APPENDIX to the CHRONICLE. 639 



upon that most severe service in 

 Gallicia, operating upon a con- 

 stitution already affected by West 

 India service, and the wounds re- 

 ceived in it, produced the feverish 

 and other fatal syniptom.=, which 

 carried him to the grave at the 

 early age of 43 years, ripe indeed 

 in glory, but imniaturely for his fa- 

 mily and friends, and above all for 

 his country. 



At Hammersmith, James Elphin- 

 ston, esq. 88. A long retirement 

 from the cares of the world, had 

 in a manner withdrawn this gentle- 

 man from the view of it for some 

 time past, but he has made no 

 common figure in it during the 

 long period of his life. 



At Fineshade, the seat of her fa- 

 ther, the hon. J. Monckton, where 

 she was on a visit, Eleanor, coun- 

 tess dowager of Harborough, 38. 

 She has left one son, the present 

 earl of Harborough, a minor, and 

 four daughters. 



At the Hyde, Ingatestone, Mrs. 

 Disney, wife of the rev. Dr. D. 

 and daughter of the rev. Francis 

 Blackburne, archdeacon of Cleve- 

 land, Yorkshire, 63. 



At Stewart-hall, county Tyrone, 

 Andrew Thomas, earl of Castle- 

 stewart, no less eminent for the in- 

 tegrity and independence of his 

 mind, than for his illustrious de- 

 scent. He was the acknowledged 

 head of the house of Stewart, be- 

 ing immediately descended, in the 

 male and legitimate line, from Ro- 

 bert the second, king of Scotland. 

 By his widow (daughter of the late 

 judge Sill), he left two sons and 

 two daughters. His lordship is suc- 

 ceeded by his eldest son Robert. 



At Abbeyland, county of Cork, 

 the most reverend doctor Dillon, 

 titular archbishop of Tuam. He 



was a prelats exemplary in his con- 

 duct, engaging in his manners, and 

 enlightened in his mind; his zeal, 

 as a public character, extended no 

 less to the punctual discharge of 

 the duties he owed to the flock com- 

 mitted to his care, than to promote 

 and support the general interests of 

 religion : his virtue in private life 

 endeared him to his fi lends, while, 

 in his general intercourse with so- 

 ciety, his dignified deportment ren- 

 dered him respectable. Placed at 

 the head of this diocese, at a fear- 

 ful period of civil commotion, un- 

 awed by the dread of the misrepre- 

 sentations of prejudice, or the mis- 

 conceptions of disaffection, hetaught 

 obedience to the laws of his coun- 

 try, and charity and forbearance to 

 all men. The same zeal which ac- 

 tuated him to remove abuses com- 

 mitted to the prejudice of religion, 

 rendered him firm in opposing any 

 attempts to encroach on its lights. 



The most noble William Henry 

 Cavendish Bentinck, duke of Port- 

 land, marquis of Titchfield, &c. 



At Lansdown-house, Berkeley- 

 square, the right hon. John Henry 

 Petty, marquis of Lansdown, earl 

 of Wycomb in England, earl of 

 Shelburne, viscount Fitz Maurice, 

 and baron Dunkerron, in Ireland. 

 His lordship was in his forty-fourth 

 year. He succeeded his father, the 

 late marquis, in 1805; and the 

 same year, married lady Gifford, 

 relict of Sir Duke Gifford, baronet, 

 by whom he has left no issue, but 

 is succeeded in his titles and estates 

 by his brother, lord Henry Petty. 

 He had been for many months in a 

 declining stateof health. In the au- 

 tumn of the present year, by the 

 advice of his medical attendants, 

 he was preparing to embark for 

 Lisbon, to try the effect of the tem- 

 perature 



