1336.} me Incidents, ee nets §c. 683 
side, and G. Hudson, Manches- Windsor, J 
Hyde, and J. 
Windsor, ‘eabuene Dee. 13 
» Nov. 24° 
| Whete,a and 3 -Great-East-cheap, Wilkins, S. Holborn hill, Dee. 8 
Wignall, C. Liverpool, Dec. 13 
Walker,. =e ham,’ Dec. 5 Wilkie, T. Paternoster-row, Dec. 8 Ward, W. Leeds, Dec. 13 
Ward, R. ‘aa ors — G. Paternoster-row, Jan. Yates, J.” City-road, Nov. 18 
pel, D: 
Yopeun RP, Witham, Wssex, 
9 + 
Witness WwW. pence eta, Witts, T. and J. J. Moss, Chelten- | Nov. 2 
ham. Dec. 12 
Winsatey, Ring street, Cheap Wallwork, J. Manchester, Feb. 14 
ee vi 
Y¥ oung, . I. Manchester, Dec. 20 _ 
“i GSW Gs BCCLESYASTICAL PREFERMENTS, - 
Rev, G. S. Bull, to the perpetual Curacy of Bier- 
ley ‘Chapel, Bradford—Hon. and Rev. H. A. Napier, 
to “Rectory of “Swincombe, Oxfordshire—Rey. 
W.. O. Bartlett, to the Vicarage of Canford Magna, 
with the chapel of Kingston annexed—Rev. T. Tur- 
‘ton, tothe Rectories of Gimingham and Trunch, 
Norfolk—Rev. | W. Mair, to the Vicarage of Ful- 
“pour All Saints, Cambridgeshire—Rev. C. Green, 
to the Rectory of Buxhall and Harleston, Suffolk— 
Rew. “Topping, 'to the Vicatage of Leigh—Rev. 
“S. Bagnall, to the perpetual Curacy of Aston, Che- 
Shire—Rev., M. Hoare; to the Living of Barkby, 
Leitestershire—Rev. C. P: N. Wilton, to the Chap- 
Jaincy of the colony in New South Wales, and to 
atendency. of the Female Orphan School 
“at Paramatta—Rey. F. R. Hall, to the Rectory of 
Fulbourn,’ ‘Cambridgeshire—Rey. R. S. Skillicorne; 
*to'the Rectory of Salford—Reyv. J. Brinkley, to the 
_Bishopric.of. _Cloyne—Rev. G., W. Curtis to the 
Rectory of Winnington, Essex—Rev. Dr. Busfield, 
7 ppointéd officiating minister of Carlton, near Skip- 
ston, ¥. orkshire—Rev. S, M. Martin, to the Rectory of 
St. Mary Magdalen,..and to the Vicarage of St. 
Nicholas, Lincoln—Hon. and Rev.T.H.Coventry, to 
«thé Rectory of CroomeMontis, Worcestershire—Rev - 
a W, Ries tothe Reactors ‘Compton Parva, Wor- 
o712-biothoh .1 
ontreriy 
dont 
cestershire—Rev.C.H.Parker,to theRectory ofComp- 
ton-Magna, Worcestershire—Rey. W. Hook, to the 
perpetualCuracy of Moseley, nearBirmingham—Rev. 
T. Westcombe, to theVicarage of Preston Candover, 
Hants—Rev. T. Whitfield, to the Living of Win- 
terbourne, Gloucester—Rev. T. T. Haderfield, to 
the Rectory of Godington, Oxford—Rev. H. Cripps, 
to the Vicarage of Stonehouse, Gloucester—Very 
Rey. J. Hook, to the Mastership of St. Oswald’s 
Hospital, Worcester—Rev. T. Wilde, to the Rec- 
tory of St. Andrews, Worcester—Rev. W. Wood, to 
the Rectory of Staplegrove, Somerset—Rev. G. R, 
Orchard, to the perpetual Curacy of Christ Church, 
Rood, Somerset—Rev. T. Nalder, to be Minister of 
Queen Elizabeth's Hospital, Donnington, Berks— 
Rey. H. Atlay, to the Rectories of Tinwell,;, Rut- 
land, and Great Ponton, Lincoln—Rey. G. B. Blom- 
field, to the Living of Tottenall, Cheshire—Rev. H. 
