SM 
got into the main current, or that >he had 
sunk throygh a hole that has been discovered 
im the bridye since the water subsided. The 
most diligent search was made for his body 
without success 5 but eighteen days after it 
was found by accident in the river, about a 
mgile below the town. Major Lloyd was 
recently married to Miss Emma Hale, daugh- 
terof the late General Hale,of the Plantation, 
near Guisbro’ Yorkshire. 
At Newtown, King’s county, Sir Michael 
Smith, Bart. late master of the Rolls in 
Ireland, and many years a Baron in the Court 
of Exchequer. Sir Michael is succeeded in 
his honour by Sir William Smith, a Baron . 
ef the Exchequer. By Sir Michaels death, 
a pension of 2,7001. which he enjoyed asa 
retired judge, ceases. 
NORTH BRITAIN. 
Married.} At Rothesay, Captain Robert 
Stewart, of the Telegraph Excise Yacht, to, 
\ Elizab(th, eldest daughter of W. Muir, of 
Park, 
At Edinburgh, Lewis Henry Ferrier, esq. 
ef Belsyde, to Miss Monro, daughter of Dr. 
Alexander M. sen. of Craiglockhart.—David 
- Meldrum, esq.’ of Dron, to Miss Margaret 
Brodie, daughter of Mr. Archibald B. \ 
Dizd.} At Edinburgh, fsabella, Countess- 
dowager of Errol, mother to the late and 
present Earl of E.—~Miss Henvietta Hope, 
daughter of the late Hon. Charles Hope Weir, 
of Craigie Hall.—-James Frazer, esq. princi- 
pal secretary to the Bank of Scotland. 
At Perth, James Morison, an eminent sta- 
tioner, Bookseller, author, and publisher. 
jarther acesunt will be given ix our next. 
The Rey. Duncan Mackay, late acting 
chaplain | of his Majesty’s troops on the estab- 
lishment of ni. in the East Indies. 
Having returned from India some years ago 
with a moderate fortune, he chose to express 
the respect which he always rétained for that 
ancient seat of learning where he had re- 
ceived his education; his attaehment to that 
district ef Scotland, where he was born, and 
his desire to heip forward virtuous and indr- 
gent young men of genius, during the course 
of their academical studies, by founding anew 
Bursary. im the United College of St. An- 
drew’s, and vesting the patronage thereo! in 
his chief, Lord Reay. Having communi- 
cated his intention last summer, and corre- 
sponded with the College upon the subject, he 
jately lodged three hundred pounds sterling 
in the ‘hands of Mr. Walter Cook, W. 5S. 
Agent for the College, but he died before 
the necessary deeds were finished, and he left 
them to be executed by his trustees. 
At Edinburgh, 29, Lieutenant John 
Berry. At an early age he entered the 
navy> and, solely by merit, rose from. the 
station of a seaman to the rank of Lieutenant 
of his Majesty’s ship the Revenge. He was 
North Britain—Deaths Abroad. 
fApril t 
wounded at the landing: of the British troops 
in Egypt and in the ever-memorable battle 
of Trafalgar, he received another wound, of 
which last he never entirely recovered. On 
many other occasions he distinguished him- 
self by the most undaunted bravery, skill, 
and resolution. 
DEATHS ABROAD 
At Corunna, ofa fever, occasioned by ex- 
cessive fatigue, Captain F. J. Darby of the 
10th light as ae and nephew to Sir dohn 
Lade. : 
In Spanish ‘Town, Jamaica, Blizabeth 
Haywood, a free-black woman, at the very” 
advanced age of 130 years. She was a grown 
girl at the time of the earthquake which de- 
stroyed Port Royal, in 1692, and remembers’ 
having gone with her mother for a load of: 
the wreck which drifted ashore on the beach 
near Port Henderson on that occasion. She 
was a native of the island, and in her youth’ 
belonged “to Dr. Chamock, of the above 
town. ‘ 
At the battle at Corunna, in the 22d year 
of his age, Lieutenant Noble, of the 95th: 
rifle regiment, only son of the late Mr. No- 
ble, of Wakefield, Yorkshire. He was 
bravely animating his men in the heat of the 
battle, when he received a shot through the 
head and instantly expired. 
On board the Mary transport, on his pase 
sage home from Corunna, Lieutenant-Colo- 
nel Symes of his Majesty’s. 76th’ regiment, 
formerly Ambassador to the Kingdom of Ava, . 
and author of an interesting and valyable ac- 
count ofthat country. - 
“On his passage to Gottenburgh, Arthur 
Branthwayt, esq. late a captain.in the 2@ 
dragoon guards, son of the late Rev. Arthur 
Branthwayt, of Stiifkey, in Norfolk, and 
the last of the male line’ of the ancient and 
respectable family of the Branthwayts, of 
Norfolk. He was on board the Crescent fri- 
gate, lately lost off the coast of Jutland, aud. 
one amongst the unfortunate sufferers who 
perished on that melancholy occasion, “ 
At Jamaica, Charles Cecil, second son of 
Sir Cecil Bishopp, and late of the Muros fits 
gate. The ship was wrecked jn an@ttempe 
to-destroy some batteries in the neighbour- 
hood of the Havannah, and this excellent 
young officer having exerted and exposed him- 
self, in spite of the cautions of his friends, 
“was attacked, on his arrival at Jamaica, by 
the yellow fever, which soon proved fatal. 
In the harbour of Gijon, in Spain, the 
Hon. Captain Herbert, of the royal navy, 
second son.of the Earl of Carnarvon, He 
was going on shore from the Swallow sloop, 
with Mr. Creed, son of Thomas Creed, esqe. 
navy agent; but just as they were on the 
Bar, a violent surf broke over them, filled 
the boat, and plunged the whole into the sea. 
The greater part, by taking hold of the boat,- 
kept 
fd 
