tT 
1805 ] 
By this it will be feen what dreadful havoc 
has been made in this fmall place ; but of 
the mifery that accompanied this fcene of de-_ 
folation, no one, without being an a€tual 
witnefs, can form anidea. We are now en- 
tirely relieved from it; the poft is opened, 
and clean bills of health are iffued. Famine, 
however, now aflails us, inftead of difeafe: 
for three months we have been living almoft 
entirely upon falt provifions; and fince the 
beginning of laft month there has been an 
inceflant deluge of rain, accompanied by re- 
peated heavy gales of wind, The bay, at 
this moment, has a moft difmal appearance, 
nearly thirty fail of fquare-rigged veffels 
being afhore, and feveral of them beaten to 
pieces; befides, thofe which rode out the 
gales are lying ina very diftreffed fituaticn, 
fome with every matt carried away !” 
Staff, Major-General Barnett—Lord Pel- 
ham Clinton——Capt. Parfonage—Mrs. Nouth 
—Drs. Baynes and Straith—Rev. J.T. 
Frome and wife—Mrs. Hughes—Mr. Wil- 
liams and two children—Mr. Levery, fen. 
and one daughter—Mr. Levery, jun. 
Royal Artillery —Captains Adie and Ledger- 
ton—Lieutenants Hall, Pritchard, Wright, 
and Ellifon—Mrs. Witham, and 195 men. 
Royal Engincersw_—Mr. C. M*‘Donald, and 
123 men. 
2d, or Queen's Regiment. Capt. Johnfton 
Lieutenants Culloden and Smith—Enfigns 
Coldftream and Griffiths, and 91 men, 
toth Regiment. Lieutenants Parker and 
Gleed—Dr. Colbraith—-Mrs. Carpenter, and 
23 men. . 
13th Regigtent. Lieutenants Brown, Pa- 
terfon, Maffer, and Hull—Dr. M‘Guire— 
Mittreffes Wilkinfon and Brown, and 123 men, 
54th Regiment. Major Bellew—Captain 
Heywood—Paymafter Wilkinfon— Lieute- 
nants Cuthbert, M‘Pherfon, and King—En- 
fign Doolan, and 102 men. 
De Roll’s Regiment. Captains Metzger, 
Laville, Bachman, and Altenberg——Lieute- 
nants De Roll and Wiefembach—Enfigns 
Couftan and Polliftrong—Drs. Deguizois and 
Lodren—Mrs. Muller, and 187 men. 
Barrack Department. Major Andrews and 
wife——-Lieutenants Claydon and Naughton, 
and 15 men. 
Ordnance Department. Mefirs. Alexander 
Rofs, James Bolton, Hanley, fen. and wife 
——Lieut. Scholey—Mifs C. Hockings and 
brother—Meffrs. Rodgerfon, M‘Donald, fen, 
Pons, wife, and one fon, Smith, Hare, wife, 
daughter, and two fons, 
Viftualling Department, Capt. Darling and 
fon—Mefirs. Thomas Ince, Stokes, fen. 
Hanley, jun. Bennet, and Miller. 
Naval Department. Miftrefles Pownall, 
Wooden, and two children—Mifs B. Mouat 
Drs. Burd and Chriftie—Mr. Dent—Five 
clerks in the yard—-and about 30 men. . 
Civil Department. Mrs. Jephfon and child 
-—~Mefirs, Nugent, Pulgraye, and F, Rae 
leigh. : 
“" Deaths Abroad. 
307 
Inhabitants. Meffrs. Glynn and wife, G, 
Cowper and wife—Rodgers and wife—M ‘Kay, 
wife, and daughter, Geddes and wife, C. 
Viale and wife—8oyd and wife, T. Gavino 
and fifter, G. Robinfon and wife, Abbot and- 
wife, Shea, Gazzo, fen. J. Nailor, R. Jeph- 
fon, A. Rombado, J, Calder, Humphries, 
G. M‘Donald, Dixon, Meade, Kahn, Scott, 
D. Archibald, Donnoughe, jun. Chatto, 
Alexander, C. Mackellar, Thomas, jun. 
Booth and fon, Nechlin, Byrn, R. Cowper, 
Horfey, A. Rofs, Clarke, Afhton, Johnfon, 
Oxberry, Wyatt and fon, and Meffrs. Par- 
rodys—Dr.and Mrs. Netts—Mittreffes Green, 
Garnett, Power, Archbold, Way, Yorfton, 
Davies, Kenion—Mifles F. Cowper and 
Hill. | 
Abfira&. Officers 54—-Soldiers 364-—Wo- 
men\and Children 164—Total Military 1082, 
—Inhabitants about 2500—Total 3532. 
DEATHS ABROAD. 
At Philadelphia, the Rev. J. B, Linn, 
paftor of the firft prefbyterian church in that 
city. His untimely and lamented death was 
occafioned by the rupture of a blood veffel,: 
after a long feries of indifpofition,: which, 
however, was far from pointing to a cataf- 
trophe fo premature and violent. This young 
man (for he was only twenty-feven years of 
age) attained a degree of eminence in his 
profeffion, and in literature in general, which 
feldom falls to the lot of age made perfect by 
various obfervation and long experience; he 
was faft advancing to the fummit of diftinc- 
tion, when various corroding maladies laid 
hold of him, and tarnifhed in a great degree 
the flower of his days. In no inftance, how- 
ever, did his ardent defire after ufeful know- 
ledge, and his indefatigable zeal in purfuic of 
it forfake him, and his lateft moments were 
employed upon {chemes of great an@ laudable 
ambition; a myfterious ftroke, however, has 
interpofed, and laid low all the hopes of his 
country and family with regard to him. 
James Baden, profeflor of eloquence and 
the Latin tongue in the univerfity of Copen- 
hagen. His death is a ferious lofs to the li- 
terary world, He began his conneétion with 
that inftitution in 1779; his labours were 
not confined to the pupils at the National 
College; he devoted a great portion of his 
time to advance the Danith language to its 
higheft {tate of improvement; and his tranf- 
lation of Tacitus rivals the original for pre- 
cifion, tafte, and purity of diftion. He alfo 
publifhed a German and Danifh DiCtionary, 
known to every modern linguift. Inthe late 
ter years of his life he found himfelf inade« 
quate to the active duties of his public fitus 
ation, and retired, but not without an ho- 
nourable proof of the approbation of the 
Danith Government. 
In Canada, Ytyenti Pohi, aged 102, a nae 
tive of China, brought to America in early 
youth: he is faid to have defcended from the 
race of the Chinefe emperors; and being of 
ftrong powers of mind and body, inftituted, 
fa 
SEO 
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