702 



Chronology, Marriages, and Deaths. 



[Deo. 



11. Dlspatclies from Canada, stating tliat tlia 

 bill for increasing the representation of that pro- 

 vince has received the royal assent ; the number 

 of the new members introduced into the assembly 

 will be eight. 



16. Two of the Chancery prisoners liberated 

 from the Fleet prison ; their crime was " Rebel- 

 linn and contempt of tirat Court," as it is called, 

 and one of them (William Gray) bad been con- 

 fined seven years ; they were relieved by the in- 

 ftrumentality ofSir E. B. Sugden,the solicitor-ge- 

 neral. 



16. Governor and Deputy Governor of the Bank 

 of England attended at the Treasury, and bad a 

 confeience with the Chancellor of the Exchequer, 

 in consequence of some tlnancial changes intended 

 by Government. 



20. New market opened contiguous to the late 

 Fleet Blarket; it is called Farringdon Blarketi 

 and forms a quadrangle of 2.32 feet by 150, and 

 has cost upwards of .£200,000 in purchasing 

 ground and buildings which stood thereon, &c. 



MARRIAGES. 

 At Dawlish, Rev. W. M. Blencowe, to May- 

 nard Anne, eldest daughter of Colonel Rochefort. 

 M.H. for Westnieath. — Rev. C. Barnwell, to 

 Sophia, daughter of the late G. Wyndham, esq., 

 Cromer-Hall. — At Talocre, C. Stanley, esq., 

 brother to Sir T. M. S. Stanley, bart., to Miss 

 Moslyn. eldest daugliter of SirE. Mostyn, bart. — 

 At St. George's, Hanover-square, David Baillici 

 fsq., to Miss Stewart, daughter of Laily Stewart, 

 and niece to the Countess of Aberdeen. — At Ayles- 

 bury, J. de Veulle, jnn, esq., surat of the Royal 

 Court, Jersey, to Miss Anne Eliza Tindall.— At 

 Chester, Rev. R. V. Law, third son ol the Bishop 

 of Bath and Wells, to Sidney Dorothea, dangbter 

 of Col. Davison.— At Cheekley, C. W. Martin, 

 esq., nephew to the Duke of AthoU, to Miss 

 Charlewood. — J. W. Fane, esq., eldest son of J. 

 Fane, M.P. for Oxford, to Ellen Catharine, third 

 daughter to the Hon. T. Parker, brother to the 

 Earl of Macclesfield. — In St. James's-square, 

 Bethel Wahond, esq., Jl.P. for Sudbury, to Lady 

 Jane St. Clair, daughter of the Earl of Rosslyn.— 

 S.Corapton, esq., .M.l". for Deiby, to Miss I. S. 

 Cathcart, niece to Lord Cathcart.— At Lewes, on 

 the anniversary of the Popish powder plot, Mr. 

 Guy, to Miss Fox !— Major Bruce, to Miss Isabella 

 Basset, niece to Sir R. Basset. — C. Hampden, 

 esq., to Henrietta Fourness, youTigest daughter of 

 W. Wilson, esq., of Eaton Hall.— At Stoke Gif- 

 ford, Major General Orde, to Lady Elizabeth 

 O'Brien, widow of Lord E. O'Lryen, and daugh- 

 ter to the Duke of Beaufort.— At Marylebone, 

 J. C. Cowell, esq., to Frances Anne Esther, 

 niece to Lord Cavan. 



DEATHS. 

 Miss Mary Anne Poulett, eldest daughter of 



usual quantity annually, and that an increased 

 demand and consumption of tish has evidently 

 taken place in ihe'United Kingdom, especially in 

 Ireland. Next to the cod fishery, the Chamber 

 would notice that important branch of industry, 

 the seal fishery, which, though not equally pro- 

 duptive as in some former seasons, has yielded 

 this year a large quantity of oil and skins ; the 

 fishery, employing about 300 sail of vessels of all 

 descriptions, and about 5,000 men, has produced 

 about 120,000 seals, which maybe fHirlves:imated 

 at ^100,000. 



Lieut. General the Hon. V. Poulett, and slater to 

 Lady Nugent.— At Chichester, Lord F. Lennox. 

