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a76 
The Reo. Louis de la Chaumette, one of the 
minifters of the French Church, in Thread- 
needle-itreet. 
At Guildford, Mrs. Pickfone, wife of Mr. 
Pickftone, under-fherif of the county of Sur- 
rey. 
a Clapton, aged jo, Mis D°’ Aguilar, 
daughter of Diego Baron D’Aguilar, of the 
Holy Roman Empire, 
Aged 76, at Buth-hill, Edmonton, Ars. 
Blackburn, reli&@ of John Blackburn, efq. 
who died in the year 1798. She was daugh- 
ter of —— Small, efg. of St. Helena; mar- 
ried, firit, to Felix Baker, efq. captain of an 
Eaft Indiaman, who brought her from thence ; 
fecondly, to John Berens, efq. of Southgate, 
who died 1787 ; and, laitly, to Mr. Blackburn. 
At Watford, Herts, Jr. Ebret, furgeon, 
enly fon of the celebrated Artif and Botanift 
of that name. 
In Park-itreet, the widow of Mfajor Fayce. . 
. At his heufe, at Horniey, im his 73¢ year, 
‘fobn Danvers, elq. 
At Lambeth, the Rew. Thomas 
D. D. feb-dean of the Chapel Royal. 
Mr. Thomas *Woollzrtom, many years an 
eminent linen-draper in Oxford-itreet. 
At his houfe, the corner of Park-lane, 
Piccadlly, Charles Cole, efq. 
At Twickenham, the reli€t cf Peter $éa- 
Rerleyy ef]. 
In Weft Smithfield, Mrs. Fearon, wife of 
Mr. Fenton, woollen-draper. 
In Carnaby-market, Air. Elland, butcher, 
formerly of Enfield. 
At Homerton, obs Lomax, ejg. Matter of 
the Innholders Company. 
At his brother’s houfe, at Mile-end, Rear- 
admiral Charringten. 
In her Zoth year, Mrs. Saunders, of Liffon- 
SRreet, Paddington. 
Ja Margaret-ftreet, Cavendifh-fquare, és. 
Sarab Stephens. 
Pearce, 
In Montpelier-row, Twickenham, Middie-. 
fex, the reli& of Adujor Vaughan. 
Aged 70, Peter Waldo, eiq. of Mitcham, 
Surrey: liberal, though, to many, who par- 
took of his bounty through the hands of 
others, an unknown benefactor, and friend 
to the poor. 
Mr. T. Trotter, engraver, fon of the Rev. 
Dr. Trotter, of Swallow-itreet. He ferved an 
appreaticefhip toa calico-printer, which re- 
@uires a talent for drawing ; and when he 
was out of his time he betook himfelf to en- 
graving, and foon produced many excellent 
portraits in various works ; alfo a head of the 
Rev. Stephen Wifion, and another of Lord 
Morpeth ; his lait principal performance was 
the portrait or Shakefpeare, patronized by the 
late Mr. G. Steevens. A few years fince 
he received a hurt in his eyes by the fall of a 
flower-pot fram a chamber-window, which- 
prevented his following a profeffion he had 
adopted from choice; and he has lately been 
principally employed in making drawings of 
z 
Marriages and Deaths in and near Lendon. 
[Apri 5, 
churches and-monuments, in various parts of 
the country, fer Sir Richasd Hoare and other 
gentlemen, He has left a widow, and one 
daughter, totally unprovided for, to lament 
a good hufband, a good father, anda worthy 
honeft man. He was buried‘in the yard of 
the New Chapel, Broadway, Weftminfter, 
where the remains of the ingenious Hollar 
were depofited, 
After a fhort illnefS, in confequence of a 
violent cold which he caught by officially at- 
tending the Seffions at the Old Bailey, aged 
s6 or 57, Tippine Rigby, efq. alderman of 
Caftie Baynard Ward. He was the younget 
fon of a Clergyman of Buckingham, defcend- 
ed from an ancient family in Northampton- 
fhire, where they had been fettled more than 
200 years. Few men have paffed. through: 
life with a fairer charaéter. So great was'the 
confidence repoied in him by his fellow citi-+ 
zens, that they chofe him one of their repre- 
fentatives in the Common Council twenty- 
fix years fucceilively. In this fituation he 
conducted himfelf with fo much prudence 
and moderation as to give fatisfaétion to all 
parties. Onthe death of the late Midford 
Youttg, efq. in 1802, he was appointed De- 
puty of his Ward. The refignation of Sir 
William, Herne, foon after, afforded his 
friends another opportunity of thewing how 
much they were attached to him. By their 
exertions he was elected alderman almoit 
witheut oppofition: three hands only of the 
numerous voters aflembled on the day _of 
eleGtion were held up in favour of his eppo- 
nent, though that opponent was a man of large 
fortune, and of great refpeCtability. But thefe 
civic honours, fo handfomely conferred upon 
him, were but of fhort duration, he fearcely 
enjoying them fix months. 
‘Fe Leflie, efq. of Buckingham-ftreet, whe 
had practifed, for near forty years, with repu- 
tation, as afurgeon in the metropolis. Atag 
early period of lire he entered into the navy, 
under the patronage of his uncle, the late 
Admiral Duff, and ferved as furgeon during 
great part of the glorious war in 1756, with. 
Commodore Harrifon, in the Venus. After 
fettling in London, at the clofe ef the war, 
he fucceeded the late Sir William Fordyce- 
as furgeon to the 3d regiment of foot-guards, 
an appointment which he held many years, 
till increafing infirmities and extenfive pri- 
vate -praGtice obliged him to refign.. By his 
numerous friends he was greatly efteemedy 
for his unbounded hofpitality, and kind and 
tender attentions in his profefiional duty. 
At her houfe, in Brook-itreet, Groivenor 
fquare, Careline, Counte/s Dowager of Aifefourye 
She was daughter of the late duke of Argyll, 
and fifter to the prefent Duke, by his wife the 
honourable Mifs Bellenden, daughter of Lord 
Bellenden. in June 1739 fhe married Charles, 
the third Earl of Aijefbury; by whom fhe had - 
an only child, Lady Mary, who in April 1757 
taarried Charles, the prefent Duke of Rich- — 
' mend, 
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