1821.] 
Alarriages in and near London. 
85 
charter, belonging* to any state or countries 
in amity with his Majesty.” 
July 5. The late ex-sheriff, Mr. Parkins, 
brought a charge of illegal conspiracy 
against the Bridge-street Association, be¬ 
fore the Lord Mayor Thorpe, which was 
discharged for want of evidence to bring 
the crime home to the parties. 
— 6. The Judges at Westminster decided 
that the 4th of Geo. I[. cap. 7. which 
speaks of juries generally, does not apply 
to special juries; a decision which unhap¬ 
pily leaves it open to particular men to 
derive an income by serv ing constantly on 
special juries, a practice which, if con¬ 
tinued, must prove fatal to the purity and 
independence of juries, and consequently 
to trial by jury, the best bulwark of our 
public liberties. The words of the act are, 
a No person shall be returned or summoned 
to serve as a juror at Nisi Frius in Mid¬ 
dlesex, who has been returned or summon¬ 
ed in the two terms or vacations next pre¬ 
ceding” How this excludes special 
jurors from its operation, we are at a loss 
to conceive ; but the question is of vital 
importance, if it ought to be considered as 
a question. 
— 18. An indictment for extorting 
money, &c., found by the Grand Jury at 
the Old Bailey, against Sir John Sewell,jone 
Murray, Sharpe, and others, said to have 
combined, under pretence of preserving 
our glorious constitution. 
— 19. The Coronation of George IV. at 
Westminster, when, after a grand proces¬ 
sion, 320 public characters dined in the 
Westminster Hall. The same event cele¬ 
brated in every part of the kingdom. 
— 23. The first indictment which had 
been obtained by the Bridge-street Con¬ 
spiracy, tried in the case of Miss Carlisle, 
when, as the jury in nineteen hours had not 
agreed on their verdict, they were dis¬ 
charged without coming to a decision^by 
the mutual consent of the counsel. Mr. 
Cooper, of Norwich, made his debut for 
the defendant, on this occasion, in a speech 
which affords the highest promise of a 
brilliant career in his profession. 
The value of merchandize from the fi’ee 
traders of Great Britain to India, whicl 
amounted, in 1815, to 870,1171., had in 
creased, in 1819, to 3,052,7411. This ap 
pears from an official statement lately lai< 
before the House of Commons. 
From the year 1814, the number o 
acres under hop cultivation in England 
has been regularly on the increase. Ii 
1814, 40,571 acres 5 in 1820, 50,148 acres 
Value of cloth of all sorts, blankets, car 
pets, hosiery and woollen yarn, exported ii 
the following' years 
1815 
1816 
1817 
£10,200,227 
8,400,538 
7,958,927 
1818 
1819 
1820 
£9,047,96 
6,899,69 
6,279,16 
Population of Mary-le-bone parish.— 
Inhabitants, 96,040; inhabited houses, 
10,065. Increase of the former, 20,606, of 
the latter 1689. 
MARRIED. 
G. Thornton, esq. of the Grenadier 
Guards, to Susannah,daughter of the late J„ 
Dixon, esq. of Cecil Lodge. 
J. Campbell, esq. to Louisa, daughter of 
J. Shuttleworth, esq. of Ilford, Essex. 
T. Dunbar, esq. second son of the late 
Sir George D. baronet, to Miss Trickey, 
of Upper Charlotte Street. 
Captain Evelyn, only son of J. E. esq. 
of Wootton, Surrey, to Miss M. Dawson, 
of New Forest, Tipperary. 
H. Jessop, esq. of Clifford’s Inn, to Miss 
Good, daughter of W.G. esq. of Brompton. 
C. Austin, esq. of Luton, Bedfordshire, 
to Agnes, daughter of the late J. Adding¬ 
ton, esq. of Barnet. 
W. J. Pocoek, esq. second son of the late 
N. P. esq. of Great George-street, West¬ 
minster, to Anne, only daughter of T. 
Wilson, esq. of Maidenhead. 
At Bow, J. Julin, esq. to Amelia second 
daughter of the late Rev. Dr. Lindsay. 
The Rev. C. A. L’Oste, to Catherine 
daughter of the late Rev. C. Atkinson. 
J. Jolly, esq. of Upper Belgrave Place, 
Pimlico, to Miss Braysher, of Dulwich. 
R. Limond, esq. surgeon, to Catherine, 
daughter of R. Simpson, esq. of York Place. 
O. Markham, esq. Comptroller of the 
Barrack Department, to Miss Jewis, 
daughter of the late Capt. J. 
H. Tennant, esq. barrister, of Lincoln’s 
Inn, to Elizabeth, eldest daughter of G. R. 
Roupel, esq. of Great Ormond (Street. 
Spencer Percival, esq. eldest son of the 
late Right Hon. S. P. to A. Eliza, youngest 
daughter of the late General Macleod. 
The Rev. E. Williams, of St. George’s, 
Hanover Square, to Elizabeth, youngest 
daughter of the late J. Charrington, esq. 
T. GordoD, esq. of Islington, to Sarah, 
fourth daughter of the late W. Oakley esq. 
Mr. E. Chase, of Luton, to Sarah, daugh¬ 
ter of R. Pearce, esq. of Pimlico. 
J. Holmes, esq. of Montague-street, to 
Miss Roberts, of Harrow Weald. 
C. Pepys, esq. of Lincoln’s Inn, to C. 
Elizabeth, second daughter of W. Wing¬ 
field, esq. of Lincoln’s Inn. 
At Greenwich, the Rev. W. Jones, to 
Sarah, only daughter of T. Lynne, esq. 
R. Rickards, esq. of Chiswell-street to 
Rebecca, second daughter of the late Mr. 
W. Reid of Bristol. 
Col. H. Baillie, of Mortimer-street, Ca¬ 
vendish Square, to Mary, daughter of the 
late T. S. esq. of Castleton Hall, Lanca¬ 
shire. 
Lieut. Col. Lewis, eldest son of C. L. esq. 
of St. Pierre, Monmouthshire, to Jane, 
third daughter of the late D. Bucknal, esq. 
DIED 