Davis, to the perpetual Curacy of Barford St. Mi- 
chael, Oxfordshire—Rev. G. Tod, to the Church 
and Parish of Tealing, Forfar—Rev. R. Downes, to 
the Rectory of Berwick St. John, Wilis—Rey. A. 
C. Price, to the Vicarage of Chesterton, Oxford- 
shire—Rev. W. T. Hopkins, to the Rectory of Nuf- 
Geld, Oxfordshire. 
yr ttn SCIDENTS, ‘MARRIAGES, AND DEATHS, IN AND NEAR LONDON. 
1 ok 1 ns | CHRONOLOGY. 
pein 3—The. Secretary of State sent notice to the 
Spital- fields deputation, ‘that his Majesty had given 
orders that the furniture, decorations, hangings, &c. 
of Windsor Castle and Buckingham Palace should 
all be of British manufacture.’ 
24——Captain' T. Young tried at the Admiralty 
Sessions for selling four African girls as slaves, and 
acquitted. This was the first offence tried under the 
new act for preventing slave dealing, and which ren- 
ders the crime felony without benefit of clergy. 
' 98.—Arrived from France, the Rt. Hon, George 
ue Saunton his Majesty’s Secretary of State for Foreign 
ee: {The Sessions ended at the Old Bailey, 
when one hundred and twelve prisoners were sen- 
_» tenced to transportation—seventy-three to imprison- 
ment, and twenty-two condemned to death,—among 
r were five females !!! 
ght -2e—Par urli t prorogued to Tuesday, Nov. 14. 
3.—Mr. John Wilks, M. P. for Sudbury, com- 
“Mitte tothe’ Poultry Compter, by the Lord Mayor, 
ona charge of for 
{hy bfiee Mr, Wilks Ii ated from prison’ by bail. 
9.—The Right Hon. the Lord Mayor gave his 
~b'thayoralty dinner at Guildhall; ‘on which occasion 
his Majesty's tinisters, the Earl of Liverpool, Messrs. 
Canning, Peel, and Huskisson attended. The 
French ambassatlor, Prince Polignac, also honoured 
ORE chief ‘magistrate with Wis presence. 
Adogl4erThe new Parliament assembled, and after 
some Sites were sworn in, the House of Com- 
mons cliose Mr. Maniers Sutton their Speaker. 
Se gy Lipvis Majesty went in procession 10 the House 
et 
Ol 
of Lords, and delivered his speech on the opening of 
the Parliament. 
MARRIAGES. 
At Monken Hadley, N. Harden, ‘esq. to Jemima, 
relict of T. Lucas, esq., and daughter of Dr. New- 
come, late Primate of Ireland—Rev. F. Whichcote, 
third son of Sir R. Whichcote, Bart. of Aswarby, 
Lincoln, to Miss Eliza Bree—Rev. G. H. Glyn, to 
Miss E. Smith—Rev. W. Stamer, A.B., second son 
of Sir W. Stamer, Bart., to Miss A. M. Lock— 
Lieut. Col. Tod, to Miss J. Cutterbuck—H. Murray, 
esq., son of the late Lord G. Murray, and nephew 
to the Duke of Athol, to Miss C. O. Cave, of Castle- 
Orway, Ireland. 
—— 
DEATHS, 
Sir William Beckenham, Bart., at Langley Farm, 
Beckenham—Alderman Magnay, aged 70 years—The 
Hon. Mrs. Green, lady of J. Green, esq., of Green- 
mount, Ireland, and sister of the late Lord Massy— 
At Blackheath, Eleanor Henrietta Victoria, daugh- 
ter and only child of the Right Hon. F. J. Robinson 
and Lady Sarah Robinson—At Waresley-Park, Eli- 
zabeth, the eldest daughter of Colonel.and Lady FE. 
Steele—At Chiswick, Mrs. Horne, relict of the late 
Rev. Dr. Horne—In'Duke-street, Manchester-square, 
Sir Richard Hardinge, Bart., aged 71—At Windsor, 
Major T. S. Fairtlough, 63d regt.—Margaret, wife 
of the Rev. Dr. Sampson, of Petersham, Surrey— 
Mr. F. Town, artist, 88—In Montague-square, the 
Dowager Countess of Normanton—Aged 35, Amelia, 
‘third daughter of John Lawrence, esq,, of Somer's 
Town. 
482 
