220 
necéssity, without waiting to be backed by those 
of the City, which was refused, on account of its 
Privileges !!! 
20. —Prince Polignac, the French Ambassador, 
suddenly left town for France, after an audience 
with the ministers. ° 
.— The Duke of Wellington appointed to the 
office of Warden and Keeper of his Majesty’s 
Gi.que Ports. 
21.—Two culprits executed at the Old Bailey. 
— Sessionsended at the O)d Bailey, when 16 
were condemned for death, and 90 transported, 
besides a large num! er imprisoned. 
— The Duke of Northumberland received the 
keys of office, and went through the preliminaries 
for entering on the functions of Lord Lieutenant 
of Ireland, at the office of Mr. Peel, in Downing- 
street. 
MARRIAGES. 
_ At Brotherton, Lord Muncaster, to Frances 
Catherine, daughter of Sir John Ramsden, Bart, 
—At Bath, Rey. J. H. Keane, to Madame Leo- 
nora Garciar.—T. Davidson, esq., to Miss Anne 
Grace.—At Charlton, O. Lang, esq., to Charlotte, 
daughter of Lieut. Col. Rogers.—At Abberley 
Lodge, Rev. H.S. Cocks, son of the Hon. Regi- 
nald Cocks, to Frances Mersey, daughter of H. 
Bromley, esq.—At Godalming, H. Watkins, esq., 
‘to Miss Lack.—W.H. Wood, esq.,of Brazenose 
College, Oxford, to Miss Mancknols.—At Maryle- 
bone, Rey. W. H. Hughes, to Miss A. C. Williams. 
—At Marylebone, W. Peters, esq., to Marianne 
Jane, second daughter of Henry Bonham, esq., 
M.P.—At Brighton, W. Campion, esq., 15th Hus- 
sars, to Harriet, eldest daughter of T. R. Kemp, 
“esq-, M.P.—At St. George’s, Hanover-square, the 
Earl of Cornwallis, to Miss Laura Hayes. 
DEATHS. 
_ At Missenden, General ‘Sir Brent Spencer, 
Bart.—At her residence at Whitehall, Baroness 
Willoughby de Eresby, joint hereditary great 
chamberlain of England (with her sister the Mar- 
chioness of Cholmondeley).—At Brighton, Sir 
Hutton Cooper, M.P. Dartmouth.—aAt Horsley 
Hall, P. Philips, esq., only brother of Viscountess 
Strangford.—Rey. R. Bathurst, third son of the 
Bishop of Norwich.—At Gloucester, Lady George 
Sutton.—At Hampton Court, Sir John Thomas, 
Bart.,82.—At Norwich, P. M. Martineau, esq., 
-76.—At Great Yarmouth, J. Watson, esq., 79.—At 
Eaglehurst, Viscount Kilcoursie.— At Bruton, 
Rear Admiral Goldesbrough, 82,—At Hampton, 
the Right Rey. Dr. Robert Stanser, Bishop of 
“Nova Scotia.—In Tavistock Row, J. Johnstone, 
esq., 82, the celebrated Irish comedian.—Dr. 
"Hyde Wollaston, Vice President of the Royal 
Society At Holbeck, near Leeds, Betty Jack- 
son, aged 106 ; she had resided the whole of her 
life in that village, and had not suffered much 
fromthe infirmitiés of age —At Gawsworth, Mr. 
‘W.Gee, farmer, 93 ; he had resided during the 
whole of his protracted life upon an estate belong- 
‘ing to the Earl of Harrington, and retained all his 
faculties to the last, Working about the farm till 
within a few weeks ofhis death.—At Coventry, J, 
Woodcock, esqy., 70.—In Powis Place, Godfrey 
Sykes, esq., Solicitor to the Board of Stamps.—At 
Hampstead, Hon. Mrs. Tyler, sister to the late Lord 
Teynham.—At Peterborough, Mr, R. Wilson, 97. 
Chronology, Marriages, and Deaths. 
. celebrated General Massena.—At Paris, F. Plow- 
-good spirits. 
