1798.] 
Chapman, daughter of the Rev. R. Chap- 
man, vicar of Bakewell, Derbythire. 
Mr. Robinfon, of Great. Mary-le-bone- 
ftreet, to Mifs Butler, of Manchefter-f{treet. 
Mr. William Morfland, of Old-ftreet, to 
Mifs Elizabeth Ann Schofield, of Jewin- 
ftreet. 
Mr. Wm. Proffor, of Back-hill, Hatton- 
Garden, to Mrs, Bulkeley, of Highgate. 
Mr. Thomas Bodley, of Lombard-ftreet, 
to Mifs Etty. 
Mr. Stephen Wilfon, of the Old Jewry, 
to Mifs Sarah Lea. 
Mr. Chandler, of Tabernacle-walk, to Mifs 
Vickerman, of Tower Royal, Bridge-row. 
At St. Andrews, Holborn, Mr. Edw. John 
Collins, to Mits S. Warburton. 
James Coppinger, efg. of Cork-ftreet, 
Weftminfter, to Mifs Louifa Antoinette Def- 
fallees, of Martinique. 
Mr. Field, of Hammerfmith, to Mifs Pryer, 
of the Strand. 
Died] At Kentifh-Town, Capt. J. Walth, 
fen. one of the oldeft fuperannuated officers 
in the navy. 
In Titchfield-ftreet, aged 78, Mrs. -H. 
Naith. 
In Clare-ftreet, Clare-market, Mrs. Sheriff. 
In Palace-yard, aged 78, Mrs. j. Bull, 
widow of F. Bull, efq. late alderman and 
member of parliament for the city of London. 
On Mount-Pleafant, Mrs. Perkins, fifter- 
in-law to the above. 
In his 73d year, Mr. Deputy W. Deane, of 
Billingfgate Ward, and fenior member of the 
corporation of the city. 
Mr. S. Wright, or Eaft-lane, Bermondfey. 
In Ranelagh-ftreet, Pimlico, Mr, G. P. 
Strigel, aged 80. 
In Sloane-ftreet, Mrs. Gainfborough, widow 
of the late Mr. T. Gainfborough. 
In Mount-fireet, Grofvenor-fquare, Wm. 
Cowper, efq. Me 
At his fon-in-law’sin Kirby-ftreet, Hatton- 
Garden, Thomas Mitchell, efq. late of Stoke 
Newington, aged 85. 
In Angel-ftreet, St. Martin’s-le-Grand, 
Mrs. Ann Petch, aged 82. 
Mr. David Kinghorn, gentleman jaoler of 
the Tower. 
At her apartments in the King’s-road, in 
her 78th year, Mrs. Barker, widow of Major 
Barker, and fifter to the late W. Lawrence, 
efq. M.P. for Rippon. 
After a lingering illnefs, Mr. Stephen 
Moulton, law-ftationer, of Chancery-lane. 
Mr. Jonathan Hayter, of Great St. Helens. 
in Holborn, Mr. Samuel Hilyear, many 
years firft clerk to Peter Holford, efq. the 
oldeft of the mafters in chancery. 
In Spa-Fields, Mr, W. Panton, meffenger 
to his majeity’s yeomen of the guard, at St. 
James’s. 
In Upper Guilford-ftreet, Mrs. Senterne. 
Mrs.Hewfon, of Southampton-ftreet, Strand. 
In Prince’s-court, Wettminfter, Richard 
Ripley, efq. of the Exchequer Bill office, 
Marriages and Deaths wm and near London. 
475 
At Fulham, aged 33, Mrs. Claridge. 
In a court in Rofemary-lane, at the greag 
age of g5, an old beggar woman: Qn fearch- 
ing her miferable appartment, cafh and notes 
were found hid in chinks in the cieling, and 
various parts of the room, to the amount of 
2301. which fhe bequeathed to her landlord, 
a poor but induftrious old man. 
In Cary-ftreet, Lincoln’s-Inn-Fields, aged 
40, John Norris, efq. 
Mr. Henry Allan, of Nicholas-lane, Lom- 
bard-{treet, 
At Hampftead, Mrs. Abell. . : 
At Chelfea, aged 75, Mr. Thos. Haddock. 
in Chancery-lane, Mr. Wm. Jackfon, 
In Craven-ftreet, Strand, Mrs. Strachan. 
At Kentith-Town, aged 68, Wm. Suck- 
ling, efq. of the Cuftom-houfe, 
Mr. Benjamin Sealey, attorney, of Bofwell- 
court. 
At Enfield, Wi. Claxton, efg. 
My. Richard Newton, of Bridges-ftreet, 
Covent-Garden, in the 2ift year of his age, 
of very confiderable merit as a caricature ar- 
tift. ‘Though his years were few, he-was not 
an idle obierver of men and manners}; to 
judge him fairly, is to judge of his works al- 
together. From the fecond tothe fifth year 
of his apprenticefhip, his difplay of the pen- 
cil was often excellent, and procured him 
many admirers ; his latter works profeffed, 
however, very little of the felicity of the 
former. He has left many prints which will 
refcue his name from oblivion, and when 
Caricatures of true humour have their turn in 
the convivial circle, no artift, perhaps, will 
find more admirers than Richard Newton. 
| Mr.George Cadogan Morgan,whofe lament- 
ed death we announced in our laft number, was 
born at Bridge-end, in Glamorganhhire, South 
Wales, in the year 1754. His father was a 
very reipectable furgeon and apothecary in 
that town; and his mother, who ftill furvives, 
is the fifter of the celebrated philanthropift 
and pbilofopher, Doétor Richard Price... His 
. early education he received at the grammar- 
{chool inthe neighbouring town of Cowbridge, 
and his father, who adhered to the eftablifhed 
church, intending him for holy orders, fent 
him at an early ageto Oxford. However, af- 
tera fhort refidence in that univerfity, his 
{cruples refpeting the do€trine of the Trinity 
and the other myfteries of the thirty-nine ar- 
ticles, determined him to abandon all thoughts 
of becoming a clergyman of the church of 
England 5 but as his firft views had been di- 
rected to the clerical office, he was induced, 
in confeguence of his connection with his 
uncle, to enter himfelf as a pupil in the di- 
fenting academy at Hoxton, then under the 
care of Doétors Savage, Kippis, and Rees, 
His attention had hitherto been paid to claffi- 
cal literature, which he cultivated with much _ 
ardour and fuccefs, for he was for fome time 
at the head of the {chool at Cowbridge ; but 
the reputation which his uncle Price had fo 
juftly obtained for mathematical fciegce, now 
drew 
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