188 
In Albermarle-ftreet, Lord Lilford, former- 
ly Mr. Powys. Whilft a commoner, Lord 
Lilford was generally confidered as one of the 
moft re{pe€table of the independent country 
members of the lower houfe ; he voted al- 
moft uniformly in oppofition to the court 
intereft ; latterly he efpoufed the fide of the 
alarmifts, and for this, and his fuppoxt of the 
war, he is fuppofed to have been advanced to 
the pecrage. 
At Richmond, aged 31, Mrs. Jane Ni- 
cholls. — 
In Bond ftreet, Mr. Wm. Pritchard. 
At Sadler’s-Hall, Cheapfide, aged 73, Mr. 
Wm. Pritchard. 
At Chelfea, Mrs. Blunt, reli of J. Blunt, 
efq. of Horfham. 
In King-ftreet, Cheapfide, at his brother’s 
houfe, John Sowden, efq. of Kendall, Wef- 
mereland. 
At Hackney, Thomas Flight, efg. 
At Kenfington Palace, aged 16, Mr. C. 
Wynyard, fon of the late Lieutenant-General 
Wynyard. 
At Pimlico, Mr. Wm. Wallace. 
At Kenfington Palace, Mifs F. Stephens. 
At the Spa Gardens, Bermondfey, -aged 
79, Mr. Thomas Keyfe; more than 30 
years proprietor of that place; his paint- 
tngs have been univerfally admired. 
In Goodman’s- fields, Mr.A.DeMattosMocat- 
ta; he was one of thericheft Jews in England, 
having amafled immenfe wealth by his own 
induftry. He bequeathed 200 guineas to 
be divided amongft three men, whom he ap- 
pointed to watch his grave, day and night, for 
the period of twelve months, 
_. At Somerfet-place, Mrs. Mary de la Garde, 
formerly os the ifland of Jerfey. 
In Chefterfield-ftreet, May-fair, Mrs. 
Barker, fifter of Lady Lucas ; her death was 
occafioned by the melancholy accident of her 
cloaths having caught the flames in confe- 
quence of her falling afleep near the fire. 
Mrs, Bellamy, wife of Mr. Bellamy, of the 
Houfe of Commons. 
At her houfe at Hackney, aged 79, Mrs. 
Wakefield, reli€t of the Rev. George Wake- 
field, minifter of Richmond, in Surry ; mo- 
ther to the Rev. T. Wakefield, minifter of 
Richmond ; of Mr. Gilbert Wakefield, a 
prifoner in Dorchiefter gaol, and of three other 
Yurviving fons. 
Mrs. Incledon, wife of Mr. Incledon, of 
Covent-Garden Theatre. 
In Wimpole-ftreet, the Honorable Mrs. 
Hamilton, widow of the late Hon. and Rev. 
Mr. George. Hamilton, brother of the late 
‘Earl of Abercorn. 
in Durham-place, Chelfea, Matthew 
Squire, efq. Rear-Admiral of the Red. 
In Hill-ftreet, Berkeley-fquare, the Hon. 
W. Fortefcue, third fon of the Earl of For- 
tefcue. 
In Piccadilly, Mifs Fitzpatrick, daughter 
of the Hon, Richard Fitzpatrick. 
In Wimpole-itreet, Mrs. Nicolas, wife of 
Robert Nicolas, efg. of Afhton-Keynes, 
Marriages and Deaths in and near London. 
- ners. 
[March t, 
Wilts, and fixth daughter of the late Sir The= 
mas Frankland, Bart. ; 
In Lamb’s Conduit-ftreet, Mr. Ellis ; his 
death was occafioned by an inward injury, 
which he received from the preffing of the 
crowd in the Houfe of Commons on the 
night of the debate on the fubje& of peace. 
In Quebec-ftreet, Oxford-ftreet, Mr. Wale, 
apothecary. 
At Iflington, Mrs. Brazier, wife of Joha 
Brazier, e{q. of Cooper’s-row, Tower-hill. 
In Dartmouth-ftreet, Weftminfter, aged 
82, Mrs. Pilliner. 
In Lincoln’s-inn-fields, Mrs. Adams, wife 
of W. Adams, efg. barrifter, and fifter to 
Lord Keith; in her mindg and manners was 
combined all that is eftimable, endearing, 
and exemplary in the female charaéter. 
In Manor-ftreet, Chelfea, aged 73, Mr. 
James Belfon, fhip-broker; formerly the 
well-known captain and owner of the Charles 
Sharp Weft-Indiamen, trading to St. Vin- 
cent’s and Nevis. Few men had a more ex- 
tenfive knowledge of maritime and commer- 
cial affairs. Toa mind well ftored with li- 
terature, he joined the moft conciliating man- 
Sympathy and benevolence were the ~ 
tenants of his bofom through a long life; to 
this, with many a figh and tear, the widow, 
and the fatherlefs in particular, will long 
bear a teftimony. 
At his houfe, in Great George-ftreet, 
Weftminfter, aged 72, the Right Rev. John 
Warren, D. D. Bifhop of Banger. His lord- 
fhip received his education at Sudbury, from 
whence he removed to Cauis College in Came 
bridge, and on the expiration of his term, 
was patronized by Dr. Mawion, Bithop of 
Ely, to whom he became domeftic chaplain, 
and by his fkill and fagacity ; having greatly 
improved the revenues of the fee, in return 
for this important fervice he had conferred off 
him fucceffively the reétories of Levering- 
ton, Sutton, and Mepal, in the Ifle of Ely, 
Snalewell in Cambridgfhire, finecure re&tory 
.of Elm cum Emneth in Norfolk, and the 
vicarage of Wifbech, St. Peter’s, with the 
Chappell of St. Mary annexed ; from whence, 
in 1779, he was promoted to the fee of St. 
David’s, and in 1783, tranflated to that of 
Bangor. His lordfhip in April, 1777, mar- 
ried Eliz.beth, one of the daughters of Henry 
Southwell efq. of Wifbech, by Frances his 
wife, fifter of Matthew Wyldbore, efg. de- 
ceafed, lately member in parliament for Pe- 
terborough, by whom he had no iffue. A 
certain very extraordinary and well-known 'in- 
cident in his life, and the deaths of his brother 
Dr, Warren, a celebrated phyfician, and of . 
the late Lord Chief Juftice Eyre, (who mar- 
ried the fifter of the bifhop’s lady,) and with 
whom he was conneéted by ties of the meft 
exalted friendfhip, are fuppofed to have prey- 
ed on the"bifhop’s fpirits, and cut the thread 
of amoft valuable life earlier than might have 
been expected in a man of found ftamina, 
and fingular temperance.. His lordfhip’s re~ 
mains were interred in Weftminfter-Abbey. 
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