, Kensington, 79, Jo- 
seph Battie, esq. late of the Bengal esta- 
blishment. , j 
Mrs. Peto, wife of Mr. Peto, builder, 
Godalmin. 
On Lambeth Terrace, 80, Mr. Hugh 
Pain. 
At Somers’ Town, 75, Lieut.-col. Robert 
Platt, late of the 5th foot. 
At Kensington-gore, the widow of J. 
Fitzgerald, esq. 
In Beaumont-street, St. Mary-le-bone, 
Joseph Kidd, esq. of Shacklewell. 
Tn Sloane-street, 70, Mrs. Covmbes. 
At Twickenham, the Hon. Mrs. Butler. 
At Ewell, William Dowdeswell, esq- 
At Clapham, Eliza, daughter of tlie late 
Thomas Puckles, esq. 
The Rev. R, Hurrison, morning preacher 
at Brompton, and joint lecturer at St. 
Martin’s-in-the-fields, and St. Botolph, 
Bishopsgate : he was an eminent preacher, 
At Sutton, Surrey, Lawrence Brickwood, 
esq. formerly a banker. 
At Islington, 54, Susannah, wife of Mr, 
John Cheap, jun, 
In Bridge-street, Southwark, 65, Arthur 
Pott, esq. 
Thomas 
Deaths in and near London, 
373 
In Newington-pkice, Kennington, Sarah, 
wife of Peter Hofman, esq. 
At Kennington, 71, Mrs. Lambert, widow 
of John L. esq. 
In Air-street, Piccadilly, J. Ward, esq. 
At Park-cottage, Knightsbridge, 87, 
Edward Powell, esq. 
In Francis street, Newington Butts, 31, 
Mrs. Mary Morton, widow of Charles M. 
esq. of Montego- bay, Jamaica. 
At Harrowgate, 83, Sir A, Chambre, 
late one of the judges of the Common 
Pleas. 
At Ingestrie, Staffordshire, 22, Frances 
Charlotte Countess of Dartmouth ; also, 
aged 18 months, Lord Viscount Lewisham, 
the eldest son of the Earl of Dart- 
mouth, ; 
In the 43rd year of herage, Mrs. Eliza- 
beth Luddington, wife of Mr. William 
Luddington, of Euston-Square, and sister 
of Dr. John Evans, of Islington. She 
fell a sacrifice to the incessant attention 
and unremitting vigilance with which she 
conducted a seminary for young ladies, 
which under her fostering wing had at- 
tained to unexampled prosperity. On 
her return after the Midsummer recess to 
the discharge of professional duties, her 
indisposition augmented, and terminated 
in speedy dissolution. ‘To her mournful 
partner, and to her three affectionate 
daughters, as well as to her relatives 
and friends, she was endeared by the 
many excellences both of her head and 
of her heart; they will long cherish her 
memory. Her removal from an extensive 
sphere of usefulness and in the zenith of 
activity, forms an awful comment on the 
vanity of human expectations, and pow- 
erfully inculcates the wisdom of directing 
our hopes to the imperishable enjoyments 
of a better world. This account shall be 
closed with lines of which she expressed 
her warmest admiration, 
— Yes, we shall live for ever. 
years 
May bring their destined trials, woes, and Joys, 
And shew the thorns and roses in our way ; 
But we shall follow when the mighty Lord 
Of man’s redemption, rising from the graye, 
Ascended,—pointing to our promised home 
_ Above,—where spirits of the just abide 
In immortality and perfect love! 
At his seat at Brocklesby-hall, in Lin- 
colnshire, Charles Anderson Pelham, Lord 
Yarborough. Mr. Anderson, which is bis 
patronymic name, assumed that of Pelham 
on succeeding to the fortune of Charles 
Pelham, his great uncle. He served in 
several parliaments for the county of 
Lincoln, till the year 1792, when, by the 
interest of Mr. Pitt, to whom he had at- 
tached himself, he was, by the King, 
created Baron Yarborough. His lord- 
ship soon, however, changed his politics, 
and for many years has voted with oppo- 
sition, He has not been distinguished as 
an orator in cither house of ai 
e 
Life’s short 
