616 
Tn Upper Seymour-ftreet, T. Dilkes, eff. 
At Cheam, in Surry, Mrs. Peach, wife of 
the Rev, H. Peach, reétor. ’ 
At Brompton, H. Dyett, efg. late of the 
ifland of Montferrat, Wet Indies. 
At his houfe in Bedford fquare, ‘fames 
Hefeltine, efg. king’s pro€tor; a gentleman 
whofe abilities and perfevering induftry raifed 
him to high eminence in his profeilion, and 
whole affable difpofition and agreeable man- 
NM-rs endeared him to an extended circle of 
private friends, by whom his memory will 
be long refpected, and his death moft fincerely 
segretted. By his profeflional purfuits, he 
had acquired a fortune of 200,000!. The of- 
fice which he held is faid to net its pofleffor 
20,000]. per annum, 
At Walworth, aged 77, Mr. Fobn Gill, 
Only fon of the late Rey. Dr. Gill. 
Mr. Coben, one of the Jewith rabbies ; 
preparing to officiate in the religious duties of 
the fynagogue, he fell downin a fit, and 
aflerwards expired. On the following Mon- 
day, in the forenoon, the body was interred 
in the Jewith burying-ground, at Mile-end, 
with great pomp and folemnity 3 upwards of 
one hundred and forty coaches following to 
the grave. 
In Charles-ftreet, Berkeley-fquare, Ars. 
Fiyeit, wife of Benjamin Hyett, efq. of Painf- 
wicks, Gloucefterfhire. 
At Colehill-houfe, near Fulham, at an 
advanced age, Mrs, Madden, wife of James 
Madden, efg. ; 
In St. James’s place, the Rev. W. Maxi- 
milian Friend, late re€tor of Chinner, in 
Bucks. 
In the 6oth year of his age, Richard Sim- 
fon, fg. of Walfingham-place, Lambeth. 
At Hillingdon, near Uxbridge,’ Charles 
Lalbst, ¢f9. ; 
Mr. Kennet Dixon, of Trinity-fquare, Tow- 
er-hill, aged 36 years. 
Aged 61, Henry Spicer, ef7- of Great New- 
port-itreet, portrait painter in enamel}, to his 
royal highnefs the Prince of Wales. 
At the Marquis of Stafford’s, in Arlington- 
ftreet, his lordfhip*s youngeft fon, Lord L. 
Gower, aged 13 menths. 
At Fulham, after a long and painful ill- 
nefs. C. Parker, efg vice-admiral of the red, 
and fon of Sir Peter Parker, admiral of the 
fieet. He was a zealous, intelligent and ac- 
tive cfficer, and had diftinguifhed himfelf 
againft the enemy on various occafions. His 
fervices in the late war, as captain of the 
Blonche frigate, in the Weft Indies, muft 
be fret in every memory 3 and during the 
American war, when captain of the Diamond, 
he exhibited great and early proofs of his gal- 
lantry. One trait, among many others, de- 
ferves to be recorded; having, by the com- 
mancé of Loid Rodney, reconnoitred the har- 
bour of Curagoa, within a fhort diftance of the 
forts, he cbierved in the offing, two of the 
enemy’s cruifers, a Dutch frigate and an 
armed {chooner, to which he gave chace, and 
Marriages and Deaths in and near London, 
[July 4, 
foon brought them to aétion, but the fchooner 
fheered off, after receiving a few fhots. Upon 
this, a Dutch line of battle fhip in the har- 
bour, flipping her cables, ftood off towards the 
Diamond. Captain Parker, however, con- 
tinued the action until the enemy’s frigate 
ftruck her colours. He took out fome of the 
prifoners and did not relinquith his capture 
before feveral fhots from the Dutch line of 
battle fhip had pafled over the Diamond. 
Lord Rodney afterwards expreffed great regret 
that Captain Parker’s account to him fhould 
have been fo flight as to prevent his ftating 
the circumftances to government in the high 
terms it merited. 
{ Further particulars relative to the late Mar- 
quis of Exeter, whofe death was noticed in our 
laf.—The late Marguis of Exeter was the 
tehth Earl of Exeter, LL.D.F.R.S. vice-pre- 
fident of the Society of Antiquaries, and a 
moft liberal patron to the town of Stamford. 
He was fon of the Hon. T. Chambers Cecil, 
(fon of Brownlow, eighth Earl of Exeter) by 
Charlotte Gonnen, who died Jan: 3, 1803, 
and was born at Bruffels in 1754. He mar- 
ried, In 1776, Emma, heirefs of Thomas 
Vernon efq. of Hanbury, Worcefterfhire, by 
whom he had two‘fons, who died infants, and 
a daughter, born 1779, married 1797, to John 
Chaplyn, efq. of Blakney, county of Lincoln. 
From this lady he wasdivorced; and married, 
fecondly, 1791, Mifs Higgins, who died at 
Burleigh, Jan. 18, 1797, and, thirdly, Aue 
guft 19, 18co, Elizabeth, Duchefs-dowager of 
Hamilton, daughter of Sir Peter Burrell, 
bart. He fucceeded his late uncle in 1793, 
and is himfelf fucceeded by his eldeft fon, 
from his fecond marriage, Brownlow, born 
July 2, 1795. His lordfhip was making con- 
fiderable improvements at Burleigh ; the 
{plendid colletion of piétures which are 
attached to the houfe by the will of his lord- 
fhip’s predecefior, which, by its rigid limita- 
tions, rendered them unalienable. The late 
marquis was a nobleman of very extenfive 
and active charity, His remains were re- 
moved frum Pembroke-houfe, Privy-gardens, 
on the gth of May, in order to their being 
depofited in the family vault of his lorafhip’s 
illuftrious progenitor, Lord Burleigh, in St. 
Martin’s church at Stamford. After the 
hearfe and fix horfes, followed three mourn- 
ing-coaches and his lordfhip’s carriage, each 
drawn by fix horfes. Upwards of 30 noble- 
men and gentlemen’s carriages had previoufly 
joined the procefiion, which reached Burleigh 
houfe about 9 in the morning of the 12th of 
May, where the Stamford volunteer infantry 
joined at rz, the fix fenior officers of the corps 
a¢ting as pall-bearers. After the funeral fer= 
vice, three volleys were fired by the corps, 
the laft tribute of refpe& to their deceafed 
noble commandant. At leaft 3000 fpeétators 
it is fuppofed, were prefent in the park. ] 
[The late Mifs C. Fj. Hammond, whofe death 
was announced in our laf? number, was daughter 
of the Jate W. Hammond, efq. of St. Alban's 
Court 
