1829.] 
18.—Sessions terminated at the Old Bailey, 
when 20 prisoners received sentence of death; 
84 were transported ; and between 70 and 80 
imprisoned. 
23.—The Roman Catholic Relief Bill this day 
(St. George's) became an operative law! The 
following is the protest of the Lord Chief Justice 
of England against the third reading of the Ca- 
tholic Bill——* BecauseI think this bill is a great 
departure tromthe principles of the revolution of 
1688, by which, in my opinion, it was establisbed 
that the government of Great Britain and Ireland 
should be conducted wholly by Protestants, and 
because I think the measure is calculated to give 
encouragement to violence and disaffection, and 
is more likely to lead to the overthrow of the Pro- 
testant church in Ireland, which I consider essen- 
tial to the maintenance of civil and religious 
liberty, and to cause the dignitiesand revenues of 
that church to be transferred to a Popish priest- 
hood, than to produce permanent tranquillity in 
Treland.—TeENTERDEN.” The following Peers 
afterwards signed this protest: Kenyon, Verulam, 
Farnborough, Abingdon, Newcastle, Brownlow, 
Falmouth, Churchill, Farnham, Clanbrassil, 
Ailesbury, Skelmersdale, Bexley. 
MARRIAGES. 
At Bath, the Rey. H. Stenhouse to Miss Louisa 
Bart Taylor.—At St. George’s, Hanover-square, 
the Hon, G. Talbot, brother and heir of the Earl 
of Shrewsbury, to Miss Jones, daughter of Sir 
: H. St. Paul, Bart, M.P. Bridport.—Earl Nelson, 
to Hilare, widow.of G. U. Barlow, esq., eldest son 
of Sir George Barlow, Bart., and 3d daughter of 
Sir Robert Barlow.—Viscount Stormont, eldest 
son of the Earl of Mansfield, to Louisa, daughter 
of C. Ellison, esq., M.P.—Rev. W. J. Brodrick, 
‘to the Honourable Harriet Broderick, third 
daughter of Viscount Middletou.—J. Donkin, 
esq., to Caroline, eldest daughter of B. Hawes, 
esq.—Hon. J. H. R. Curzon, 4th son of Lord 
eynham, to Miss Isabella Hodgson.—At Pad- 
dington, W. Oakes Blount, esq., son of Sir C, B. 
Blount, to Miss F.C. Olebar.—At Cheltenham, 
the Rey. H. Withey, to Christian Dottin, 4th 
daughter of the Hon. Sir J. G. Abbyne, Bart., of 
“Barbadoes.—At Saucethorpe, J. G. Pole, esq., 
eldest son of Sir W. T. Pole, Bart.,to Margaretta, 
daughter of H. Barton, esq.—At Bergh Apton, 
A. Kyd, esq., to Miss Emma Beeyor.—At Edin- 
burgh, J.P. Read, esq., to Helen, daughter of 
Sir J. Colquhoun, Bart.—At Chichester, the Rev. 
_H.H. Dod, to Frances Elizabeth Holland, grand- 
_ daughter to the late Lord Chancellor Erskine.— 
At Shenley, the Hon, and Rey. C. G. Perceval, 
3d son of Lord Arden, to Miss M. Knapp.—At 
Rockingham, W. de Capel Brooke, esq., 2d son 
of Sir R. de C. Brooke, Bart., to the Hon.Catherine 
Watson, sister to Lord Sondes.—At High Clere, 
_ Rey. J. C. Stapleton, to the Lady H. E. Herbert, 
daughter to the Karl of Uarnarvon.—At Ply- 
mouth, G. H, Palliser, esq., to Mary White, 
eldest daughter of Colonel Westropp. 
DEATHS. 
At Pimlico Lodge, J. Elliot, esq., 65.—At Wands- 
worth, Marianne, wife of the Bishop of Chester. 
—At Spatisbury, the Hon, Miss Arundell.—Rev. 
R. Nares,76, Archdeacon of Stafford.—In Mon- 
_ tague place, H, Hase, esq., principal cashier to the 
Chronology, Marriages, and Deaths. 
