412 
At Sidmouth, Mrs, Colman, wife of Francis 
C. esq. 
At Coryton, Mrs. Tucker, wife of William 
T. esq. 
At Tavistock, Mrs. Hall, wife of Charles 
Hal], M.D. late of Braunston, Northampton- 
shire. 
At Plymouth, Miss Louisa Grigg, 18. 
At Exeter, Mrs. Chave, relict of John C. 
esq. of Rembertou, and daughter of William 
Troyte, esq. of Huntsham.—Mr. Matthew 
Bowden: he was found dead in his bed. 
At Colebrooke, the Rev. Henry Land. 
At Chumleigh, John Fewings, aged up- 
wards of 90. This man wes of the humble 
eccupation of a tinker, but he presented a 
singular contrast to the corrupt manners and 
dissolute life of this description of itinerants. 
He was never known to take what is techni- 
cally called a dram, nor was he ever seen in 
a state of intoxication; and, until within a 
year or two previous to his decease, he uni- 
formly followed his employment without the 
assistance of glasses. At this advanced period, 
also, he would (to accommodate an old cus- 
tomer) walk five or six miles, with his tools 
at his back, and return the same day. The 
following anecdote, which he often related, 
may not be deemed unworthy of insertion, as 
it tends to shew the prodigious increase of con- 
sumption in an article then scarcely known 
to the lower classes of society. About fifty 
years ago, calling accidentally at a farm- 
house, he was invited to partake of some tea 
that the good woman had just brought from 
market, and which she actually prepared by 
boiling in the common kitchen-copper, and 
every now and then dipping a portion of it 
out with a ladle. This rough preparation, 
however, pleased honest John so well, that 
from that time till his dissolution, he was a 
perfect Johnsonian tea- drinker. 
CORNWALL. 
Married.} At Falmouth, John Nepean, 
€sq. lieutenant in the royal navy, son of 
Brigadier-General Nepean, to Miss Oates, 
daughter of M.O. esq. of Bellairs.——W. Lake, 
esq. to Miss Harriet Tippet. . 
At Forvey, Mr. Collins, a master in the 
royal navy, to Miss Catharine Dewar. 
At St. Erme, John W. Chilcott, esq. to 
Elizabeth, eldest daughter of the Rev. Dr. C. 
rector of St. Erme, aie 
At Redruth, Mr. Donald Bain, master of 
the academy. at that place, to Miss Harriet 
Wise, daughteriof Mr. David W. surgeon and 
apothecary. 
At St. Hilary church, near. Marazion, 
Francis Rawle, esq. solicitor’to Miss Amelia 
Millett, only daughter of Richard Oke M. 
esq. of Penpoll. 
At St. lves, Mr. John Couch, to Miss 
Charlotte Heame. 
Mr. T. Treloar, of Nansavallen, to Miss 
Sophia Tom, of St. Columb, 
At St. Ives, Mrs. Haines, 
Cornwall—Treland. 
[Nov. }, 
Died.] At Helston, Mr. Edward Wheeler, 
inn-keeper.—Mr. Richard Thomas. 
At Portissac, near Padstow, Captain W. 
Billing. 
At Bodmin, the youngest son of Mr. 
Wright. 5 
At Penzance, Colonel Campbell.-—-Mr. 
Henry Roberts.—-Mrs. Jenkins, 85. 
At Parr, Mr. H. Crochett, an officer of 
the custems _ 
At St. Austell, Mrs. Rowe, widow of Mr. 
Philip R. and daughter of Mr. Walter Por- 
hery. ; 
At Penzance, Mrs. Honor Carthen, 50. 
Mr. Peter Rogers, 45. 
At Pentreath, Miss Thomas. 
At Padstow, Charles Hellyatt, esq. 
At Bodmin, Mr. Thomas Marsh, officer of 
excise. 
At Trevarno, near Helston, Mrs. Philippa 
Wallis, wife of Mr. Christopher W. attor- 
ney, 67. ; 
At St. Tudy, Mr. Joseph Rounsavell. 
IRELAND. . 
Died.| At Belfast, a poor woman named 
Johnston, at the age of 123 years. She has 
left a brother, aged 100, and his wife of the 
same age. 
At Killester House, near Dublin, Sir Wm. 
Gleadowe Newcomen, baronet, principal of 
the oldest banking-house in Ireland. He 
married Charlotte, daughter and sole heiress 
of the late Charles Newcomen, of Carriglass, 
in the county of Longford, esq. (since created 
in her own right Viscountess Newcomen.) 
He was many years representative in parlia- . 
ment for the county of Longford. He is 
succeeded as principal in the bank, and in 
honours and estates, by his only son, thé 
Hon. Sir T. Newcomen, Bart. 
At the Broadstone, Mr. Crobally, 128. 
Until the six weeks previous to his decease, 
he had not experienced two days illness in 
the course of his uncommonly protracted life. 
At Limerick, in his 79th year, Sylvester 
O*Halloran, esq. an eminent surgeon and 
man-midwite, as well as a celebrated histo- 
rian, member of the Royal Irish Academy, 
and of most of the literary societies in the 
United Kingdom. He studied physicand sur 
gery in Paris and London; and made so ra- 
pid a progress, that he published his first worl: 
before he had attained the age of twenty-one. 
In 1752 appeared his Treatise wf the Glau- 
come or Cataract, in an octavo volume. He 
afterwards wrote a Treatise on Gangrene and 
Sphacelus, likewise in one volume octavo; an 
Introduction to the Study or the History and 
Antiquities of Ireland, in a quarto volume; 
and a general History of Ireland in two quar- 
to volumes, published in 1778. A second 
edition of the latter, with considerable im- ~ 
provements, appeared in 1803. He was pro- 
foundly versed in the Irish language.and an- 
cient laws, and was ever_remarkable for his 
loyalty and attachment to the House of 
Brunswick, 
