212 ANNUAL REGISTER, 1816. 



United Kingdom. PVom these 

 unceasing exertions of benevo- 

 lence, she had established such a 

 character that her dQcease was 

 lamented as a public calamity by 

 rich and poor in the district of her 

 residence, and in which she has 

 left a memory that is likely to be 

 as long and as beneficially remem- 

 bered, as the good she has done 

 will be durable. 



The susceptibility of her mind 

 was too keen for the bodily frame 

 in which it was enclosed, and her 

 death was accelerated by her feel- 

 ings for the fate of a much-lo\ ed 

 son. One of her sons, the Hon. 

 Francis Bernard, Lieut, of the 

 9tli Dragoons, died in Portugal 

 in the service of his countiy, on 

 January 24th, 1813, in the 'iUh 

 year of his age. Another son, 

 the Hon. Heni7 Boyle Bernard, 

 Cornet of the King's Dragoon 

 Guards, fell gloriously in the bat- 

 tle of \Vaterloo, in his 18th year. 



1. The Right Hon. Lady Peii- 

 rhyn, w idow of Richard Pennant, 

 Lord Penrhyn, and daughter and 

 heiress of (Jcneral Warburton, of 

 Winnington, Cheshire. 



5. Lieut.-gen. Sir Geo. Prcvost, 

 late Governor-in-chief and com- 

 mander of the forces in the British 

 colonies in North America, in his 

 49th year. He was the son of 

 Major-gen. Prevost, who served 

 under General Wolfe at Quebec. 

 Sir George began his service in 

 the West Indies, where he dis- 

 tinguished himself at .St. Vincent, 

 at Doniinica, of which he Avas 

 appointed governor, and at St. 

 Lucia. In 1808 he obtained the 

 post of Licut.-governor and com- 

 mander in Nova Scotia, and in the 

 same year acted as second iu coni- 

 jna»d at the capture of Martinitjue. 



He afterwards succeeded General 

 Sir James Craig in the chief com- 

 mand, civil and military, in North 

 America, which he hehl till his 

 return to England in 1814. 



6. The Hon. Sir Edw. Crofton, 

 bart. in '.,is 38th year, at Mote 

 Park, CO. Roscommon. 



At Warsaw, F. Narodsky, a 

 Polish gentleman, at the age of 

 125. He married a second wife 

 at 92, by whom lie had a daugh- 

 ter now living. 



8. At Weilburg, the Prince oj 

 Nassau IVeilhurg. 



10. The Lady of Gen. Sir Cor- 

 nelius Cuyler, bart. 



10. At an advanced age, Eliz. 

 Dowager Marcliioni'ss of Wuterford, 

 relict of George De la Poer Be- 

 resford, Marcjuis of Waterford, 

 who died in 1800. 



In liis S9th year, Henry Haring- 

 lon, M. D. alderman of Bath, 

 eminent as a classical scholar, a 

 man of wit, and a musical com- 

 poser. 



17. John Heath, esq. one of the 

 Judges of the Court of Common 

 Pleas. 



19. Sir Thomas Windsor Hun- 

 loke, bart. of VV ingcrwoith, Der- 

 byshire. 



20. The Princess of Mecklenburg 

 Schwerin, of tlic house of Saxe 

 Weimar. 



21. The Piincess of Nassau 

 JiVdburg. 



22. Sir Drunvnond Smith, bart. 

 of Tring Park, Herts. 



24. The Hon. Apsley Bathurst, 

 D. C. L. son of the laie Earl B. 



Dame Eliz. Twisdcn, relict of 

 Sir John Papillon Twisden, bart. 



27. Samuel J'iscount Hood, Ad- 

 miral of the Red, and Governor 

 of Greenwich Hospital, in his92d 

 year. He was raised to the peer- 

 age 



