86 
At Burton Overy, Mr. Judd, one of the 
bigh constables of the Hundred of Gartree, 
which office he he!ld near’ 52 years. 
At Astfordby, Mrs. Green, 88. 
At Sapcote, the Rev. James Knight Moore, 
rector of that patish. He was a gvod scholar 
_ and an able divine, a faithful minister of the 
ehurch of England, laboriovs and persevering 
ta the-dis: harge of all the duties of his sacred 
efEce, insomuch as to affect his constitution, 
which was not very robust. His excellent 
wife, of the same pious and charitable dispo- 
sition as himself, was his willing assistant in 
attention to ‘he peor, and in the instruction of 
children. They maintained an evening school 
fer this purpose, besides a Sundry school, in 
which about 79 children were taught their 
duty to God and their neighbour ; besides 
which, on all great festivals, they were enter- 
tained with a plentiful repast, 
At Hog’s Hall, near Burbage, Jeseph, son 
of Mr. Joseph Warner, 23. 
At Orton Hail, Mrs. Perkins, widow of 
$.S. Perkins, esq.  - 
At Welham, Mr. Warren. 
- At Hinckley, Elizabeth, youngest daugh- 
ter of Mis. Seller, 23. 
STAFFORDSHIRE. 
TMarried.] At Stafford, Mr. Hawkins, to 
Miss Sarahi Daniel. 
John Blakesly, esq- banker, of Hinckley, 
to. Miss T. Wamley, of Castle Bromwich. 
Did.) At Betton, near Market Drayton, 
Mrs. Harper. 
At Weeford, 
Moieley, 26 
At Woassel, Mr. Thomas James, } jun. 33. - 
near Lichfield, Mr. John 
At Lichfield, Mr. G. T. Pape, som of the © 
late Rev. Dr. P. of Penn. 
At Wolverhampton, Miss Norton. 
At Fetrenhall, where she resided for near. 
acentury, Elizabeth Prittie, spinster, aged 106. 
Sie retained her faculties, and could walk 
about, till within a few days of her death. 
As Stafford, Mrs. Kent 47.—Mrs. Hill, 75. 
&t New- Chapel, Mr. R. Horiphitys,. son 
of the late Mr. A H. schoolmaster, of Shrews- 
Bun Ye 
At Newcastle, Mrs. Watkin, of that place. 
Peing informed that her son was fighting in 
the street, she ran to the place pointed out, 
end on seeing one of the men fall, she ex- 
claimed: ‘* Oh my son!” and expired imme- 
diately. 
At Brocton Grange; Mr. York, 77. 
WARWICKSHIRE. 
Marrizd | At Staunton upon Arrow, Mr. 
~ En lfis, 
only daughter ef John M. esq. of Burcher, 
Herefordshire. 
- At Coventry, Mr. Chailes Price Tite, of 
London, to Miss Mary Ann Potter. 
Died.| At Coventry, Mrs Clay, relict of 
TE. C. esq. —Mirs. Cratern, relict of Mr. Tho- 
mas C. attorney, 79.—Mrs. Wilson, Jate of 
the Hare and Squirrel Tavern, 72. 
Staford—Warwick. 
of Birmingham, to Miss Murcott,— 
[Aug. 1, 
At Ladbrooke, Mrs. Palmer, widow of C. 
Palmer, esq. 
At Birmingham, in the 85th year of hisage, 
Richard Hobbs, B. M. many years ago a ce~ 
lebrated character in the musical world, and 
formerly organist of St. Martin’s church, in 
this town.—Edward Jackson, third son of Mr. 
Robert Wheeler, 17.—Mrs. Sarah Wilison.— 
Mr. John Baldwin, eldest son of Mr. Samuel 
B. 23.—Mr. Jobn Nevill, sen. of Coleshill, 
66.—Mr. William Wright, jun. 
At the Soho, where he was employed as 2 
medal engraver, Conrad Henry Cuchler, na- 
tive of Hesse-Darmstadt, 64. In this too 
much neglected branch of the fine arts, the 
variety and perfection of his works have given 
this gentleman 2 just claim toa distinguished © 
reputaticn, 
At Hatton, near Warwick, aged 38, Mrs. 
Sarah Ante Wynne, the only remain- 
ing daughter of the Rev. Dr. Parr. The 
brilliancy of her imagery in conversation and 
Writing, the readiness, gaiety, and fertility” 
of her wit, the acuteress of her observations 
upon men and things, and the variety of her 
knowledge vpon the most familiar and most 
profound subjects, were very extraordinary. 
They who lived with her in the closest ing 
timacy were again and again struck with ad=- 
miration at the rapidity, ease, vivacity, and ~ 
elegance, of her epistolary compositions. 
Whether upon lively or serious topics, they 
were always adapted to the occasion; they’ 
were always free from the slightest taint of 
affected phraseology and foreign idiom ; they - 
were always distinguished by_a peculiar feli- - 
city and originality of cohception and expres- 
sion; and the genius displayed in them woulé 
most undoubtedly have placed the writer in 
the very highest class of her female contem- 
poraries, if she bad employed her pen upon 
any work with a deliberate view to publica- 
tion. Her reading in the most approved au- 
thors, both French and English, was diver- 
sified and extensive, her memory was prompt © 
and correct, and her judgment upon all ques- 
tions of taste and literature, morality and re- 
ligion, evidently marked the powers with 
which she had been gifted by nature, and the 
advantages which she had enjoyed for cultie 
vating those powers under the direction of her 
enlightened parents, and in the society of- 
learned and ingenious men, to which she had 
access from her earliest infancy. Wich be- 
coming resignation to the will of Heaven she 
endured a long and painful illness, which had 
been brought upon her by the pressure of do-- 
mestic sorrows on a constitution naturally 
weak. Her virtues as a friend, a child, a. 
wife, and a mother, were most exemplary, © 
and her piety, being sincere, rational, and hae | 
bitual, gave additional vaiue to the great fae: 
culties of her understanding, and the gene= 
rous feelings of her heart. 
In the 74th year of his age, the Rev. Peter 
Pasa thirty-three years pastor of the dissent = 
~ mg> 
