1801,] 
On Apri! the 1sth, aged 38, Mr. Thomas 
Merrifield, of New Bond-ftreet. He was in 
perfe&t health on the Wednefday preceding 
his death, but in the afternoon of that day he 
went into the ftreet to fpeak to an acquaint- 
ance, and returning inte his houfe he com- 
plained to his wife of being very cold, and 
went to bed, and died on the Wednefday fol- 
iowing, of an inflammatory fever. 
At Richmond, Surry, Mr. R. Gray, many 
years in the King’s gbfervatory. 
At his houfe, in Albemarle-ftreet, aged 
77, the Hon. J. B. C. Bulkeley, brother to 
the Earl of Coventry. 
Mr. T. Davies, of the City-road. Except 
a few trifling legacies, he has left his pro- 
‘perty tu various charitable inftitutions, the 
principal of which is 20,000]. tothe Orphan- 
f{chool in the City-road, and Scool. to build 
and endow alms-houfes for twelve poor per- 
fons. 
At his houfe, at Clapham, W. Thornton 
Aitell, efq. } 
At Layton, Effex, aged 15, Mifs S. Wild- 
man, youngeft daughter of H. Wildman, efq. 
Northumberland and Durham. 
36f 
At Alfred place, R. Beft, efq. of Chatham, 
brewer. gt 
_ At Poplar, in his 47th -year, Mr. J. 
Cooper, millwfight. ag 
- Mrs. Devaynes, of Dover-ftreet.: | 
T. Hemming, efq. of Hillingdon, Mid- 
dlefex. ; 
In her r3th year, Mifs C. A. Turner, 
daughter, of S. Turner, efq. in Great Or- 
mond-ftreet. 
At Little Ilford, Effex, in a very advanced 
age, Lady Paul, reli@t of Sir Onefiphorus 
Paul, bart. of Hill-houfe, Gloucefter. 
- In Lamb’s Conduit-ftreet, Mrs. Fry, wife 
of C, Fry, efq. Solicitor, of Lincoln’s-inn. 
T. Maltby, efq. of the New Road, Mary-— 
bone. : 
Aged 63, Mrs. Darwin, widow of the late 
Mr. J..T. Darwin, of the Poultry. 
At Richmend Lodge, of the gout in his 
ftomach, “in his 49th year, the Hon. Sir 
Charies Stuart, K. B. brother of the Marquis 
of Bute, Col. of the 26th regt. of foot, and 
M. P. for Poole, in Dorfetthire.. 
PROVINCIAL OCCURRENCES. 
WITH ati rHE MARRIAGES anp DEATHS, 
Arranged geographically, or in the Order of the Counties, from North io South. 
*,.* Authentic Communications for this Department are always very thankfully received 
: ee 
NORTHUMRERLAND AND DURHAM, 
The Agricultural Society for the county 
of Durham, at their late meeting, adjudged 
and paid the following rewards, viz. five 
guineas to Mr. J. Harrifon, of Gatethead, for 
the beft ftailion for getting harnefs-horfes ; 
five guineas to the Rev. R. Harrifon, of 
Harton, near South Shields, for the beft ftal- 
lion for getting hunters or road-horfes; five 
guineas to Mr. Ch. Mafon, of Chilton, for 
the beit bull; and two guineas to Mr. H. 
Chapman, of Dinfdale, for the fecond bef 
bull. 
By an enumeration juft concluded, the pa- 
rifh of All Saints, in Newcaftle, appears to 
contain, of inhabited houfes, 15773; which 
are occupied by 3795 families; uninhabited 
houfes, 66; Males, 63193 females, 8077. 
Total of inhabitants, £4,396; of whom 18 
are employed in agriculture, 2995 in trade, 
and 56 are independent of trade. In St. 
joha’s parith are 630 houfes, of which num- 
ber 11 are uninhabited; and 978 families; of 
whom 2037 are males, and 2598 females, 
making in all 46355 of thefe 15 are émploy- 
ed in hufbandry, and g are independent of 
trade. St. Andrew’s parith, 998 families, 
377) males, 2689 females, 4460, total; of 
whom $47 are employed in trade, 36 are in- 
dependent ¢ftrade, and 36 employed in agri- 
culture——446 inhabited houfes, and 12 un- 
Meontrmty Mas. No. 72. 
inhabited, The entire population of the 
tawny, according to the differentreturns, will 
ftand thus—Parifh of All Saints, 14,396—- 
St. Nicholas, 4803—-St. John’s, 4635—and 
St. Andrew’s, 4460——Making altogether a 
total of 28,294——A._ number far beneath the 
eftimate ufually formed or the amount of the: 
population, which, including Gatefhead, had 
been generally fixed at 60,000. 
Population of Wall’s-end parifh, Northume .” 
herland—Wall’s-end township, 1212; . Wil- 
lington, 1193; Howdon, 635—Total, 3090, 
Two Lire-BoaTs have been lately finifhed 
by Mr. Greathead, of Shields, one of which 
has been conveyed to the ftation of Bawdfey 
Cliff, and the other to Loweftoffe, in Suffolk ; 
and from their great utilicy in faving the 
lives of feamen in tempeftuous weather, they 
wll, in all probability, foon become general 
on the coafts of this iflana. 
Married.| Mr. J. Humphrey, of Cun- 
ningarth, to Mifs Sharp, of Morpeth. 
_ At Rothbury, Ch. Wealands, ef. of Peals, 
to Mifs Donkin, of Plainfield.—W. Donkin, 
efq. of Plainfield, to Mifs Carnaby of ‘Tod- 
burn, near Morpeth.—Mr. J. Woodhoufe, 
painter, to Mifs Lawfon, both of Alnwick. 
At Barnard-caftle, Mr. Ant. Aaderfon, to 
Mrs. A. Anderfon, widow.—Mr.. Waing, of 
Hazon, near Felton, to Mrs. Smith, book- 
feller and ftationer, of Alnwick.—Mr. J, 
3A Hindmarth, 
