502 



ANNUAL REGISTER, 1804. 



27th. At Clifton-hall, Penelope 

 Madan Maitland, second daughter 

 of Alexander Charles Maitland 

 GJibson, esq. of Ciifton-hall : and 

 on the followinc; day, at the same 

 place, Alexander Maitland, fourth 

 son of brigadier-general Frederick 

 Maitland. 



29th. At Ilanipton-court Pa- 

 lace, Frances, eldest daughter of the 

 late earl of Ludlovv-. 



Lately, sir James Cockburne, 

 of Langtown, bart. 



October 1st. At his housein Upper 

 Gower-street, of the repeated at- 

 tacks of a paralytic disorder, aged 

 73, George Wilson, esq. formerly 

 an emineiit solicitor in the high court 

 of chancery. The chambers m hich 

 he occupied in Symond's inn had 

 been successively tenanted, during 

 the period of a century, by his fa- 

 ther and grandfather J and he dis- 

 charged the duties of his profession 

 ■with hereditary reputation and in- 

 tegrity. He married Sarah, daugh- 

 ter of John Cox, and sister and 

 heiress of George Cox, of fair- 

 seat, CO. Kent, esqrs. by whom 

 (who died 1796) he had four chil- 

 dren, Sarah, Mary, George-Cox, 

 and G^orgc-Cox, One only sur- 

 vives him. Mary, now the wife of 

 sir Hugh Inglis, bart. M. P. 



2nd. Suddenly, at Exeter, in her 

 80th year, j\Irs. Elizabeth Elliot, 

 daughter of the late col. Ducket, of 

 the Horse-guards, and relict of the 

 late Granville E. esq. a general in 

 the British service. 



Mrs. Lewis, wife of Mr. Pavid 

 Lewis, jun. of Carmarthen. The 

 circumstance that occasioned her 

 death is remarkable. She dreamt 

 that she met with two men carrying 

 a CQtlin, and enquiring whom the 

 coffin was for, they replied it was 

 for her. This had such an efl'cct ou 



her mind, that it brought on a niJs.» 

 carriage, which terminated her life. 



At Jersey, much regretted, Mr. 

 Pleydell Dawnay lie Geyts, third 

 son of Charles-William Le Geyts, 

 esq. He was midshipman on board 

 his majesty's ship the Severn, and 

 descended from one of the first fa- 

 milies in that island. He was a very 

 promising youth, much beloved by 

 his captain and near relation, his 

 .serene highness the duke de Bouil- 

 lon, by the rest of the officers and 

 men of the ship, and by all who had 

 the plea,>>ure to know him. His 

 loss is most severely felt by his dis- 

 consolate parents. 



.^>th. Of the gout in his stomach,^ 

 in his 43d year, Thomas Seddon, 

 esq. of Aldersgate-street, colonel of 

 the 11th regiment of loyal London 

 Yoluuteers, His remains were in- 

 terred on the 12th with military ho- 

 nours. 



At her house in Spa-fields, aged 

 65, lady Anne Erskine, sister to t4ie 

 earl of Buchan, and the hon. Tho- 

 mas Erskine. ' She was a trustee for 

 the late countess of Huntingdon's 

 chapels, an,d superintended their 

 management. 



At his house in B.ury, after a 

 severe and lingering illness, which, 

 he supported with much fortitude, 

 lieutenant-colonel Thomas Rockley, 

 of the 7th battalion of the royal. 

 arm\ of reserve. 



6th. Aged 60, sir William 

 Kemp, bart. of Bristow, co. Nor- 

 Iblk. Ho was riding on a hobby, 

 from which he fell, and expired oa 

 the spot. 



6th. At his lodgings in Bristol, 

 after a long illness, the rey. John- 

 William Hamilton, brother to sir 

 Frederick H. bart. and nephew to 

 lieutenant-general sir John Cra- 

 dock, K. B. 



7th. l^ 



