APPENDIX to the CHRONICLE. 569 



for Sandwich, and lady Charlotte, 

 married to the present viscount 

 Grimstone. Lord Liverpool partly 

 inherited, and partly accumulated, 

 a large fortune during the course 

 of a long and brilliant career. He 

 has left to his eldest son, the pre- 

 sent earl, 15,000/. per annum, of 

 which only about 3,500/. per an- 

 num is in land. To his widow, 

 the countess of Liverpool, only 

 700/. per annum for life, in addi- 

 tion to her former jointure, as 

 lady Cope, of 1,000/. per annum. 

 But the present earl has added 

 500/. more per annum to his fa- 

 ther's bequest; and it is understood 

 that the duchess of Dorset, her 

 daughter, adds 300/. per annum 

 more. To the honourable Cecil 

 Jenkinson, his second son, he has 

 left 1,000/. per annum, in addition 

 to an estate of near 3,000/. per an- 

 num, of which Mr. Cecil Jenkinson 

 is already in possession, by the 

 death of a relation. To lady 

 Charlotte Grimstone, now lady 

 Forrester, he has left only the 700/. 

 per annum, bequeathed to the 

 countess of Liverpool, after her 

 decease. The landed property is 

 entailed to all the family of the 

 Jenkinsons, in tail male, to a great 

 extent. 



At Teddington, viscount Aghrim, 

 baron of Ballyraore, 66. He is 

 succeeded in his titles and estates 

 by Frederic, viscount Aghrim. His 

 lordship married Anne Elizabeth 

 Christine, baroness de Tuill de 

 Scerosberkin, by whom he has left 

 several children. 



At his seat, Wardour castle, 

 "Wiltshire, Henry lord Arundell, 

 baron of Wardour, count of the 

 Holy Roman Empire. His lord- 

 ship was born in 1740, and succeed- 

 ed to the honours and estates of his 



father in 1758. Seven years after- 

 wards he married Mary, daughter of 

 BenedictConquest,esq.bywhomhe 

 had three daughters, the eldest and 

 youngest of whom are dead; the 

 survivor, Eleanor Mary, in 1786, 

 became the wife of lord Clifford. 

 Being a Roman Catholic, his lord- 

 ship never took the oaths, or his 

 seat, in the House of Peers. A few 

 years since, as the ancient family 

 seat was falling into decaj', lord 

 Arundell erected a mansion in its 

 immediate vicinity on a noble and 

 extensive scale ; but the expence 

 incurred in this undertaking, tended 

 not a little to embarrass his fortune. 

 He is succeeded in his title by his 

 first cousin, James Everard Arun- 

 dell, esq. of Irnhara-hall, in the 

 county of Lincoln. 



In Tichfieldstreet, madame 

 Jarry, relict of general Francis J. 

 commandant of the royal military 

 college, at Wycombe. She was a 

 native of Posen, in Poland, and fre- 

 quently amused her friends by re- 

 lating anecdotes of the Buonaparte 

 family, one of whom she employed 

 as a mantua-maker during her resi- 

 dence at Paris. 



At his seat, Hawkestone, Shrop- 

 shire, sir Richard Hill, bart. 75. 

 Thisgentlemanwas descendedfrom 

 a family of considerable antiquity, 

 in the county of Salop, which can 

 be traced up to the time of Edward 

 II. Rowland was the first honour- 

 ed with a patent of baronetage in 

 1726. He afterwards represented 

 the city of Litchfield in parliament, 

 and had a large family, consisting 

 of ten children, the eldest of whom 

 Richard, was born in 1733. He was 

 educated at Westminsterschool,and 

 afterwards admitted as gentleman 

 commoner of Magdalen college, 

 Oxford; where he resided until he 



received 