 Captain in the Royal Fnsilcers, and brother to the 

 Duke'of Richmond.— At MudiforJ, T. E. Bennett, 

 second son of J. Bennet, M.P. for Wilts.— At Ox- 

 ford workhouse, 74, Mr. W. Huggin9,an excellent 

 classical scholar ; he had been a member of New 

 College, a common seaman, and then a commoner 

 of St. Edmund's Hall— but his excesses and in- 

 temperance were such that he was compelled to 

 leave ; be then became usher to Professor Robert- 

 son, at Christ Church, and to the Rev. Mr. Hin- 

 ton, and assisted young students for examination 

 in the university, was alms'-man at Christ Church, 

 and was at last compelled to seek an asylum in 

 the work-house 1!— In Hereford-street, Lady Hat- 

 ton Finch, 83.— In the Strand, Mr. Maw e, 65, 

 author of " Travels in the Interior of Brazil."— 

 Jlrs. Mary Watliug, late of Leominster, 78 ; her 

 mother, a native of Hereford, bore the maiden 

 name of Wyatt. and remained an only legitimate 

 issue of the male descent from Sir Thomas Wyatt, 

 who forfeited to Queen Mary, together with his 

 head, bis fortune, and his wide domains, leaving 

 to his pnsterity nothing more than the first uni- 

 versal entail " of eating bread in the sweat of 

 their brow :i!''— In Portman-square, the Countes.i 

 Dowager of Clonmell, 67.— At Mount Juliet, the 

 Countess of Carl ick. — Colonel J. Midgley. 65, 

 governor of Tilbury Fort.— At Hampstead, Rev, 

 T. Belsham, 80, Unitarian minister, Essrx-street. 

 — AtTonbridge Wells, Lady Hawley.— At Hast- 

 ings, R. Battye, esq., 70 — At Everton, Sir Jobo 

 Reid, bart.— -\t Bath, J. Walmesley, esq., 90.— 

 K. Roche, esq., editor of the Courier. — At Brigh- 

 ton, Lady King, mother of Lord King.— At Brock- 

 well Hall, Surrey, J. Blades, esq., 78. — Lady 

 Barrington, wife of Sir W. Barrington, bart.— At 

 Devonshire Terrace, Maria, wife of the Right 

 Hon. M. Fitzgerald, Knight of Kerry.— The Hon. 

 John Coventry, 64, brother of the Earl of Coven- 

 tiy.— General Garth, 85.— Isle of Wight (Ivy Cot- 

 tage), J. Biggs, 100, leaving a widow of 92 ; he 

 liad been married 78 years, and left a son 76 — At 

 Coleraine, G. Little, esq., formerly of Annan, and 

 principal proprietor of the most extensive salmon 

 fisheries in Europe. 



MARRIAGE ABROAD. 

 At Madras, R. F. Lewis, esq., to Fanny Clevo- 

 land, uiece to Admiral Sir C. Tyler. 



DEATHS ABROAD. 



At Lausanne, the Most Hon. Thomas Taylor, 

 Marquis of Headford.— At Koefrenick, the eldest 

 son of General Blucher.— On bis passage from 

 Quebec, to join his family at Florence, the Hon. 

 M. H. Perceval, collector of customs, and son-iii 

 law to Sir C. Flower, bart.— At Sierra Leone, the 

 Hon. J. W. Bannister, chief justice and judge of 

 the Admiralty in that colony.— At Aix-la-Chapelle, 

 Lieut. Colonel C. Grant.— Field-Marshall Count 

 Gncisenau, governor of Berlin. — At Boulogne, J. 

 Brougham, esq., brother to H. Brougham, esq., 

 flI.P. — In Paris, Anne, Baroness de Robeck, 80. 

 — At Vienna, Constance, wife of John Spencer 

 Smith, esq., late H. M.'s Envoy Extraordinary to 

 the Court of Wiitemberg, and M.P. for Dover.— 

 At Nice, Lady Emily Caulfield, 19, only surviving 

 child of the Earl and Countess of Charlemont. — 

 At Averbacli, the Grand Duchesi of He»s» 

 Darmstadt. 



