512 ANNUAL REGISTER, 1804. 



tcr's decease ; and lcs;acies to the 

 poor of Tipton, Wolverhampton, 

 ind Tettenhall, at the discretion 

 df the minister of each parish, and 

 ivhich is intciidfd to be laid out in 

 the purchase of Jinscy petticoats 

 Tor poor widows. On the decease 

 of Mrs. Mee, the distinguished fa- 

 mily of Hales will be extinft. 



Dec. 1st. At his seat at Berring- 

 ton, near Leominster, co. Hereford, 

 in his 75th year, the right hon. 

 Thomas Harloy, father of the city 

 of London, president of St. Bartho- 

 lomew's hosj)itaI, lord lieutenant 

 of the county of Radnor, one of his 

 majesty's most honourable privy 

 council, and uncle to the earl of 

 Oxford. He was alderman of Port- 

 soken ward, 1761, sheriff 1763, 

 lord mayor 1767, 



At his house, the park at Hcr- 

 fingfordbury, Samuel Baker, esq. 

 late M. P. for the county of Hert- 

 ford, and third son of the late sir 

 W. B. alderman of London. 



2iid. At Mount Clcre, Roe- 

 hampton, Surry, in his 85th year, 

 sir John Dick, bart. and knight of 

 the Russian order of St. Alexander 

 Newski, wliich he received from 

 the late empress of Russia, for his 

 services to her ilect while he Mas 

 English consul at Leghorn. Tic 

 was likewise, for several years, one 

 of the commissioners for auditing 

 public accounts. He is said to have 

 died worth upwards of 70,0001. 

 the whole of which he has left in 

 equal divisions to Mr. Carr, Mr. 

 Simons of Carlisle-street, Soho, his 

 apothecary, the rev. Mr. Cleaver, 

 and Dr. Vaughan, his physician, 

 after a reservation of annuitie.s of 

 1601. per annum each to his house- 

 keeper and the servant who attend- 

 ed his person, and one of 2001. per 

 annum to col. Pleydcll, in approba- 



tion of his attachment to the duke 

 of Gloucester. 



At Brithelmstonc, in her 5th 

 year, the eldest daughter of tho 

 duke of RutLand. Her remains M'ere 

 interred in the family vault at Bo(- 

 tesford, co. Leicester. 



3rd. At Bath, the lady of sir 

 Francis Baring, bart. 



6th. At his apartments in De- 

 vonshire - street, Michael Marcus 

 Lynch, esq. of Mallow, co. Cork, 

 in Ireland, late of the royal north 

 Lincoln regiment of militia, and 

 brother-in-law to the right hon. J. 

 H. Addington. 



At his seat, at Kedleston, co. 

 Derby, in his 78th year, Natlianiel 

 Curzon, Lord Scarsdale, a baronet, 

 LL.D. and a vice-president of the 

 Middlesex hospital. He was the 

 eldest son of the late Sir Nathaniel 

 Curzon, bart. whose family came 

 to this country with William the 

 conqueror. We find them seated 

 at Kedleston ever since the reign of 

 Edward the first. This family first 

 represented the county of Derby in 

 parliament, in the second year of 

 the reign of Richard II. and con- 

 tinued to do so, with some intervals, 

 until the twelfth of William III.; 

 from which period they uninterrupt- 

 edly continued to represent it till 

 the year 1761, when his present 

 majesty was pleased to call the late 

 lord up to the house of peers. His 

 private worth will be long in re- 

 membrance : and the poor of the 

 surrounding villages will rccollctt 

 Avith gratitude his continued bene- 

 volence. His exquisite taste for the 

 line arts is universally known and 

 acknowledged by those of the pre- 

 sent age, and his noble mansion at 

 Kedlfston will remain a monument 

 of it to posterity. lie is succeeded- 

 b}- his eldest son, the hon, Nathaniel 



Curzon, 



