CHRONICLE. 



469 



garden-gate, 1786, and for which, 

 though repeatedly solicited, he re- 

 fused to accept any reward. 



21st. At Kirchberor, after a very 

 short illness, both at the same hour, 

 Frederick Everard, the reigning 

 prince of Hohenloe, and the prin- 

 cess his consort, born a countess of 

 Castel Remling. The former had 

 reached his 67th, and the latter her 

 ■69th year. 



22nd. At iVlontrose, Miss Ram- 

 say, sister to sir Alexander Ramsay 

 Irvine, bart. of Balmain. 



23d. At her house at Richmond, 

 Surrey, sincerely regretted, Mrs. 

 Mary Ellis, relift of James E. esq. 

 of North-street, Westminster. 



At his seat of Tothill, near Ply. 

 mouth, aged 70, beloved, admired, 

 and revered by all ranks of peo- 

 ple, John Culme, esq. He was, 

 strictly and impartially speaking, a 

 venerable old English gentleman; 

 hospitable and hearty in his house ; 

 with his family, friends, and ac- 

 quaintance, open, friendly, cheer- 

 ful, and sociable; to his domestics 

 and dependents a good master. 



At his lordship's house in Gros- 

 renor-place, Anne, countess of 

 Upper Ossory, daughter of the late 

 lord Ravensworth, and first mar- 

 ried to the present duke of Grafton, 

 from whom she was divorced, and 

 afterwards married to the earl of 

 Upper Ossory. By the duke her 

 ladyship had lord Euston and other 

 children. She had likewise two 

 daughters by the earl of Upper 

 Ossory. The errors of this lady's 

 youth were, according to the best 

 of her endeavours, atoned for by a 

 subsequent exemplary conduc^t. Her 

 remains were interred in the family- 

 vault in Bedfordshire. 



At Kilmurry, n«arThomas.town, 

 in Ireland, aged 98, the countess- 



dowager of Carrick, sister to the 

 carl of Shannon, and mother of 



the present earl of Carrick. 



She was married to the late earl 

 of Carrick, 1745, and he died 

 1774. 



25th. At Grenier's hotel, in 

 Albcmarle-street, Ralph Dutton, 

 esq. brother to lord Sherborne. 



26th. At his house at Hyde- 

 park corner, the wife of Drummond 

 Smith, esq. Her death was occa- 

 sioned by grief for the death of her 

 sister, which brought on a violent 

 fever. Lady Cunlitfe is inconsole- 

 able for the very recent loss of her 

 two daughters. 



At Elberfeld, in Germany, in her 

 25 th year, and far advanced in preg- 

 nancy, lady Sykes, wife of sir Fran- 

 cis William S. bart. of Basildon-park, 

 Berks, niece to the duchess dowager 

 of Chandos, grand-daughter to the 

 late, and niece to the present, lord 

 Heniker. Through her amiable 

 disposition, and motherly care of an 

 jnfant son affli6tcd with the scarlet 

 fever, her ladyship fell a viflim, to 

 the great grief of her family, rela- 

 tives, and numerous friends. 



March 1st. At Dresden, in her 

 3 4th year, the princess ]Maximilian 

 of Saxony, born princess of Parma. 



2nd. At Exeter, aged 100, ivlrs. 

 Mackenzie, mother of lieutenant- 

 colonel M. 



4th. At Springhall, in Scotland, 

 aged 84, sir William Maxwell, bart, 



6th. At Bath, Archibald Swin- 

 ton, brother to the late lord Swin- 

 ton, one of the judges of the court 

 of session in Scotland. 



At Brussels, aged 69, marquis 

 Goswin de Fierlaut, counsellor of 

 state to the emperor, formerly pre- 

 sident of the privy council in Bra- 

 bant, and knight of the imperial or- 

 der of St. Stephen. 



H h 3 7th. 



