IDO 
[Sept, 
Herefordshire — Gloucestershire, 
At KidJernnnster, Herbert Braam, esq. to 
W iss Watson. 
Ac West Bromwich, IVJr. Thomas Hood, 
Tipton, to Miss Fisher, daughter of Mr. 
James Fisher, ironmaster, of York. House. 
Mr. Hill, Hatter, of Kidderminster, to 
Miss Walters, of the Bull Inn. 
Died ] At 3 very advanced age, Mrs. Sex¬ 
ton, of the Ty thing. 
Mrs. Evans, widow of the late Mr. Robert 
Evans, Kiaderroinster. 
Mrs. Foley, lady of the Hon. Andrew Foley, 
M. P. for Droitvvich. 
HEREFORDSHIR I. 
Jifarried.J At Stoke, Mr. J. Thomas, of 
l/cominster, to Miss Whieldon, youngest 
daughter of John W. esq. of Cliff Bank* 
GLOUCESTERSHIRE. 
The tunnel now making under the Severn, 
about a mile on the Chepstow side of Newn- 
ham, is proceeding rapidly, and with every 
prospect of success. It is 13 feet high, and 
12 wide. The engine-pit, through which the 
work is drained, is 72 feet deep. 
A vessel, to sail against wind and tide, has 
just been completed at Bristol. She has one 
mast of iron, with an upright windlass affixed 
to the same ; her sails, which are of a pecu¬ 
liar construction, when in motion, can weigh 
her anchor, work three pieces of mechanism, 
(two projecting from her sides, and one in 
the centre) two pumps, and, upon occasion, 
two sweeps of 24 feet. Her canvas is also 
extended or shortened in an instant, and if re¬ 
quired, the ma?t, with all its appendages, is 
as quickly lowered. She has neither blocks 
nor running rigging, except a fore and aft 
stay, and cables. In fact, she is a complete 
life as well as packet boat, and calculated to 
sail upon, as well as before, the winti- 
At Tewkesbury, a melancholy accident 
lately attended the reprehensible practice of 
leaving guns loaded in insecure situations. 
A little boy and girl, going into the house of 
a neighbour, the boy found a gun, which he 
took hold of not knowing it was loaded, 
pointed at his sister, and said he wonld shobt 
her. He pulled the trigger, the piece ex¬ 
ploded, and, being almost close to the girl’s 
head, the contents entered a little above the 
car, shattered her skull in a most dreadful 
manner, and killed her on the spot! 
JHarried.^ At Blocklay, H. Karris, esq. 
solicitor, Tewkesbury, to MissWintle, daugh¬ 
ter of J. Wintle, of Broad Oak 
Richard Ice, esq. of Hartshill, to Miss 
Roberts, only daughter of Thomas Roberts, 
genr. of Oxford, near Campden. 
Ivir, W. Bishop, of Chaselton, to Miss 
XL zabeth Taylor, of Moreton ia-Maish. 
At Stroud, Mr. Alexander Porter, to Miss 
Jones. 
Mr. James Dunn, to Miss E. Flint, both 
of Bat .. 
P. Heron Cockburn, esq. of Hubert Lodge, 
lo Mrs. Vaseall, relict of T. O. V, esq. of 
Acton cottage. 
On Monday, at Swalnswick church, Mr. 
John Cottle, of Batheaston, to Miss Miles of 
Tad w ick , 
At Bisley, Mr. Henry Morse, of Guershill, 
to Miss Jane Amanda Bath, of Chalford. 
DiW.] At Barnwood House, his seat, near 
Gloucester, Sir Charles Hotham, bart. of 
South Dalton, and Ebberstone Lodge, both in 
the east rid pg of the county of York. His 
mild, unassbming manners, and his benevo¬ 
lence of heart will cause him long to be la¬ 
mented j indeed, in his death, society has 
lost a valuable member—and the poor a stre¬ 
nuous advocate and a generous benefactor. 
At Tewkesbury, Anna Cecilia, last sur¬ 
viving daughter of the pious and learned Dr. 
Philip Doddridge, of Northampton, who 
died in 1731. 
At Bath, Mrs. Simms, in Northgate-street. 
At Lower East Hayes, Governor Shaw, 
Mr. James Reed, son of Mr. Reed, wine- 
merchant, in Pulteney-street. 
Mrs. Stillman, wife of Mr. James S. Corn- 
street. 
In Beaufort Buildings, Mr. Pinckney, late 
of Woolfall, 70. A few years since this 
worthy man retired to Bath from very exten¬ 
sive agricultural pursuits, which he conducted 
for nearly 40 years with great ability and un¬ 
blemished reputation. 
At his house in Stanhope-place, Stephen 
Comyn, esq, 
Mr. Thomas Jermyn, surgeon, of Bath, 
universally lamented by his family and 
friends. 
At Weston Super Mare, Mr. Stroud, an 
eminent wine merchant and banker, of Bath, 
and tor a number of years conductor of the 
Upper Assembiy-Rooms j he had been for 
some years in a declining state of health, 
but appeared belter on the day of his dissolu¬ 
tion ; yet after dinner, without any previous 
sensation of illness, he fell from his chair in 
an apoplectic seizure, which proved fatal in 
a few hours. 
At Purton, after a short illness, deeply la¬ 
mented by her surviving family and friends, 
Anne, wife of the Rev. J. Prower, vicar of 
Purton, Wilts. 
At Wotton-Underedge, Miss Sarah Tud- 
gey, 85. 
At Monmouth, Miss Tregoze, 87, sister 
to the late Daniel Tiegoze, esq. of Tregirog. 
At Rendecomb, W.George, esq. universally 
regretted. 
Mrs. Sarah Harris, of Gloucester, 81. 
At Taunton, Mr. George Tyne, 72. 
At Cudleigh, the Rev. John Garrett, mas¬ 
ter of the free grammar-school of that town, 
and vicar of Culmstock, Devon. 
In Gloucester, Mr. Septimus Ludlow, a 
barrister-at-law, and formerlythe acting part¬ 
ner of an extensive banking concern at Chip¬ 
ping Sodbury. As a lawyer he was allowed 
to possess considerable information j but giv¬ 
ing up the promised tide of professional emi- 
nsnee for the management of the bank, and 
which 