“her thigh was broken. 
(Fes. 
—At Threnhall Priory, the Baroness de Feilitzseh, 
87,—In Norfolk, Sir E.Stracy, DBart., 88.—Near 
Swansea, Catharine Rees, 101,—In the alms- 
houses, at Ludfotd, Herefordshire, endowed for 
the relief of old servants, Jolin Griffin, 87 ; he had 
formerly been coachman to Sir F. Charlton, and 
in his latter days his great boast was, that he had 
eclipsed all his rival charioteers belonging to the 
noblemen and gentlemen inthe neighbourhood, by 
taking the family coach in siv days to London, 
which no one else could accomplish under seven! 
—Rear Admiral Swiney,82,—At Exeter, Elizabeth 
Blanchard, she was widow of the late town-ser- 
jeant, and was upwards of 100 ; she was remark~ 
able for ready wit and rhyme, and retained these 
gifts, with all her mental faculties, to the end of 
her life.—1n Sidmonth-street, Mrs. F. H. Duncan, 
widow of J. Duncan, esq., late member of the 
medical board, Madras:.—At Hillington, Maria, 
youngest sister of G. Fuller, esq., banker.—At 
Bottesford, Roosilia, 77, widow of Admiral E. 
Sutton, and sister to Mrs, M. Sutton, widow of 
the late Archbishop of Canterbury.—In Baker- 
street, Mrs, Campbell, 82.—At Edinburgh, Mr. 
R. A. Smith, presenter in St. George’s church, 
well known to the musical world by his Scottish 
and Irish Minstrels, “The Flower o’Dumlane,” _ 
&c.—At Lliangoedmore-place, Archdeacon Mil- 
lingchamp.—At Solihull, Rey. C. Curtis.—In 
Stratton-street, Roger Wilbraham, esq., 86, for- 
merly M.P. for Helston and Bodmin.—At Bath, 
Rachael, wife of Lieut. General Dickson; and 
Sarah, daughter of the late. Sir R. Blackwood, 
Bart.—At Exmouth, C. Baring, esq., 88. younger 
brother of the late Sir Francis Baring, Bart.—At 
Sturbiton, Sarah, wife of Alderman Garratt.—At 
Ramsgate, Sir William Curtis, Bart., 77. 
MARRIAGES ABROAD. 4 
At New Orleans, Mr. Alexander Philip Socrates 
Aurelius Cesar Hannibal Marcellus George Wash- — 
ington ‘l'redwell, to Miss Caroline Sophia Juliana 
Wortley Montague Joan of Are Williams!—At 
Paris, Viscount Perceval to Lonise Marie, daugh- — 
ter of Count d’Orselet.—At Florence, Sir S. C. 
Bruce, Bart., to Miss H. B. Alves.—At Quebec, 
Rey. E, W. Sewell, son of Chief Justice Sewell, 
to Susan Stewart, daughter of the Hon. M. 
Stewart, aud niece to the Earl of Galloway, and — 
Bishop of Quebec.—At Paris, E. Gambier, esq.,to 
Emily, daughter of the late C. Morgell, esq., M.P. 
DEATHS ABROAD. 
At Tananarwo, Madagascar, Rey. D. Tyerman, 
deputy froin the London Missionary Society.—At 
Paris, the Princess of Essling, 63, widow of the — 
den, esq., formerly a distinguished member of the 
Chancery bar, and well known for his Histories 
Ireland.—At Boulogne, R. Peake, esq., 72, trea 
surer of Drury Lane theatre 40 year's,—At Chau- 
celade, Frances Descoure, on the eve of attaining 
her 111th year. Her body was nothing more than 
a dried-up skeleton, but she had not lost, even to 
her very last day, either her perfect senses or h 
It is to be remarked that she hi 
had a fall within the last six months, by which 
‘She was not bedridden 
until this period, and her death is to be attribute 
to this accident.— Bulletin de la Dordogne. 
Cadiz, J, N. Hall, esq., of Bow Chureh-yard.. 
