CHRONICLE. 



507 



decease about 60001. per aimiim de- 

 volves to her sister, Mrs. lilundell, 

 o{ Bath, and about 25001. per arm. 

 to her late lord's nephew, the pre- 

 sent earl. Iler remains were inter- 

 red at Brampton-Bryan. 



5th. At St. Petersburgh, field- 

 inarshall count Muschin Puschin, 

 who some time commanded the Rus- 

 sian forces, in the last war Mith 

 Sweden. 



After a long illness, aged 74, 

 Abraham Winterbottom, esq. an 

 eminent attorney in Threadneedle- 

 Strcet. At the close of a long and 

 irreproachable life, he sunk under 

 the infirmities of ill-hoalth, and the 

 loss of his wife, who had herself 

 lingered under the confinement of 

 long illness and blindness, and by 

 whom he had no issue. By this and 

 other privations, left almost* alone 

 in the world, he had not the forti- 

 tude of mind to prevent him from 

 terminating his life by a pistol, at 

 his house at Highbury-place, Isling- 

 ton. He was secretary and solici- 

 tor to the Magdalen charity, and 

 I solicitor to the South-Sea company. 

 [ 8th. Captain Iluby, going on 

 I shore from his vessel lying in the 

 i river at Selby, co. York, together 

 with captain Ellis, employed in the 

 same trade, the latter fell off the 

 plank into the water. Captain 

 Huby jumped in after him, and, 

 owing to his exertions, capt. Ellis's 

 I life was preserved, but he himself 

 was unfortunately drowned. Capt. 

 liuby had been married to Miss 

 Martin, of Reedness, in the Marsh- 

 land, near Selby, only three days 

 before. 



9th. At Newcastle, lioiit.-col. 



' Blakeney, late inspecting officer of 



the volunteer corps in that distriiff. 



lie was dreadfully wounded in the 



Uiittle' of liunker's-Ilill, Xortli- 



America, and was always considereci 

 an intelligent and brave officer. 



lOih. At Bristol, Miss Louisa 

 Anne, fifth surviving daughter of 

 sir Edmund Cradock llartop, bart,' 

 of Four-Oaks-lIall, co. Warwick, 

 one of the representatives in parlia.> 

 ment for the t'ounty of Leicester. — 

 Her remains were interred on the 

 22d, in the family vaiUt at Aston 

 Flamville. 



12th. At her house, in Lower 

 Seymour-street, Mary, countess- 

 dowager of Shaftesbury. She was 

 second surviving daughter of Jacob 

 Bouverie, viscount Folkstone, full 

 sister to William Bouverie, late earl 

 of Radnor, and second wife of An- 

 thony fourth earl of Shaftesbury, 

 married to him March 26, 1759, 

 by whom she had two sons, the 

 present earl and Cropley Ashley, to 

 \Vhom, by her death, a considera- 

 ble accession of fortune accrues ; 

 and a daughter, INIary Anne. She 

 was interred in the family fault at 

 Wimborn-St. Giles, Dorset. 



The hon. capt. Paget Bayly, of 

 the royal navy, fourth brother to 

 the earl of Uxbridge. He was bora 

 in 1753. 



14th. At his seat at No6ton, near 

 Lincoln, in his 70th year, George 

 Hobart. earl of Buckinghamshire, 

 baron Hobart, of Blickling. He 

 was (he fourth son of John first earl 

 of Buckinghamshire, being eldest 

 son of the second wife, Elizabeth 

 Bristow ; succeeded his half-brother 

 John 1793, and was before that 

 event, conductor of the opera en- 

 tertainments. He was M. P. for 

 Beer-Alston, and secretary to his 

 elder brother, when embassador to 

 Russia. He married,, in 1757, Al- 

 binia^ eldest daughter of lord Vere 

 Bertie, eldest son of Robert first" 

 duke of Aucaster, by his second 



marriajrw 



