1822.] Deaths in and near London. 565 
In Guildford-sti*eet, Anna Elizabeth, 
daughter of J. H. Booth, esq. 
At Clapton, 17, William, eldest son of 
Mr. Gaviller. 
In Duke-street, Portland place, 16, Miss 
Harriet Sophia Davies. 
In Upper Cadogan-place, Lieut. Col. 
Andreiv Hamilton. 
In Queen Ann-sti-eet, 82, the Hon. Mrs. 
Anson. 
In Wigmore-street, Cavendish-square, 
Mrs. Sarah Brings. 
In St. Clement's Churcli-yard, Mr. Hud- 
cock. 
In Mansfield-st. Sir Martin B. Follies , 
M.P. for King' s Lynn. 
At Horton Lodge, near Epsom, in her 
88 th year, the Hon. Louisa Browning, 
widow of J. B. esq. of the same place; 
she was the eldest daughter and only sur¬ 
viving child of the Right Hon. Charles 
Calvert, Lord Baltimore, and sister to F. 
Calvert, the last Lord Baltimore. 
At Ealing, 12, Miss Elizabeth Janes. 
In York-street, Portman-square, 73, 
Rose Fuller , esq. 
At Ewell, 70, Mr. Rickard Mason. 
At Stoke Newington, 68 , Anne Capper, 
one of the Society of Friends. 
Mr. Joseph Bullock, in the Tower of 
London, keeper of the Menagerie. 
At Brcmpton, after a lingering illness, 
°0 ,-G. A.F. Dawkins, esq. 
At Twickenham, 69,Mrs. Sarah D'Oyly . 
At Norwood-green, W. A. Thack- 
thvmite, esq. of Fulmer, Gerrard’s Cross. 
On Croydon Common, 54, R. Oliver, esq. 
In Old Burlington-street, the lady of T. 
Cockaynetje sq, of Ickleford-house, Herts. 
In Newington-place, Mr. W. Devey, 
many years a factor at the Coal Exchange. 
At Cranley, Mrs. Butcher, late of Park- 
hatch. 
At Cholmondeley-house, Piccadilly,Col. 
Seymour, the son-in-law of the Marquis of 
Cholmondeley. The colonel had been ill 
tor some time, and had never wholly reco¬ 
vered the fatal effects of the pestilential 
disease he contracted when on duty with 
his regiment, the 3d Guards, at Walcheren ; 
he was iu the prime of life, and considered 
one of the finest looking men in his Ma¬ 
jesty’s service. Fie has left a wife and child. 
The Rev. Caleb Evans, third son of 
Dr. E. of Islington, deeply lamented by his 
family and their friends. 
At Ripley, 79, R. Harrison, esq. for¬ 
merly of Mansion-house-street, banker. 
In Russel-square, the Right Hon. Sir 
James Mansfield, Knt. Sir James was 
bred to the bar, and began to practice in 
the Court of King’s Bench. He first dis¬ 
tinguished himself as a junior counsel in 
Mr. Wilkes’s contests, which gave him 
some celebrity. He practiced, afterwards 
in Chancery, and there obtained a band- 
some fortune. He was bred at Cambridge, 
which university elected him their counsel, 
which he held many years, and returned him 
in two'parliameuts to be one of their repre¬ 
sentatives, in which honourable situation 
he continued until 1782, in which year he 
was appointed Solicitor-General, but lost 
both at the same time by the powerful in¬ 
fluence of Mr. Pitt, who dismissed him to 
make room for Sir Richard Pepper Arden, 
as Solicitor-General, and himself and Lord 
Euston (now Duke of Grafton) stood candi¬ 
dates for Cambridge university against 
the old members, Lord John Townshend and 
Mr. Mansfield. Mr. Mansfield continued 
as King’s counsel, but had no other post 
under government until he was past the 
age of seventy, when he was called to the 
degree of Serjeant at Law, and appointed 
Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas ; 
he was at the same lime sworn of the Privy 
Council. At that great age he executed 
the duties of that high office with consi¬ 
derable ability, and having held it ten years, 
retired on the usual pension. Sir James 
enjoyed his faculties to the last,although at 
the advanced age of eighty-eight. While 
at the bar, he was considered as one of the 
soundest lawyers of his day, but not being 
made a judge till be was superannuated, 
he disappointed, when on the bench, the 
expectations ofhis friends. 
In Hanover-street, Hanover-square, John 
Ring, esq. an eminent surgeon. He was a 
pupil of the late celebrated surgeon, Per- 
eival Pott, esq. and when he had completed 
hs education, settled in business. Here- 
sided and practised with considerable re¬ 
putation and success, in New-street, Swal¬ 
low-street, till obliged to remove to make 
room for the new street, now called Re¬ 
gent-street. Mr. Ring was a member of 
the College of Surgeons, and member of the 
Medical Societies of Loudon and Paris* 
He was, from the first, a warm advocate 
for the vaccine inoculation, and has pub¬ 
lished several works on that subject; as a 
Treatise on the Cow Pox, containing the 
History of Vaccine Inoculation, 2 parts, 
1801—3 ; and Answers to Mr. Goldson, 
Dr. Moseley, and Mr. Birch, who violently 
attacked the vaccine practice. His first 
work was “ Reflections on the Surgeon’s 
till 1790.” He has also published on 
other subjects,—as a translation of Dr. 
Geddes’s Ode to Peace, and a translation 
of Mr. Anstey’s Ode to Dr. Jenner. 
At Brighton, 65, James Perry, esq. up¬ 
wards of 33 years conductor, and chief 
proprietor of the Morning Chronicle news¬ 
paper, and in that employment one of the 
most active and useful men ofhis age. It 
was the newspaper of liberty during the 
whole of the eventful period of the French 
revolution, and Mr. Perry, as its conduc¬ 
tor, had a most difficult task and arduous 
struggle to maintain ; but like Paukoucke, 
of Paris, who conducted the Moniteur 
through 
