CMRP OiN Ee LB 
Somervile, one of the sixteen peers 
for Scotland. ‘He succeeded his 
father, James, 1766; and is suc- 
ceeded in title and estates by his 
| nephew, son of his brother Hugh. 
At Aberdeen, in his 77th year, 
George Campbell, D. D. F. R.S. 
Edin. late principal and professor 
of divinity in the Marischal college 
and university of Aberdeen. 
May 3. The right hon. lady Ger~ 
trude Cromie. 
At Hampton Court Palace, in 
her 7st year, Anna Catharina 
Rumpsfoon Warmen-huyen, dow- 
ager baroness du Tour, mother-in- 
law to Baron Nagel. 
_ 13. At Drumsheugh, near Edin- 
burgh, the hon. James Erskine of 
Alva, one of the senators of the 
Caellege of Justice. He was ad- 
mitted an advocate, Dec. 4, 1743, 
@ppointed one of the barons of the 
Exchequer, May 27, 1754, and 
on the 20th May,176}, was appoint- 
ed one of the lords of the session, 
and took the title of lord Barjarg, 
which title he afterwards altered to 
lord Alva. 
19. At her house in Hertford- 
Street, lady Charlotte Finch, eldest 
danghter of Daniel seventh earl of 
Winchelsea and third earl of Not- 
tingham. She formerly enjoyed 
the place of governess of the royal 
nursery, with an appointment of 
6001. per annum. 
22. At the White Lion inn at 
Bath. Henry Thomas Cary, visc, 
Falkland, and Baron Cary m Scot- 
land. He had reached Melksham, 
on his way to London, but being 
too ill to proceed, returned to Bath. 
He was born in 1766, and sucs. 
ceeded his grandfather, ‘the late 
Viscount, in 4785, Dying without 
issue, his brother, the hon. Charles 
John Cary, succeeds him. 
(61 
At Chesterfield, aged 48, the 
hon. Eliz. Horton, eldest sister of 
the Earl of Derby, and lady of the 
trey, Thomas Horton, rector of 
Bradsworth, co. York. 
At Woolwich, Gen. Broome, 
of the artillery. He rose from the 
situation of a private to the high 
rank of a general officer, merely by 
his personal merit. He wasa captain 
of artillery at the time of the trialof 
lord George Sackville, in which he 
appeared us a principal evidence 
against his lordship. 
31. Aged 64, in Harcourt place 
Dublin, the right bon. William 
Barton Conyngham, one of his ma- 
jesty’s most hon. privy council,’ 
teller of the exchequer, and one of 
the commissioners for executing the 
office of high treasurer in Ireland, 
treasurer of the Royal Irish Aca- 
demy, F. A. S$. Lond. brother of 
the late Francis Pierpoint Burton, 
baron Conyngham. (father of the 
present viscount Conyngham) and 
nephew of Henry earl Conyngham, 
in compliance of whose will he 
took the name of Conyngbam ; and 
uncle to the present lord, to whom 
his estates devolve. Our readers 
will recollect him as the mnni- 
ficent patron of Mr. Murphy, 
in his journey to, and description 
of, the monastery of Batalha, which 
Mr. Conyngham had himself vi- 
sited, and made some sketches of, 
with two other gentlemen who 
accompanied him in his travels 
through Portugal, 1783. ‘* These 
sketches, which are very correct 
representations of the original, 
gave Mr. Murphy so high an idea 
of that building as to excite in him 
an earnest desire to visit it; and 
Mr. Conyngham having generously 
offered him his patronage and sup- 
port, he set out frem Dublin, 
in 
