> 
1828.] 
had been within a, few pounds of the receipts, so 
that nothing remained to be divided; and that 
the whole payments since the bridge commenced 
amounted to £),059,821. 7s. 9d. 
9 —A motion was made in the House of Lords, 
“That it is expedient to take the laws affecting 
His Majesty’s Roman Catholic subjects into con- 
sideration, with a view to such a final and conci- 
liatory adjustment, as may conduce to the peace 
and strength of the United Kingdom, to the sta- 
bility of the Established Church, and to the con- 
cord and welfare of all classes of His Majesty’s 
subjects.’’ After alengthened debate, it was ad- 
journed to next day, and lost by a majority of 45 
—contents being 137, non-contents 182. 
12.—A Deputation of the West India Mer- 
chants, headed by Lord Seaford, chairman of the 
committee, held a long conference with the Chan- 
cellor of the Exchequer, at the Treasury, on the 
state of their affairs. 
14.—The 109th Anniversary of the Westminster 
Hospital, held at Willis’s Rooms, the Duke of 
Northumberland in the chair. It was announced 
‘that upwards of 200,000 poor persons had been 
restored to health by means of this institution. 
18.—The Battle of Waterloo celebrated by 
‘H.R.H. the Lord Admiral, in a grand acquatic 
breakfast and splendid regatta on the Thames, 
— The celebration of the Repeal of the Test 
Act, at Freemasons’-hall, the Duke of Sussex in 
the chair; it was attended by 400 friends of reli- 
gious liberty from all parts of the kingdom. 
19.—A Petition presented to Parliament, pray- 
ing the Jews to be admitted to civil rights, the 
same as Protestant dissenters. 
21.—A numerous meeting assembled at the 
Freemasons’-tavern, for establishing a college for 
the education of the youth of the metropolis, as 
ineuleated by the United Church of England and 
Treiand, the Duke of Wellington in the chair, 
owhen a collection of nearly £20,000 was made. 
MARRIAGES. 
At St. Margaret’s, Westminster, the Right Rey, 
Bishop of Jamaica to Miss M. H. Page.—At Horn- 
‘sey, Count Alexander Charles Joseph Vander 
urch, ebamberlain to the King of the Nether- 
lands, to Miss Elizabeth Cooper.—R. W. Bulkley, 
esq.,to Miss C. M. Hughes.—At Streatham, J. 
Goding, esq., to Lady Jane Coventry.—Captain 
Short (Coldstream Guards) to Miss E. S. M. Bar- 
well.—B. Granville, esq., to Miss M. S, Onslow, 
grand-daughter of the late Admiral Sir R. On- 
low, bart.—At St. George’s, Hanover-square, 
the Hon, E.S. Jerningham, second son of Lord 
Stafford, to Miss Smythe, niece of Mrs. Fitzher- 
rt; J. W. Bowden, esq., to Elizabeth, daughter 
Sir J. E, Swinburne, bart.; Hon. H, Walker, 
” dest son of Viscount Ashbrook, to Frances, 
on jet of the Rey. Sir T. Robinson, bart. ; 
aptain Hallowell, eldest son of Vice-Admiral Sir 
Hallowell, to Mary, daughter of Sir Murray 
axwell.—At Mary-le-bone, W. Marshall, esq., 
pd to Georgiana Christiana, daughter of G. 
P Tt, esq., Portland-place.—E. Curray, esq., 
to Louisa Lawrence, daughter of Sir J. Scarlett, 
M.P.—Frederick Deyon,esq., to Miss Ann Thynne, 
second daughter of G.F. Thynne, esq., of Poet's 
Corner, Westminster, ; 
- 
a 
Incidents, Marriages, &c. 
107 
DEATHS. - 
In Hertford-street, May-fair, the Rey. Lord 
Henry Fitzroy, brother to the Duke of Grafton, 
and one of the prebends of Westminster Abbey— 
Countess Rice, lady of the Rey. Count Rice, and 
grand-daughter of the late Count Zinzendorff.— 
At Chertsey, the wife of R. Clark, esq., chamber- 
lain of London.—The Countess Mary Justina, 
lady of Count Reuss.—In King’s-road, 78, Lady 
Mary, widow of Sir W. More, bart.—In Belgrave- 
street, Lord Forrester.—The infant daughter of 
Lord Loughborough.—In Brook-street, Grosve- 
nnr-square, at an advanced age, the Hon. Anne 
Seymour Damer.—Warner Phipps, esq., secre- 
tary to the Albion Insurance-—Admiral Sir Wil- 
lian Domett.—Matilda, wife of T. Campbell. esq., 
the poet.—Mr. T. Lane, an artist of talent; he 
fell through a skylight (at the Horse Bazaar, 
Gray’s-inn-lane) and was killed on the spot.—At 
Tunbridge-wells, Lord H. S. Churchill, third son 
of the Duke of Marlborongh.—Horatio Paget, 
third son of Rear-Admiral Sir C. Paget.—In the 
Fleet. 82, Mr. J. Amos ; he had been confined ten 
years for contempt of the Court of Chancery !— Miss 
~ Grant, eldest sister of the Right Hon. C. Grant.— 
In Goodman’s-fields, 75, Dr. Raphael Meldola, 
the learned and highly-respected Rabbi, High 
Priest of the Southern (Oriental, Spanisk, &c.) 
Jews.—At Kensington, Viscountess Nevill, relict 
“of Ralph Viscount Nevill, R.N.—83, the Rey W. 
Coxe, archdeacon of Berks.—In Park-street, 87, 
the Hon. Anne Robinson, sister of the late Lord 
Grantham.—In Somerset-street. the Dowager 
~ Lady Dunsany.—At Sydenham,68, J. P. Welsford, 
secretary to the Patriotic and Waterloo Funds.— 
At Windsor, Lord Mountsandford, accidentally 
- killed in an affray at that town.—At Kirklington- 
park, 83, Sir Henry Watkin Dashwood, bart.— 
Elizabeth Cockburn, wife of the dean of York, 
and daughter of Sir Robert Peel, bart.—86, Mr. 
P. Jackson, who was in the orchestra of Drury 
Lane Theatre in the early days of Garrick; his 
widow, born 1739, remains (Oxford) to lament his 
loss.—At Islington, 101, Elizabeth Coldthorp.— 
82, the Dowager Duchess of Beaufort.—C. Pratt, 
esq. ; he was thrown out of a phaeton in return. 
ing with sume friends from a fight between Bald- 
win and Neal; he only attained his majority on 
May 23, when he entered in possession of nearly 
£250,000 property ! 
MARRIAGES ABROAD. 
At Paris, Visconnt de Cussy to Miss Barbara 
Clara Middleton.—At the British Ambassador’s, 
at Paris, T. Nolan, esq., to Miss Juliana Blount. 
—At Paris, Chevalier Brant, late secretary of 
legation in London from the Emperor of the 
Brazils, to Augusta Elizabeth, daughter. of the 
Chevalier Kieckhoeffer, consul-general of the 
Brazils, in that city, 
DEATHS ABROAD. 
At Toulouse, Sir William Congreve, late head 
of the laboratory department, Woolwich. —At 
Rome, the Dowager Lady ‘Turner.—At Florence, 
the Russian Prince Nicholas. Demidow, whose 
immense fortune has su frequently furnished mat- 
ter of speculation; he is said at one time himself 
to have estimated his income at £1 per minute.— 
At Dresden, 68, Charles Marquis of Northampton. 
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