1805.4 
_ Mr. N. Clifford, clothier and woollen-dra- 
per, of Reading, to Mrs. Chamberlain, widow 
ef the late T. Chamberlain, efq. of Lambeth. 
Captain Bifshopp, of the Guards, fon of 
Sir Cecil Bifshepp, bart. to Lady Charlotte 
Townthend, daughter of the Earl of Leicefter; 
At Hammerfmith, Captain Wilkie, of the 
33th regiment, to Mifs Elizabeth Hales, fe- 
cond daughter of the late Sir John Hales, 
bart, 
Griffin Wilfon, efq. of Lincoln’s-inn-fields, 
to Mifs Hotham, daughter of General Ho- 
tham. 
R. Dundas, efq; to Mifs J. R. Dundas, 
@aughter of the late Captain j. Dundas, of 
the Eaft India Company’s fervice. 
Cordell Brooks, efq. of Great George-ftreet, 
Weftminiter, to Mils Stubbs, eldeft daughter 
of G. Stubbs, efq. of Parliament-ftreet. 
The Rev Wiiliam Paget, to Mifs Deake, 
only daughter of the Rev. John Deake, of 
Edward. ftreet, Portman-{quare. 
Sir Drummond Smith, bart. of Tring Park, 
to the Hon. Lady Sykes. 
Thomas Boddington, efq. of Upper Brook- 
ftreet, to Mifs Mary Comerford, daughter of 
the late P. Comerferd, efq. 
Captain Varlo, of the royal marines,» to 
Mifs Pritz'er, daughter of ‘Thomas Pritzler, 
efq. of Auttin Friars. 
DIED. 
At his houfe at Hampftead, aged 68, Fona- 
than Key, e/g. an eminent, refpe&table, and 
wealthy wholefale ftationer, in Abchurch- 
lane, from which bulinefs he had tecently 
retired, 
At Knightfbridge, in her 94th year, Mrs. 
Purten, reli& of Colonel Francis Burton, and 
mother of Francis Burton, efq. M.P. for the 
¢ity of Oxford, 
In Abingdon-ftreet, Weftminfter, Mr. 
Ajpley, Jen many years manager of the ora- 
forios at Covent- garden theatre, , 
in Hoxton-{fguare, in her 64th year, Mrs. 
Mary Wright, widow of the late Mr. Wright, 
of Grub ftreet, Cripplegate. 
At her lodgings in Durwefton-ftreet, Lady 
Mary Cochrane, fitter tothe Earl of Dundonald. 
Mrs. Mayhew, wife of Jonn Mayhew, efq. 
of Broad-ftreet, Golden-{quare, an eminent 
upholfterer, but who has’ retired from bu- 
finels. 
At Clapham, of a dropfy, Martin Peirie, 
e/g. formerly a partner in the houfe of Nafh, 
Eddowes, and Petrie, confiderable linen mer- 
chants in the American trade, afterwards fe- 
cretary to the Commiffioners under the firft 
Exchequer Loan for the Relief of Commer- 
ial Credit, and commiffary-general of ace 
comp's to the Englifh army in the Mediter- 
vanean and in Portugal during the Jatt war. 
Sisice his return to England, he held a fitua- 
tion under the Commiflionérs for adjufting 
the Claims of the Merchants of this coun- 
fry on the American government under a 
perticalar convention. He married the 
youngei daughter of the late Mz, James 
® 
Marriages and Deaths in and near Londons, = 207 
Johnfon, by whom he had ten children. 
His fon, Martin, received, fince his father’s 
death, an appointment of ey aiiary, 
to the army at Malta, 
In his 79th year, William Butter, M. D. 
of Lower Grofvenor-ftreet, fellow of the 
College of Phyficians at Edinburgh, at the 
univerfity of which city he took the degtee of 
M.D. in 1761, after having been ten years a 
- Member of the Medical Society there. He 
was author cf a Treatife on the Chin-cough, 
and of fome other medical works 3 ands for 
fome time previous to his refidence in Lone 
don, practifed as a phyfician at Derby. 
In Edgeware-road, aged 55, Adr. Lee, many 
years afchoolmafter. He rofe in the morn- 
ing in perfeét health, ate a hearty breakfaft, 
and immediately expired, 
At his apartments in St. James’s palaces 
aged 75, Robert Eliot, 6g. 
At his houfe in Portiand- ‘piel Martine 
Bladen Hawke, Lerd Hawkes Baron of Towtong 
in Yorkfbire, and LL. D. He was eldett fon 
of the gallant admiral and firft baron; born 
in 1744, and married, 1771, to Caffandra, 
youngeft daughter of Sir Edward Turner, bar¢. 
of Ambrofden, in Oxfordfhire, by whom he 
had iffue Caffandra-Julia, Edward-Hervey, 
Martin- Bladen-Edward, and Annabella. His 
remains were interred in the family vault at 
Storeham, in Hampthire, where thofe of the 
brave admiral were depofited. He is fuc~ 
ceeded in titles and eftates by his eldeft fon, 
the Hon. Edward Hervey Hawke, who is 
married to the heirefs of the late Colonel 
Hervey, of WV obi onli in Yorkshire, and 
has taken the name and arms of Hervey, in’ 
addition to his own, His Lordfliip, although 
not brought up like bis father in the rough 
{cnoel of Mars, yet inherited from him, to- 
gether with his titles, that nice fenfe of ho-~ 
nour which has ever diftinguifhed his. career 
through life, uniting withit, at the fame 
time, every virtue which become the Chrif- 
tian and the man; religious without parade, 
generous without oftentation, the promoter of 
every ufeful infticution, and ever active in 
the caufe of diftreffed humanity. The bet 
of hufbands, the beft of fathers, and the true 
friend, it may be truly faid of him, that he 
lived bub to do good; and his innumerable 
friends muft ever lament his lofs, yet not a 
fingle enemy can caft a fhade on fo brillianta 
retro{pection. 
At Upper Dunftable-houfe, Richmond, 
aged 46, Dame Dinah, the wife of Sir Robert, 
Baker, bart, She was the daughter and only 
child of George Hayley, efq. alderman and 
M. P. for the city of London, and niece to 
the celebrated John Wilkes. To a moft 
confcientious difcharge of every focial and 
domeftic duty—of affection as. a wife—of 
tendernefs as a parent—was added a firm and 
unfhaken piety towards Gods while, in her 
intercourfe with the world, vee conduct was 
marked with that fterling good fenfe, correét 
jucgment, rigid integrity, {weetnefs of tem 
. per 
Reo 
eae 
