296 JOURNAL OF THE PLYMOUTH INSTITUTION. 
A neat tablet with bas-relief, supposed to represent the scenes of 
the disaster, is in memory of John and James Drew, Captains R.N., 
also James William Drew, Acting-Lieutenant, the first and 
third drowned crossing Cawsand Bay 11th January, 1798, the 
second shipwrecked and drowned the 25th May following; the 
tablet being erected, as the inscription records, by their surviving 
relatives. 
Commemorating some connections of the same family stands a 
tablet telling us that Louisa Barlow, wife of William Barlow, of 
Plymouth Dock, gent., and daughter of Stephen Drew, Esq’°, 
Alderman of Saltash, departed this mortal life 19th July, 1795, at 
the early age of 25 years and 9 months. Stephen Drew Barlow, 
their son, died October, 1793, aged only 18 weeks, and was 
followed to the grave by an infant sister aged 19 months, Louisa 
Drew Barlow, who died 30th June, 1796. 
A mural tablet informs us that John Evans, Esq., Purser, R.N., 
Secretary to Admiral the Hon. William Cornwallis, and twice Mayor 
of Saltash, died 3rd July, 1834, aged 71. It also commemorates | 
Jane, his first wife, who died 28th October, 1808, aged 37 years ; 
and Mary Ziegel, his second wife, who survived him only a 
few months, dying 22nd January, 1835, aged 53 years. The same 
marble records the death of John Henry Evans, Esq., M.D., son of 
the above John and Mary Ziegel Evans, who departed this life 
21st October, 1855, aged 23. The memorial was erected by the 
surviving son and four daughters of John Evans. 
Upon the walls we find three monumental tablets to members 
of the family of Hore. The earliest of these is for Charity, wife 
of Nicholas Hore, of Saltash, who died 29th December, 1791, 
aged 65. Her husband followed her to the grave in 1800. 
“Putting off this mortal coil on the 25th May, after having 
borne the joys and sorrows of seventy-two years of life; leaving 
six children surviving him.” The second of these tablets is in 
memory of Sally Ball Graham, born 11th June, 1817, and died 
30th April, 1818; and also James Hore Graham, born 22nd 
August, 1815, dying 29th May, 1818, children of Major John 
Hore Graham, k.M., and Rachael Collier, his wife. The remaining 
stone records the facts that Mathew Hore, Esq., of this parish, 
Commander of H.M. Revenue cutter, died 23rd November, 1826, 
aged 61. It is also in memory of his second son, Mathew Hore, 
who was lost in a shipwreck 23rd July, 1821. 
