CHRONICLE. 



49 



Al Bath, aged 34, Marie Jose- 

 phine Charlotte de Morand, coun- 

 tess of Gonidee, in Brittany. 



23. The right honourable coun- 

 tess of Guildford. 



Lately, at the castle of Tra'ee, 

 in Ireland, Sir Barry Denny, bart. 

 knight of the shire for the county 

 of Kerry, and major of the Kerry 

 militia. 



30. At Great Yarmouth, lady 

 Caroline Home, sister of the pre- 

 sent earl of Home. 



At York House in the Strand, 

 Pierce Sinnott, e:q. formerly lieu- 

 ' tenant governor of Niagara, in 

 Nor;h America. 



Sir Thomas Hay, bart. of Park, 

 - in Scotland. 



May 2. At Haveningham in Suf- 

 folk, sir Thomas Allin, bart. of 

 Somerley-hali. 



3. In his road to London, lord 

 George Cavendish, uncle to the 

 duke of Devonshire, and member 

 for Derbyshire. 



Sir John Guise, bart. at High- 

 ham, in Gloucestershire. 



b'. Nathaniel Smith, esq. one of 

 the directors of the East-India com- 

 pany, and member for Rochester. 

 He was author of several valuable 

 tracts on East-India aftairs, parti- 

 ■ «ular]y the following : 1. "Ob- 

 servations on the present srateof the 

 East-India company, and on the 

 Measures to be pursued for the 

 insuring the Pei manency and aug- 

 menting its commerce." iivo.l77^- 

 t 2. " The Measures to be pursued 

 in India forinsuringthe Permanency 

 and augmentation of the Commerce 

 of the Company fartherconsidered j 

 with the Heads for carrying those 

 Measures into Execution." 8vo. 

 1772. 3. " General Remarks on 

 the Sysiemof Government inlndiai 



Vol. XXXYl. 



with farther Considerations on the 

 present State of the Company at 

 Home and Abroad. " 8vo. 1773. 



Lady Crawford, in Clarges-street. 



7. At lord Rodney's, Hanover- 

 square, David Murray, esq. brother 

 to lord Elibank, and member of 

 parliament for New Radnor. 



28. John Martin, esq. of Ham- 

 court, in Overbury, Worcestershire, 

 many years M. P. for Tewkesbury. 



At Gibraltar, sir Robert Boyd, 

 K. B governor-general of that for- 

 tress, and colonel of the 39th regi- 

 ment of foot. It is reported, mucli 

 to his honour, that this brave sol- 

 dier, by merit only, raised himself 

 from a private in the ranks. 



At hishouse,inDuke-street,Dub- 

 lin, sir William Mayne, lord New- 

 haven, a younger son of William 

 Mavne, esq.offowisLodgejClack- 

 mananshirejdescendedoftheancient 

 house of Mayne, of Lockwood, in 

 Clydesdale. He was early bred a 

 merchant in the family-house of bu- 

 siness at Lisbon, where it has sub- 

 sisted above onehundred years. He 

 retired from Portugal, 1757, and, 

 ] 758, married Frances Allen, fifth 

 daughter and co-heiress of Joshua, 

 viscount Allen, of the kingdom of 

 Ireland, by whom he had one son, 

 who di'rd soon after his birth, and 

 in right of her he enjoyed consider- 

 able possessions in that kingdom. In 

 April, 1763, he was advanced to the 

 dignity of a baronet of Great Bri- 

 taiu ; in March, 1766, created a 

 privy-counscUor of Ireland. In the 

 first octennial parliament there, as 

 before.at the accession of hispresent 

 majesty,he represented the borough 

 of Carysfort. in 17tJ4, he was rl;- 

 turned representative, in ths British 

 parliament, for Canterbury, and af- 

 terwards in 1774,for Gatton, where 



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