220 
Canterbury, Rey. J. Francis, 80—Hon. C. Wynd- 
ham, brother to the Earl of Egremont.—At Hat- 
field House, the infant daughter of the Marquess 
of Salisbury.—In Duke strect, Westminster, Char« 
lotte Countess Dowager of Suffolk and Berkshire, 
75. —In Clarges-street, Lieut.-Col. Clements, 
Guards.—Lieut.-Gen, J. Macintyre, India Com- 
pany’s service.—Georgiana Maria Hutchinson, 
wife of General Sarrazin.—In Grosvenor-place, 
Lord Rivers, 77.In Wimpole-street, T. Divet, 
esq., M.P., Lymington.—James, second son of 
Sir Sandford and Lady Graham.—Viscount Mel- 
bonrne, 88,—At Lambeth, the Archbishop of Can- 
terbury, 75. 
MARRIAGES ABROAD. 
Mme. Talma (widow of Talma the celebrated 
performer) to the Count de Chalot, ancien Colo- 
nel of dragoons, &c.—Prince Gustavus of Sweden, 
to the Princess Marianne of the Netherlands, in 
Incidents, Marriages, &c. 
[ Aveusr, 
the presence of the Royal Family !!!—At Paris, at 
the British Ambassador’s chapel, G.C, Legh, esq., 
tu Miss Louisa Charlotte Taylor. 
DEATHS ABROAD. 
At Paris, Colonel Moreland.—At Torgau, Grand 
Duke of Saxe-Weimar.--On passage from Jamaica, 
Sir Ralph Woodford, governor of Trinadad.—At 
Dunkirk, Major Woodgate.—At Canton, the lady 
of his Excellency the Hoppo ; her death was an- 
nounced in the Tartar manner, by saying, “ she 
had gone to ramble among the Genii.”” The zo- 
vernor and all the great officers of the province 
called and expressed their “ yexation!” — At 
Zante (Ionian Isles), Capt. F. A. Hastings, son of 
the late Sir C. Hastings, Bart.—At Rosseau, J. 
O’Driscol, esq., late Chief Justice of Dominica, 
and author of a ‘‘ History of Ireland.”—At Dieppe, 
Sibella Matilda, daughter of Lieut.-Gen. Sir Hud- 
son Lowe. 
MONTHLY PROVINCIAL OCCURRENCES; 
WITH THE 
MARRIAGES AND DEATHS. 
NORTHUMBERLAND AND DURHAM. 
A massy silver waiter has been recently pre- 
sented to S. Ilderton, esq., Ly the inhabitants of 
North Shields, as a public testimony of their high 
estimation, and grateful acknowledgments of his 
impartial services as a magistrate, during a period 
of several years. 
The following highly recommendatory notice of 
a day-school, appears in a window at Honghton- 
le-spring : ““ Skool hear for’ Boys and Garls, 
niten and sowen readen and speling.” 
At alate examination of paupers in All Saints’ 
parish, Newcastle, there appeared to be in Sand- 
gate Ward—a place enveloped in every descrip- 
tion of dirt and filth—about 100 poor women, 
whose ages average 73 years; the oldest Leing 
102, and the youngest 60, 
' Public baths are now about to be established at 
Durham, for the first time. 
The county of Durham has been visited with 
showers of rain, which caused the Wear to be 
swollen to a yreat degree: it did frightful damage 
to the adjacent fields in the vicinity of Durham, 
which were overflown to the extent of many hun- 
dreds of acres. A great part of the fine plain 
near the village of Shincliffe was covered with 
water by the tremendous overflowing of the 
Wear.* 
Married.) At Durham, Mr. G. Weddall, to 
Miss Gleason; Mr, H.W. Dodd, to Miss Martin. 
—At Doddington, the Rey. William Simpson, to 
Miss Lang.—At Lyme, Mr. Ham, to Miss Anne 
Hooke. 
Died.| At Gateshead Park, Mrs. Cook.— At 
Durham, Miss Burrell; Mr. Wm. Pearson.—At 
Neweastle, Mrs. Handasyde ; ‘Thomas Thompson, 
103.—At Whorton, Miss M. Dodas. 
* Similar complaints of the fatal effects of the 
Jate storms have reached us from almost all parts 
of the country, and if the rainy weather should 
continue, the consequences cannot fail to-be highly 
disastrous. 
YORKSHIRE. 
By the death of R.Creyhie, esq,, the office of 
one of the Receivers General for the West Riding 
is abolished. 
The affrays between the Irish and English, 
which so frequently oecur in the metropolis, have 
extended to Yorkshire. On the 30th of June, at 
Barnsley, a desperate battle took place betweena 
party of Irish and English weavers, in which one 
of the latter was killed. An Tishman is com- 
mitted to York castle for trial on acharge of man- 
slaughter, 
Goole, formerly a creek within the port of 
Hull, is now made a separate and distinct port 
for the warehousing of goods. 
From January to July 29 inquests were held 
for the town and county of Kingston-upon-Hull, 
28 of them within the town, 
Steps are taking to erect a new theatre in 
Leeds ; and it is probable that that necessary 
measure will be carried into effect. 
Sheffield and Dewsbury petitioned against the 
additional churches’ bill, There were also peti- 
tions sent frum Leeds and Sheffield in favour 
of it. 
From the 7th to the Mth of July, an immense 
quantity of rain fell in Yorkshire: not partially, 
but all over the county. Wednesday, the 9th, 
was a complete day of rain—it descended in tor- 
rents, and the low lands were every where flooded. 
- At Whitby, and its neighbourhood, three bridges 
were carried away. At Hull, Beverley, Pork- 
lington, Kirbymoor-Side, York, Leeds, Wetherby, 
Driffield, and, in short, generally throughout this 
extensive county, the hay which had not been got 
in was destroyed, the crops of corn were laid flat ; 
and in many places, boats could sail over acres of 
what had the day before been green fields. 
One thousand six hundred species of seeds, prin- 
cipally of hardy herbaceous plants, have been 
recently presented to the Botanic Garden at Hull, 
by Mr. Hunneinan, collected from all parts of 
Europe, and most of them hitherte unknown te 
