522 
great grandson of that emincnt an- 
Yiquary sir William D. Garter king 
of arms ; into whose family the ma- 
nor passed by purchase, in the first 
ear of king Charles I. from sir 
alter (afterwards lord) Aston of 
Forfar, to sir William’s father John 
Dugdale of Shustoke (in which 
parish it lies,) only son of John D. 
of Clithero, co. Lancaster, which his 
son sold, and took a lease for 60 
years of the impropriate rectory of 
Shustoke, and rebuilt the house, 
which is engraved in the second edi- 
tion of the history of Warwickshire, 
inscribed to John Dugdale, esq. his 
great grandson. Sir William had 
one son, John, who was created 
Norroy king of arms, and dicd 
1700, leaving William, who died 
1714, having married Judith sister 
of sir Henry Gough, of Perry hall 
in Staffordshire, knt. by whom he 
had two sons, William and John, 
who both died single, the latter 
1749, and four daughters, the third 
of whom, Jane, marricd Richard 
Geast, esq. by whom she had a son 
named Richard, the subject of this 
article, who married Penelope-Bate, 
eldest of the four daughters and 
eoheirs of Francis Stratford, of 
Merevale, esq. and in 1799 (out of 
respect to Garter Dugdale) took, 
by royal licence, the name and arms 
of Dugdale only; and, by the same 
licence, his only surviving son (who 
is now M. P. forthe county of War- 
wick) assumed the name of Strat- 
ford-Dugdale.— Mr. D. had also 
four daughters: 1. Penelope is mar- 
ANNUAL REGISTER, 1806. 
ried to Charles- James Packe, esq. of 
Hanthorpe house, co. Lincoln ; 2. 
Louisa-Anne, to the late William 
Dilke, esq. of Maxtoke castle; 3. 
Francis, died ‘an infant; 4. Emma, 
unmarried. 
16th. At Portsmouth, aged 91, 
captain James Halls, of the army. 
He was surgeon’s mate of the Cen- 
turion, and went round the world 
with lord Anson, inthe year 1740, 
when the Manilla galleon, Nostra 
Signora de Cabadonga, was taken. 
She was the richest prize ever taken, 
having near a million and a half of 
dollars on-board, and was larger and 
of more force than the Centurion. 
Mr. Halls came home surgeon of 
her. It was after this veyage, which 
Jasted three years and nine months, - 
that lord Anson, when he landed at 
Portsmouth, fell upon his knees, 
and offered an ejaculatory prayer to 
him who had preserved him from 
such imminent dangers. Captain 
Fortescue is now supposed to be the 
only person living who went that 
voyage.* 
17th. At his house in Saville- 
row, William Rowley, M. D. au 
eminent physician and medical writer. 
He died of a typhus fever, a sacri- 
fice to the anxious performance of 
his professional duties ; and was at. 
tended in his Jast moments by his 
friends Drs. Kennedy and Moseley. 
At his seat at Bunny park, Notts, 
aged 77, sir Thomas Parkyns, bart. 
born 1728; married, 1747, Jane, 
sole daughter and heiress of the 
grandsen of sir Thomas P, the se- 
| cond 
* In a recent publication (biographical index to the house of commons) sir. Py 
Stephens is mentioned as the only surviving person who went round the world in 
the Centurion.. This is perfectly erroneous. Sir P. Stephens was not with lord A. 
til after the return of the latter from his circumnavigatiom. 
