1809.) Cornwaill—Wales-—North Britain—Ireland, Sc. 
At Horsington, Mrs. Spencer, relict of 
Macthew S. esq. 
At Yeotown, near Barnstaple; ‘the wife of 
R. Newton Incleaon, esq. 
At the Retreat, near Exeter, Sir Alexander 
Hamilton, wno served the office cf high 
sheriff of the county in 1786, 
At Newton Hiouse, Yeovil, 
rélict of Swayne H. esq. 81. 
At Harewoud, near Tavistock, John Pear- 
son Foote, esq. 
At Heavitiee, Mr. Robert Jameson, son 
of John J. esq’ of Aberdeen, 27. 
At Newton Abbott, Mr. Whitburne, sur- 
Zeon and apothecary. 
CORNWALL. 
A public Dispensary and Humane Society 
has just been established at Penzance. Its 
mbjects are to mitigate the suffcxings of the 
poor sn seasons of sickness, by gratuitous 
medical <Ssist nce, nourishing food, and 
other needfui comiorts—to rescue the poor 
from’ the malignity of the smail-pox, by 
introducing vaccination—and the re covery of 
persons in cases of suspend:d animation. 
Married.| AtS*. ‘Vudy, Richard/Hasken, 
esq. to Mrs. Ann Furnis. . 
’ At Endellion, Mr. W. Thomas, to Miss 
Cock, daughter of —— C. esq. of ‘Tretreock. 
At Lirkeard, William Beard, esq. of Bod- 
Min, to Miss Nanjulian, of Lostwithiel. _ 
Died. } At-Flushing, the youngest daughter 
of j. Pb. B. Trevanion, esq. of Cashayes. 
At Towey, Mis. Fife, wife of Lieut. F. 
At Charlestown, St. Austell, Mrs. Sarah 
Vounder, 34. , 
At Camelford, Mr. John Marshall, sur- 
Beon, ; 
Mrs, Harbin, 
WALES, 
The commissioners of the Breconshire- 
turnpikes ure about to make two branches 
of turnpike-road ; one branch from the Bre- 
con and Mcerthyr road near Nant-yr- Eira, to 
join the Neath and Merthyr road neat Hir- 
‘wain iron-works; and the other from Crick- 
howell-bridge to join the Abergavenny and 
and ‘Merthyr aoe near Pentwyn Clydach, 
Lianelly. 
Married.} At Glasbury, B recon, Thynne 
Howe Gwynne, esq. to’'the Hon. Georgianna 
Marianna Devereux, sister to Viscount Here- 
ford. 
Died] At Newlin: near Cardiff, Mrs, 
Knight, aged 58, widow of the late William 
Knight, esq. and one of the daughters of 
the late William Bruce, as of Pamibie 
thian. 
NORTH BRITAIN. 
At Kilmarnock, Ayrshire, ‘aged 84, John 
Goldie, esq.; a man, for acuteness of appre- 
hension, and eccentricity of ideas, equalled 
by few. The last forty years ot bis lile were 
almost entirely spent in the study of the sci- 
ence of astronomy, in which he 1s said to have 
corrected several prevailing errors. His bool? 
upon the subject was almost ready for going 
to the press whea he died; ai 1b is Co be 
O35 
hoped his friends will put it into the hanas of 
some person, who wilt give it soon to the. pub 
lic. He > blished, some years since, a volus 
minous work, intitled, ¢* I'he Gospel. Reco» 
vered;” and a few months before his death, 
A E reatise upon the Evidences of a Deity 3” 
in which he coniwies ali atheistical depatihes, 
and ably® proves the existence of a God... This 
work wiil remaina testimony of his: great 
power of reasoning and excensive polar 
tion. . 
IRELAND. 
Married. J. At Cashell, Lord Viscount Bere 
gard, son of the Hari of Baiaden¢ and MM. P. 
for the county of Cork, to Miss Broderick, 
daughter of the Archbishop of Cashel. 
Died.| At Hampton, county of Dublin, 
Alexander Hamiiton, esq. high sheriff of the 
county, and eldest son of the late Honourable 
Baron H. 44, 
In Dublin, the Countess Dowager of Math, 
—Dowavcer Lady Steele.——'The soins ‘Hon, 
Joho Mioack Mason, 84. 
At Athen, county or Limeric, in full poss 
session of her sr arthaen Mars. Eleonora Suaug 
lah, 140. 
DEATHS ABROAD, ti 
Ins the Island of Jamaica, Lieutenant. ge. 
neral Villettes. ‘Dhus officer was.descended 
from one ef the most ancient families iq 
France. His ancestors wee Lords of monte 
didier in Languedoc, in the thirtcenth. cen= 
tury, and many of them held considerable 
offices under different monarchs. - During the 
civil wars, they were mugh distinguished zor 
their exertions in tavour of the Hugonotss 
and after the/révocation of. the edict of 
Wantes they withdrew from France anu sete 
tled in this kingdom. ‘The father of’ehe lave 
liewtenant-general was educated in the :diplos 
matic line: and was many years. aninisier 
plenipotentiary to the late and the ‘present 
king; first at the court of durin, and’aftere 
wards with the Helveuc \antuns, hte withe 
‘drew from public life in the year 4762, and 
resided at Bath till 1776; when, he. died, im 
the 75th year of his age. 
William-Anne Villettes, wus born at Bern; 
on tie 14th of June, 1754. He received the 
early-parc of his education at a private chook 
near Bath, and the lateer part of it-at the 
University of St. Andrew's. A muildness of 
disposition, and a regular performance of 
whatever it was his duty to doj;: qualities 
vite through life were distinguished teas 
tures of his character, were remarkawle even 
at this early period. It was- observed at 
scheol, that he never reccived a blow, either 
from nis master, or any of his school-fellows 5 
nor was he ever known at the university to 
to have exper:enced a reprimand: frear any of 
the professors, or to have been engaged ina 
quarrel with any of his fellow-students. His 
futher originally intended him for the 
bar, and he was accordingly entered at Lins 
coln’s-iim, and kept two or three terms 5 -but 
his ardour fur a military lire was so great, 
tha 
His ‘second SON, . 
