SO: 
Scotland- 
■Ireland 
Deaths Abroad* 
Oct. 1 y 
Oakeley, esq. The loss the inhabitants of 
the “ Happy Vale,” and its neighhourhoad, 
have sustained by his death cannot easily be 
estimated. The excellent roads formed under 
his direction, through a district formerly al- 
TTost impassable, are known to every travel¬ 
ler j the tracts which he has fertilized, the 
barren eminence which he has planted, and, 
above all, the delightful exhibitions of na¬ 
ture, in bold and picturesque scenery, v/hich 
his taste developed and adorned, have afford¬ 
ed themes of rapture to every visitor: his 
beneficence has bettered the condition, and 
made happy the dwelling, of many a rustic j 
and the memory of his private goodness will 
long live in the bosoms of his relatives and 
friends. 
At his cottage, at Cledden, near Trellick, 
Monmouthshire, Mr. Job Williams, 7'8, but 
better known by the familiar name of Job of 
Trellick, Customary as it is, in this part of 
the^kingdom, for the surrounding inhabitants 
to attead,aimo3t .unsolicited, at the funeral of 
a neighbour, upwards of 200 decent dressed 
persons of both sexes, followed his corpse 
from his house, in regular procession, to the 
church of Treliick, where it was interred. 
The principal singers from the adjoining pa¬ 
rishes were also present, and performed in the 
course of the service two anthems, in a man- , 
iier that did them great credit. . Soon as the 
ceremony was over, the green turf of his 
grave was covered with a profusion of the 
choicest and most fragrant .fiovrers the garden 
produces, an observance ne^er overlooked in 
any part of the principality, and which custom 
has been celebrated by the Muse cf Collins, 
in some beautirh! lines introduced as a dirge, 
In Shakespeare’s Flay of Cymbeline. 
s G 0 T L X n. 
There is at present living at Lcchlyack, 
in the parish of Carmichael, a x^oung man, 
who has reached his 18th year, in full health 
and complete organization ; but whose heignt 
is only two feet five inches. 
Died.'] At Barclay, E. Anne Saunders, 
aged 108. 
•At Gienallert, in the parish of Little Dun- 
keld, Mr. James Stewart, late of Tulloch, 
?1. This'gentleman was a cadet of the fa¬ 
mily of Fincastle j his father died at the age 
of 89, and his grandfather xvas killed at the 
battle or Sheritfmuir in 1715. He was him¬ 
self, in 1746, at Culloden, a lieutenant m 
Lord Nairne’s regiment, and in his cousin s, 
Captain Stewart, of K-invaid’s company. By 
his first wife, wdiose name was lorbes, he 
had seventeen children. His second \vite, 
M.aro-aret, daughter of Robert Low, ofCha- 
pleto^n, was married to him fifty-seven years, 
iind survives him at the age of eighty-four. 
inr.i,AXD. 
The Rev. Matthew Crowley, who lately 
conformed to the Protestant religion, was 
professor of the Sacred Scriptures in the Col¬ 
lege of Maynooth. This gentleman’s con 
was principally occasioned by the fol 
lowing circumstanceHe had been fo? 
some time preparing himself to give his class 
in the college a series of lectures upon the 
Protestant Heresy,” as it is theologically 
termed in the Roman Catholic ecclesiast.’cal 
seminaries, and for this purpose had diligently 
studied all the leading points of controversy 
between the Protestant and Roman Catholic 
religions, and-most carefully e.xa.Tiined the 
Holy Scriptures; and critically, with a mind 
bent upon impartial investigation, had perused 
Dr. Stackhouse’s invaluaible History or tlie 
Bible, and the late Bishop Pcrtcus’s Lectures 
on the Gospels. The result has been his re¬ 
nouncing the tenets of that religion in which 
he was brought up, and embracing the doc¬ 
trines and opinions of the reformed church. 
His conversion has produced a very strong 
sensation in the college of Maynooth, ar.d a 
great number of the students have manifested 
an inclination to follow his example. 
Dkd.^ Ac Tyrone, Colonel Charles Robi¬ 
son. 
.At Williamston, the Hon. and Rev. H. 
Cufxe. 
DEATHS .'ABROAD, 
DieJ.J At his seat near -Boston, ISiew 
England, the honourable Francis Dana, chief 
justice of the Scats of Massachussecs, one or 
the United States of America. 
At Paris, in his 86th year, Mons. Bougain¬ 
ville, the celebrated French circumnaviga¬ 
tor j having his faculties and vigour tiil a 
short time be.^ore his death. 
On the 14th or March, at Jamaica, Cap ‘'-in 
T, C, Erodie, (second son of William Bro 
die, esq. of Great Marlborough-street, Lon¬ 
don,) of his Majesty’s ship Hyperion. After 
he kfc the naval acadenny in I’ortsmouth 
Dock-yard, he had the honour to be in the 
actio.n off Cape St. Vincent, at the Nile, i.n 
the repulse of Buonaparte at Acre, and com¬ 
manded the Arrow’ sloop in the attack of Co¬ 
penhagen, of wdiich he brought home th- 
. dispatches. 
Lieutenant-colonel Cameron, ©f the 79th 
regiment. He died of a wound he received in 
the action at Fuentes d’Onor, being shot 
through the neck by a musquet ball. Lord 
Wellingtoii sent his own surgeon to attertd 
him, and, after his death, attended the fune¬ 
ral, in company with many general ofiicets, 
and the whole of his lordship’s personal staff. 
He was the eldest son of Major-general Ca¬ 
meron, and grandson of Nathaniel Phillips, 
esq. of Skbech Hall, Pembrokeshire. He 
may truly be said to have been bred in the 
tented field, having at the early age of fifteen 
joined the 79th, then at Martinique, under 
the command of his father, who originally 
raised the regiment j for a period ot rouiteen 
years he was scarcely absent from it, and was 
actively’ engaged in Egypt, Holland, Den¬ 
mark, Flushing, Spain, and Portugal. In 
the late memorable defence of the village of 
. Fuentes, on the 5th May, he had under his 
. eommaad llic 24lh, 7i&t; arid 79th} on de- 