563 
Bank of England.—Viscount Pevensey, only son of 
Earl Sheffield.—Earl] of Carhampton, 89; he had 
been a captain in the navy 67 years, and was 
brother to one of the late Duchesses of Cumber- 
land.—At Camming Convent, Dr. Collenridge, 
vicar apostolic of the Western District.—At 
Chelsea, W. Stevenson, esq., author of “The 
Historical Sketch of the Progress of the Discovery 
of Navigation and Commerce.’ — At Coombe 
House, N, B., Anne, Countess of Kellie—At 
Brighton, the Hon. Miss Caroline Vernon, 83, 
many years maid of honour to the late Queen 
Charlotte.—At Winchester, Jane Dymocke Black- 
stone, relict of the Rey. Dr. H. Blackstone, 
brother of the late Sir W. Blackstone.—Charles 
Douglas, esq., 78, brother to the late Lord Glen- 
bervie.—G. Engleheart, esq., 79, of Bedfont 
Lodge.—At Colsterworth, Mrs, A. Lowth, 160,.— 
In Foley-place, Dr. Edward Ash, F.R.S.C,S.—At 
Kirkley, Lord H. V. Vernon, brother to the 
Archbishop of York.—At Spalding, R. Holdich, 
esq., 83, deputy lieutenant of Lincolnshire.—In 
Regent’s Park, Esther, wife of Mr. Serjeant 
Goulburn.—At Trewithen, Sir C. Hawkins, Bart, 
71, M.P., for many successive parliaments, and, 
during the last sessiun, father of the House of 
Commons.-—At Bath, Mrs. M. A. Anstrey.—At 
Westbourn Rectory, the Rev. W. de Chair Tat- 
tersall, 79.—Mr. W. Bromley, 66 ; this respectable 
old servant of the public had driven the Rocking- 
ham coach for 47 years; the average yearly space 
traversed by him as a driver, was 17,478 miles, 
and the whole length of his course 821,250 miles, 
equal to 34times the circumference of the globe.— 
At Anwick, Dame Lunn, 87: she had been the re- 
spected village schoolmistress for upwards of 
half a century.—At Woolwich, Major-General 
Ford.—William Blake, son of Lord Wallscourt.— 
At Bath, Sir V. Keane, Bart., 72.—At Northwick, 
Mrs. Fairclough, 107.—At Chester, T. Harrison, 
esq.,85.—In Albemarle-street, Sir Brook William 
Brydges, Bart., 62.—At Dryburgh Abbey, the 
Earl of Buchan, 88.—At Argyll House, Lady 
Alice Gordon, eldest daughter of the Earl of 
Aberdeen, — At Bath, General James Mont- 
gomerie, 73, M.P. for the county of Ayr, and 
brother to the late Earl of Eglington.—At Ply- 
nouth, the Rey. Levi Benjamin, 100; he had 
been 60 years reader to the Jewish synagogue 
there.—At Bampton, Mrs. Betty Clarke, 100.— 
At Thoraby, Lord Rokeby, 71.—At Wolverhamp- 
ton, Mary Anson, 105.—At Maidenhead, S. Wil- 
son, esq., 95; he had served in the American 
war, and was supposed to be the last surviving 
person who served at the battle of Bunker's 
Hill.—At Cork, W. Yates, 96, pensioner ; he en- 
listed in 1755 in the 28th regt., was at the taking 
of Quebee ; at the taking of the Havannah; and 
at different battles in the American War ; and in 
1783 was discharged on a pension which was 
subsequently increased ; and, in consequence of 
his being supposed the last of the survivors who 
fought under General Wolfe, his pension was 
still further offered to be augmented, which he 
declined, saying his sovereign had been already 
sufficiently bountiful to him.—A. Donadieu, esq. 
DEATHS ABROAD. 
At Rome, Lady Abdy, 78, relict of the late Sir 
W.Abdy, Bart.—On hoard the Cornwall, East- 
Indiaman, Flora, eldest daughter of Sir W. Rum- 
ble, Bart.—At Homburg, His Serene Highness 
4C 2 
