450 
At Mary-le-bone, Jeremiah Smith, efq. of 
Beccles, to Mifs Foulger, of Cavendish. ftreet, 
Cavendith fquare. 
William Wharton Rawlins, efg. of the IMand 
of St. Chiiftopher, to Mifs Margaret Bayford, 
youngett daughter of the late Dr, Bayford. 
The Hon. H. Gardner, ton of Admiral Lord 
Gardner, to Mifs Cornwall, youngett daughter 
of the late John Cornwall, efq. of Hendon. 
The Hon. Charles Butler Agar, brother to 
Lord vifcount Clifden, to Milfs Hunt, of Lian- 
érock, in Cornwall, 
At St. Peters, Cornhill, Samuel Day, ef. 
of Stanfted, Suifex, to Mifs A. Felited, of 
Dunmow, in the county of Effex. 
F. Wetherhtad, efq, of Walthamftow, 
to Mifs E. Warner, daughter of E. Warner, 
ef. 
Te Kenfington, G. Battye, efq. to Mifs G. 
Wynyard, youngeft daughter of the late 
Lieutenant General Wynyard. 
His excellency Count St. Martin de Pont, 
many years ambaflador from the King of Sar- 
dinia to the Court of London, to Lady Fleet- 
wood, widow of the late Sir Thomas Fleet- 
wood, bart. The ceremony was performed by 
a clergyman of the Catholic church, a difpen- 
fation having been pyevioufly obtained from 
the bifhop of London, 
_ At Stoke Newington, William Everett, 
efq. fon of Thomas Everett, efq. M. P. for 
Ludgerfhall, to Mifs Ellis, ~ of Palatine- 
houfe, Stoke Newington, only daughter of 
the late Thomas Ellis, efq. of the fame place. 
} DIED. 
At Effex-place, Lambeth, ¥. Booceck, e/g. of 
the Victualling-office. 
At Greenford, the Rew. Fobn Maule, re&tor 
of that parifh, and formerly Fellow of King’s 
College, Cambridge. 
At Forty-hill, Enfield, Mrs. Geledneki, 
wife of A. Geledneki, ef. 
Aged 105 years, Jobs Thomas, of Acton, by 
trade a farrier. 
Aged 86, the Rew. Wilham Ramfaen, D D. 
mafter of the Charter-houfe, 
At her houfe, in Lower Seymour-ftreet, 
the Dowager Counte/s of Shaftefbury. 
Henry Tonge, ¢/7. ot Devonthire-ftreet, Port- 
land-place. 
At a private houfe, for the reception of 
lunatics, at Bethnal-green, Aér. Newton, 
formerly an eminent and fkilful furgeon at 
Brighton. During the war between Ruflia 
and Sweden he was chofen by the Duke of 
Sudermannia as an affiftant-furgeon on board 
his fhip, and was in the heat of the engage- 
ment tn the Gulf of Finland, atthe time the 
Jate King of Sweden was near being taken 
prifoner by the Rufiians. 
~ At his chambers in the Temple, aged 
6, Fobn Wynne, efg- a bencher of the 
Middie Temple, and orother of the Right 
Hon. Sir William Wynne, mafter of Trinity- 
all, Cambridge. 
At his apartments in the Britith Mufeum, 
Marriages and Deaths in-and near London. 
and manners which diftinguifhed this youth, 
[Dec. i, 
the Rew. Samuel Ayfcough, one of the librari- 
ans of that noble inftitution, and late vicar of 
Endham in Kent, to which living he was 
prefented by the Crown, on the 7th Decem- 
wer, 1803, on the deceafe of the late Rev. 
John Pratt, as fome {mall compenfation for 
his very ufeful and laborious exertions in the 
eaufe of literature, He might-truly be term- * 
ed a pioneer of learning, for he not only com- 
piled the immenfe catalogue, in 2 vols. folio, 
of the library of printed books in the Britifh 
Mufeum, but alfo a very fyftematically ar- 
ranged catalogue of all the manufcripts in that 
inftitution—befides an index to Shakefpear, 
and indexes to the Monthly Review, the 
Gentleman’s Magazine, the Annual Regifter, 
&c. He probably had examined and perufed 
more books than any man in Britain, and was 
always very ready to affift thofe who applied 
to: him on literary fubje@s, as he could in- 
ftantly point out the particular author, &c. 
where any topic of information might be 
found. He was modeft and taciturm, His 
chief amufement, when out of the library, 
was walking in the Mufeum gardens. His 
lofs will be almoft irreparable at the Britifh 
Mufeum, to which inftitution he had belong- 
ed nearly twenty years. 
At his houfe in Beaumont-ftreet, Thomas 
Mayer, efg. late of the city of York, a tender 
and afteétionate hufband and father, whofe 
lofs is much regretted by his friends. 
At his lodgings in Mansfield-place, Kentith 
town, in his 67th year, Richard Heighway, 
e/g. of Brachenwood-green, near King’s Wal- 
den, Herefordfhire, fenior attorney of the 
Marfhalfea Court, and formerly an officer in 
his Majefty’s fecond troop of horfe-guards. 
He was defcended from a very refpectablg, 
family, long refident at Pontisford, in Shrops 
fhire, and in 1763 married the youngeft 
daughter of Sir Philip Hall, late an eminent 
diftiller, in Whitechapel. He has left two 
fons: Richard, the elder, is re€tor of Marlbo-. 
rough, Wilts, and Samuel is in the royal ~ 
navy. ' 
At his houfe, in Upper Gower-ftreet, of 
the repeated attacks of a paralytic diforder, 
Aged 73, George Wilfon, ef7. formerly an emi- 
nent folicitor in the High Court of Chancery. 
The chambers which he occupied in Symond’s 
Inn had been fucceflively tenanted, during - 
the period of a century, by his father and 
grand-father, and he difcharged the duties of — 
his profeffion with hereditary reputation and 
integrity. He marrieda daughter of coheirefs _ 
of John Cox, efq. of Fairfeat, in Kent, by 
whom he had four children. Only one 
daughter furvives him, who is married to Sir 
Hugh Inglis, bart. . yy 
Aged 14, xt the houfe of his mother, in ~ 
Lower Grofvenor-place, Ar. Herbert Foley, 
fecond fon of the late Richard Foley, efg. one 
of the magiftrates of the police. The fupe= 
rior talents and remarkable fuavity of temper 
who - 
