555 
Jas, efq. many years in the fervice of the Eaft 
Endia Company. 
At Valenciennes, M. Francs de Linat, late 
of Chefhunt, Herts. 
_ Mrs. Sills; widow, of Upper Thamess 
ftreet, 
W. Fletcher, efy. of Welbeck-ftreet. 
At Hornfev, Mr. W. Lens, of the Three 
Per Cents. Boddced Office, Bank. 
Mr, J. Yallowley, of Chifwell-ftreet. 
At Finchley, Mifs S. Jordan, youngeft 
daughter of the late Mr. E, Jee 
Mifs Carr, daughter of W. Carry efq. of 
Hammerfmith. 
At his houfe in ive caseet! W. Hamil- 
ton, efq. of Blackheath. 
At Chelfea, Mr. T. Pemberton. 
In Upper Berkeley- -fiteet, Portman- fquare;, 
G. Redhead, efq. of the ifland of Antigua} 
fincerely Fepectted by all who knew him as 
aman of the moft humane and benevolent 
heart. 
‘The Rev. T. Chamberlayne, vice- provolt 
of Eaton, rae rector of Worpleidon, in 
Surrey. 
In Kenfington, Mr. G. Egenoffe, fon of 
the late Mr. Egenofte, of New Lifle-itreet, 
Leicefter-fquare. 
* In Highbury Place, Mr. W. Grey. 
At her houfe in Grofvenor-iquare, the 
Marchionefs of Antrim. 
At Harleyford Place, Kennington, aged 
74, Mr. Rufiell. 
Suddenly, of an apoplectic fit, Lieut. Col. 
Forfter, of the corps of marines. 
At her houfe on Sion Hill, in her 57th 
year, Mis. Porter, widow. 
Sir John Parnell, bart. M. P. for Queen’s 
County, Ireland ; he had but the day before 
removed with his family from Sloane-fireet, 
to Clifford-fireet, London. He breakfafted as 
ufual, and oe to be in perfec health: 
saterietety after breakfat he went into his 
reom, where he was feized with an apopledtic 
fit, dropped down, and expired in lefs than 
half an hour. He has left two daughters, 
and three fons, the eldeft of whom fucceeds 
to the title. Sir John has,always been con- 
fidered as a very able politiciak, and was a 
diftant relation of the poet Parnell. He was 
many years chancellor of the exchequer ir Ire- 
land,from which office hewas removed by the 
Marriages and Deaths in and near Londone 
[ Fan. 15 
Marquis Cornwallis, for his determined op- 
pofition to the queftion of the Union. Sir 
John had attended his duty in the Honfe of 
Cemmons on the preceding day. 
At her apartments, in Queen-ftreet, Weft- 
minfter, the celebrated Mrs. Crawford, once 
a bright ornament of the Britifh ftage. She 
was the daughter of a medical gentleman at 
Bath, and was firft married to an obfcure 
player named Dancer, and, on his death, her 
perfonal beauty, afd theatrical talents, at~ ’ 
traéted the attention of the elegant and fil- 
ver-tongued Barry, the rival oF Garricics 
under whofe protection fhe played till his 
wife died, when fhe became Mrs. Barry. 
On his denickis fhe was left the firft female 
performer in the metropolis, and acquired a 
handfome independence,when fhe fuffered her 
eye to be caught by the perfon of Mr. 
Crawford, a brieflefs ‘Irith barrifter; young 
enough to be her fon, who fquandered her 
fortune, the produce of her talents, broke 
her fpirit, and at laft died a martyr to his 
own diffipation, leaving her in ftraitened cir- 
cumftances, and fhe was at laft nearly re- 
duced to a ftate of poverty. 
At Chelfea, in his 73d year, the Right Hon. 
Jofeph Leefon, Earl of Miltown, Vifcount 
Rufoorough, in Ireland 5 he is fucceeded by 
his brother, the Hon. Brie Leefon. 
Aged go, the Right Hon. Lord Kenfing- 
ton, M.’P. for Haverfordweft. 
Mr. J. Battifhill, organift of Chrift’s 
Church, Newgate-ftreet, and of St. Clement’s 
Church, Eaft Cheap, and well known to the 
mufical cognofcenti for his coliaoseinery ge- 
nius, and profound fcience. 
In. James-ftreet, Weftminfter, aged 81; 
Mrs ]. Jackfon, the laft furviving iffue of 
J. Jackfon, efq. formerly of Chatham, who 
was the nephew and heir of the celebrated 
Samuel Pepys, efq. to whofe genius and 
knowledge in the adminiftration of naval af- 
fairs, may be afcribed the perfeétion of the 
fyftem of naval regulation, eftablifhed before 
the Revolution, in the year 1688, and ftill 
in force, and whofe rare and. truly valuable 
colleGtion of books, known by the name of 
Pepy’s Librarv, was, fome years ago, pre- 
‘fented to Magdalen College, in the Univer- 
fity of Cambridge, by Mr. Jackfon. 
ErratTum.—At page 209, No, 81, through fome miftake, a part of the conje€tural State- 
ment of the Bank of England’s concerns was omitted. ‘That part of the ftatement explained 
that the profit of 1,150,000]. arcfe from the intereft paid by Government upon its permanent 
debt tothe Bank, from the intereft received upon the amount of Bank-notes in circulation, 
and from the Alaelce made ‘by Government for managing the public-funds, deduéting from 
the aggregate amount of theie fums the expence of conducting the bufinefs of the Bank. 
PROVINCIAL 
