493 



ANNUAL REGISTER, 1804. 



relift of the late Willim B. esq. of 

 Revcsby Abbey, co. Lincoln, and 

 mother to sir Joseph Banks, bart. 

 She was daughter of William Bate, 

 esq. by a daughter and coheiress of 

 Tho. Chambers, esq. 



28th. Miss Eliza Baillie, daughter 

 of lieutenant-col. Baillie. 



30th. At Keith-hall, Scotland, 

 Anthony Keith Falconer, earl of 

 Kintore, and lord lieutenant of the 

 county of Kincardine. 



At Verdun, in France, George 

 Hay, sixth marquis of Tweedale, 

 one of the sixteen representative 

 peers of Scotland, and lord lieute- 

 nant of the county of Haddington. 

 He succeeded his nephew Georj^e, 

 the fifth marquis, who died in 0^1. 

 1770, at tli^ age of 13. 



At his estate near Chancney, gc- 

 iieral Scherer, who commanded the 

 French army in Italy when Suwar- 

 roff opened his victorious campaign 

 in that country. 



At Toulon, admiral La Touche 

 Treville. 



At ]*aris, in his 73rd year, car- 

 dinal De Boifgelin, archbishop of 

 Tours. This personage had the 

 singular fate of having preached the 

 coronation sermon of the evt^r-(o-be 

 laine^fel Louis XlVth. and of the 

 execrable Buonaparte. 



At Frescati, near Rome, in his 

 6th year, young Le Clerc, son of 

 the late general, and of the princess 

 Porghese, sister to the emperor 

 Buonaparte. 



At his house at Manchester, aged 

 63, Thomas Percival, M.D.F.R.S. 

 deservedly respe6ted in every de- 

 partment of life. Though princi- 

 pally addicted to the studies of his 

 profession, which he cultivated with 

 great success ; he did not confuic 

 the exercise of his talents to a single 

 object, but made many deviations 



into the patlis of literature and phi- ij 

 losophy ; and what does him much ' 

 greater credit, employed his elegant 

 genius in explaining and enforcing 

 the domestic and moral duties of 

 life ; which he has not recommended 

 with that coldness of speculation, 

 or the harshness of men who censura 

 with acrimony any failure in duties 

 which they neither do, nor mean to 

 pra6tise themselves ; but with the 

 tenderness of one conscious of th» 

 impcrfedtion of human nature, but 

 who was nevertheless to a great de- 

 gree himself the example which hi* 

 taught. 



Slid. 1st. At her house in Chelsea, 

 Mrs. Aufrere, widow of George A. 

 esq. formerly M.P. for Stamford, 

 and mother-in-law of lord Yarbo- 

 rough. By the death of this vener- 

 able old lady his lordship will com« 

 into possession of 50,0001. ready 

 money, and one of the finest col- 

 lections of paintings in this country. 

 The late sir Joshua Reynolds fre- 

 quently said, thatitcontainedagreat- 

 er variety of pieces by the first 

 masters of the Italian, Dutch, French, 

 and Flemish schools, than any other 

 private collection in England, and 

 estimated it at 200,0001. value. It is 

 supposed, that the deceased, in con- 

 formity with her promises frequent- 

 ly repeated, has left, besides, a le- 

 gacy of 10,0001. to each of his 

 lordship's six daughters. His lord- 

 .ship's two sons, it is also supposed, 

 will enjoy 20,0001. each, besides the 

 Chelsea estate. Her remains were 

 interred in the family vault at 

 Brocklesby, co. Lincoln. 



2nd. At his seat at Stanstead, 

 Sussex, aged 63, Richard Barwell, 

 esq. late M. P. for AVinchelsea. 

 J'rom a regular gradation of servic« 

 on the civil establishment of the East 

 India company, he broughf to Eng- 



lam( 



