372 Deaths in and near London. [Nov. 1, 
In Wigmore-street, 60, General Andrew 
Cowell, formerly of the Coldstream regi¬ 
ment of guards. 
At Richmond, Mrs. Catherine Leslie. 
In Doctor’s Commons, 73, Elizabeth, 
■wife of Mr. R. Hope, of Luxted, Kent. 
At Clapham, 75, Mrs. Eliza Newbery, 
widow and successor to Mr.F. N. formerly 
an eminent bookseller of St. Paul’s Church 
Yard, after a protracted illness ot sixteen 
years. 
At Pentonville, Joseph Cutting, esq. ol 
Bartlett’s Buildings, Holborn. 
In Broad-street Buildings, Anne, daugh¬ 
ter of the late Rev. Gilbert Wakefield, and 
wife of Mr. C. R. Aikin. 
In Mornington-place, 82, Mrs. Lons¬ 
dale. 
In Sloane-street, Mr. Henry Thomson. 
55, Thomas Hamilton , esq. late ot Cop- 
th all-court. 
On the Terrace, Kensington, Mrs. M . 
Smith. 
In the Haymarket, 68, Mr. B. Thomas , 
deeply regretted by his numerous friends 
and acquaintances. 
In Blenheim-street, Bond-street, Mr. 
Thomas Green, surgeon, deservedly la¬ 
mented by all who knew him in Ins public 
capacity or private life. 
Mr. John Luff 'Prentice, late of West 
Smithfield. 
In Sergeant’s Inn, Fleet-street, 32, 
Maria Matilda, wife of S. T. F. Wilde, 
esq. barrister at law. 
In Upper CharLes-street, Northampton- 
square, Mr. A,B.J. Lonst, of the Ordnance 
Office, universally respected by all who 
had the honour of his acquaintance. 
At Camberwell, 80, Mrs. Arabella 
Bonne. 
At Hammersmith, of-apoplexy, 50, Mrs. 
Evelyn Fogard, daughter of the late Mr. 
James Vincent, of Guildford. 
In High Holborn, 37, Sophia , wife of Mr. 
John Jordan, after a long and painful ill¬ 
ness. 
At Clapton, 65, Nathaniel Chafer, esq. 
of St. Dunstan’s Hill, Tower-street. 
In Warwick-lane, 60, MivjKck?, of Bland- 
ford, Dorset. 
Universally regretted by all who knew 
him, Mr. John Pierce , late of Basin gliall- 
street and Lloyd’s cotfee-house. 
87, Daniel Black ford■, esq. of Tooting. 
In Earl-street, Blackfriars, 22, Mary, 
the wife of Mr. Henry Pen ton, after a lin¬ 
gering illness, which she bore with exem¬ 
plary fortitude. 
At Cambridge Heath, aged and alone, 
Sarah Bond. From the miserable manner of 
her living*,it was supposed that, her circum¬ 
stances were very limited, but on examin¬ 
ing her drawers it is said that stock re¬ 
ceipts, and government securities were 
found to the amount of nearly one hun¬ 
dred THOUSAND POUNDS! 
At Denmark Hill, near Camberwell, 
54, John J£cy, Esq. the eldest of the respect¬ 
able firm of brothers of that name, wholesale 
stationers, in Abchurch-lane. He was also 
in the commission of the peace for the 
county of Surrey ; and was justly esteemed 
by all who have witnessed his perfect know¬ 
ledge of business, and the unaffected plea¬ 
santry of his domestic and social habits. 
Lately, in Leman-street, 73, Raphael 
Brandon , Esq. He was a Jew, and as much 
respected and esteemed among Christians, as 
among tho. ; e of his own persuasion. He not 
only supported the charitable institutions of 
his own country, but many also of ours—in 
some of which he has taken an active partus 
member of their managing-committees.— 
During some years past, he has been severely 
afflicted with palsy, and notwithstanding the 
shock, he bore it without a murmur. 
At Upper Clapton, 63, Nathaniel Cha¬ 
fer, esq. of Tower Hill. 
At Kennington, of a decline, Miss Eliza 
Moorman, only daughter of John Moor¬ 
man, esq. of Old-street. 
At Isleworth, Mr. Joseph Clements , af¬ 
ter partaking of a hearty breakfast. 
Of an enlargement of the heart, Horatio 
Nelson Matcham, nephew to the late Lord 
Nelson. 
On Twickenham Common, 40, Mrs. 
George Shepherd, late of Great Orruond- 
street. 
In Gower-streef, Bsdford-square, 69, 
Edward Pounce, esq. 
At Pentonville, 74, Mrs. Price, after a 
lingering illness. 
In Seethiug-lane, 89, Mrs. Bracewell. 
In St. Paul’s Church Yard, 46, Sarah, 
wife of Mr. James Hoppe, deeply lamented 
by her disconsolate husband and numerous 
family. 
[In a late number we noticed the death 
of Lady Louisa Conolly. This inestimable 
lady appeared to take no pleasure but in 
doing good to others, and lessening the 
sum of our misery, as far as she was en¬ 
abled. Her list of poor pensioners was 
very numerous, her occasional charities 
unceasing, and limited only by the neces¬ 
sities of those to whom she administered 
assistance. She solely supported a school 
of about six hundred children, at Cel- 
bridge, and has frequently relieved the 
wants of those wffiose condition prevented 
them from asking relief, by a mode so 
concealed that their benefactress could not 
be known. Her Ladyship is said to have 
bad 8,0001.a year, and never was a share of 
fortune’sfavourmore auspiciously distribu¬ 
ted; and it is, perhaps, not too much to 
say, that she expended annually in real 
charity more than any prince or crowned 
head in Europe. The loss and affliction 
occasioned by her death, can only be fully 
estimated by those who so often received 
consolation from her beneficence.] 
JOHN 
