Gloucestersh ire. 
405 
ISlLj 
Appllcatior^ will be made on the next ses¬ 
sions, to the Ho'jse of Commons, Tor leave to 
bring in a bill for inclosing the waste lands 
within the parish of Bishop’s Cleve j Peb- 
v/orthj VVinchcombj in the county of Glou¬ 
cester; in the Hamlet of Greet; in the Ham¬ 
let of Gretton ; for malting and maintaining 
a tram road, or railv/ay, from Llanvihangei 
Crucorney, in the county of Monmouth, to 
Hereford ; for making and maintaining a tram 
road, or railway, from Llanvihangei Cru¬ 
corney, to Kenderchurch, in the county of 
Hereford 5 to make an additional branch of 
railway, from Box Bush, near Colford, to 
Knite with tiie Lidney and Lidbrook railway, 
near Milkwail ; and another branch in Upper 
Edinwrall Farm, to the Mine Pit, in Clear- 
well Meend ; for making and maintaining a 
railway or tram-road, from Leckhampton, to 
Foxhiil j and for leave to bring in a bill, in 
order to obtain an act to extend the term and 
alter and enlarge the powers of an act, for 
completing and keeping in repair the road 
from the Ram Inn, Cirencester, to Cambridge, 
in the parish of Bath Easton. 
Murriei,] Henry Wood, esq. of London, 
to Miss Wood, daughter of W, Wood, esq. 
banker, of Tetbury. 
The Rev. T. Thomas, minister of St. 
Briavel’s and Hewelsfield, and late master of 
Newdand school, to Miss E. Weaver, of 
Hereford. 
The Rev. John Turner, eldest son of John 
Turner, esq. of Hatherley-House, to l^ry 
Jane, only daughter of Captain Edward Sey¬ 
mour Eaily, R.N. of Whiddon Park, Devon. 
Lieutenant-colonel Houstoun, inspecting 
ofHcer of the Severn district, to Miss Mason, 
of Woodsfield.' 
Mr, John Debar, to Miss Elizabeth 
Taylor. 
Mr. John Bagley, to Miss Martha Moss, of 
Bath. 
At Bromsgrove, Mr. Omwell J. Lloyd, of 
Tewkesbury, to Miss Williams, daughter 
of Mr. Oliver Williams^ of the former place. 
Mr. William Smith, of Awre, to Miss 
Mary Pride, ol ^uedgley. 
John Savage, esq. to Miss Claxton, daugh¬ 
ter of Mr. Alderman Claxton. 
At Bristol, xJr. Dauiei Britton, to Miss 
Marianne Maillard- 
William Trye, esq. of Leckhampton, in 
this county, to Mrs. Ceverdale, of Judd- 
Place. 
Dicdr\ Aged 53, Mr. Charles Elmes, of 
this city j who, though he had quitted bu¬ 
siness to indulge his natural Inclination for 
privacy and retirement, felt that it was 
amo.ngst his duties not to be an inactive mem¬ 
ber of society. He therefore undertook tjie 
unprofitable and troublesome office of trea- 
syrer of the inccirporate-d workhouse of the 
city, the duties of which he discharged with 
‘equal integrity utility, artd with a punc¬ 
tuality and ,an exacc.ness almost peculiar to 
kinissif. Tq sa exemplary, moral, aiid 
ligious character, he united a deportment In 
social ;ud private life, which, whilst mild 
and unassuming in manners, received a 
weight from the manly and firm temper of 
his mind; possessing mental attainments be¬ 
yond those of the ordinary classes of society 5 
it will not be thought an ostentatious regard 
to his memory, to add, that his political sen¬ 
timents were sound, liberal, and enligh¬ 
tened. 
Mrs. Jones, w'lfe of the Rev. Richard Jones, 
rector of Charfield. 
Aged 21 , Mr. Jonathan Martin, cabinet¬ 
maker, of Gloucester. 
Mrs. Elizabeth Long, of ICingswood, near 
V/otton-Underedge. 
At Cheltenham, Ge.neral Lyman, the con¬ 
sul from the United States ; an amiable and 
excellent character, and one of the founders 
of the American Republic- 
At Frampton Mansel, aged 83, Mrs. Sarah 
Yarn ton. 
At Broadoak, near Nevvnham, after a long 
illness, sustained wdth Christian resignation, 
Maria, second daughter of the late Mr. Bli- 
zard, supervisor of Excise. Her gentle cha¬ 
racter and amiable manners ■will long be re¬ 
membered by her numerous faroily and 
friends, by whom she is sincerely regretted. 
At the Hotwells, Mrs. Elizabeth Probyn, 
sister of the late Edmund Probyn, esq. of 
Winterbourn. 
Mr. William Katcheson, of the Anchor 
inn, Cirencester. 
After a short indisposition, sincerely re¬ 
gretted by his family and friends, Mr. G. 
Washbouxn, silversmith, an old and very 
respectable inhabitant of this city. 
AtNevvent, Mrs Cummins, relict of Mr. 
John Cummins, formerly of Moswhek, and 
New'eiit. 
The Rev. Hugh Huglies, of North-streef, 
Cheltenham. 
At Giocester, after a few days severe ill¬ 
ness, Charles Brandon Trye, esq,. F.R.S, and 
senior surgeon to the Giocester infirmary* 
A man that will be long regretted by the 
thinking part of that community ; not only as 
a surgeon, but as a man extremeJy useful in 
various u.ndertakings of national concern, 
such as rail-roaas, canals, &c. in the planning 
of which he evinced great genius. As a 
surgeon, his practice was extensive, andi his 
success great. Many arduous and difficult 
operations he performed, which ended in per¬ 
fect cures, after others of eminence had 
shrunk from the undertakings. His opera* 
tions were conceived and executed from 
perfect knowledge of the structure of the 
human body, attained by a well grounded 
education, and constant intense study through, 
life. He was educated under the eminent 
surgeon, Mr. Russell, of Worcester, then 
with'John Hunter, was house- 6 urgeon to the 
Westminster Infirmary, and aitervvatds as¬ 
sistant to the very'ingenious and scientific 
Bheidon. He was for some time house-sur- 
