tatn 7 
. 
y 
CHRONICLE. 
‘Thomas Pitt, lord Camelford, by 
whom she has left one son and a 
daughter, married in 1792, to Wil- 
liam Wyndham Grenville, lord Gren- 
ville. 
7th. At Stratfield-say, Hants, 
aged 83, George Pitt, lord Rivers, 
a lord of his majesty’s bed-chamber, 
and lord-lientenant and custos-rotu- 
lorum of the county of Dorset, in 
which he is succeeded by lord Dor- 
chester, The peerage descends, in 
the present instance, to his only son 
George Pitt, who many years re- 
presented the county of Dorset in 
Parliament, but had latterly retired 
from public life, and contingently 
devolves to the male issue of Peter 
Beckford, esq. of Stapleton, in Dor- 
Setshire, his lordship’s son-in-law. 
His remains were interred with great 
funcral pomp, in the family-vault at 
Stratfield-say. 
Sth. Sir John Davie, bart. of 
Creedy, having completed his 31st 
year in January last. 
9th. At Paris, sir Robert Cham- 
bers, late chief-justice of the su- 
preme court of judicature at Cal- 
cutta. 
10th. Lieut. col. George Smith, 
of the 9th infantry, on the Madras 
establishment. 
15th, At Long Buckby, co. North- 
ampton, in her 103d year, Mrs. 
-Swinfen. 
At Dublin, (where she had been 
for some months ona yisit to her 
daughter, Mrs, Lindsay), aged about 
62, and much regretted, dame Mary 
Hales, of Dean, near Wingham, in 
Kent, relict of sir Thomas Pym H. 
bart. of Howletts, in the same 
county, who died in 1773. She was 
only daughter and heiress of Mr, 
Jervace Hayward, an opulent brewer 
at Sandwich, in Kent. 
16th. At the Bull and Punch- 
507. 
bow!, in Liverpool, aged 77, Bres- 
law, the celebrated conjurer. He 
was a native of Berlin. 
20th. In London, of a typhus 
fever, after 27 days illness, in her 
16th year, Susannah, only daughter 
of sir Thomas Guy Cullum, of Haw- 
sted, Suffolk, bart. 
25th. At Kensington, the hon. 
Mrs. Luttrell, reli¢t of the hon. 
Temple L. next brother of Henry, 
earl of Carhampton. She was daugh- 
ter of sir Henry Gould, knt. one 
of the judges of the court of com- 
mon pleas, in England, and sister 
of Honoria, countess of Cavan. 
She married, 1778, the hon. Tem- 
ple Luttrell, by whom she had no 
issue. 
At Hazlewood, co. Sligo, Ire- 
land, William Willoughby Cole, ear! 
of Enniskillen, so created 1789. 
He was on a visit, at the time, to 
his son-in-law, Owen Wynne, esq. 
His lordship had been attacked by 
the influenza, but was considered. 
as recovered, and was in the act 
of putting on his coat when he 
died. 
At her house at St. Doulough’s, 
near Dublin, lady Catherine Toole, 
sister to the earl of Mountmorris ; 
a lady of uncommon fascinating 
charms and manners. 
After a few hours illness, at 
Ipswich, where he was with his 
regiment, Edward Goate, esq. of 
Brentley-hall, Suffolk, many years 
colonel of the East Suffolk militia. 
26th. In Bloomsbury-square, aged 
88, dame Catherine Dukinfield, re- 
lict of sir Samuel D. bart. 
At Lydiard-Tregoze, near Woot- 
ton Basset, the hon. Mr. St. John, 
eldest son of lord viscount Boling- 
broke. 
2sth. At Exmouth, after a pain- 
ful illness, the rey. Richard Hole, 
rector. 
