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joined the party. Prince Albert visited Birmingham. On Thursday Nov. 30, her Majesty, attended by Prince Albert and several of the most distinguished guests, visited Lichfield. On Friday Dec. 1, the Queen and Prince removed from Tamworth to Chatsworth, (still accompanied by the Dukes of Wellington and Buccleuch,) and were received by the Duke of Devonshire and Lady Louisa Cavendish. On the west terrace her Majesty visited an oak tree planted by herself eleven years ago, and Prince Albert planted another by its side. A ball took place in the evening. The next day the grand conservatory was illuminated before dinner. On Sunday divine service was performed before the Queen in the pri. vate chapel, and her Majesty afterwards rode to the gardens, where Mr. Paxton, the gardener, presented her with his "Magazine of Botany," in 8 vols. A selection of sacred music was performed by the Duke's chamber band in the evening. On the morning of Monday, Dec. 3, her Majesty left Chatsworth for Belvoir Castle, attended by the Duke of Devonshire, as far as Derby, where he presented a county address as Lord Lieutenant, at the railroad station. At Nottingham several triumphal arches were erected, and other demonstrations of respect paid. The Duke of Rutland received her Majesty at Belvoir Castle, and the key of the Staunton tower was presented to her by the Rev. Dr. Staunton. The next morning there was a magnificent display of the Melton hounds, about 500 scarlet coats being in the field. The Duke of Wellington joined the sport. In the evening, before dinner, the Mayors of Grantham and Leicester presented addresses from the corporations of their towns. On Thursday the 6th her Majesty returned from Belvoir Castle to Windsor.

The Angell Estates.-The celebrated claim to these immense estates, which has occupied the attention of the legal profession and the public for many years past in various parts of the kingdom, was decided in an ejectment case before Lord Chief Justice Tindal and a special jury, at Croydon assizes, on the 26th Oct. after a trial of two days' continuance, by a verdict for the plaintiff, William Angell; thus establishing the heirship and claim of this once poor man (late an agricultural labourer) to the property in Sussex, Surrey, and Kent, formerly of William Angell, the first purchaser of Crowhurst, in Surrey, of the value of upwards of a million of money. Some lighthouses, part of the property, were lately sold to the Trinity House for about 230,0007.-On the 2d of November, however, Mr. Thesiger ap、

plied in the Court of Queen's Bench for a rule nisi for a new trial, on various grounds; among others, on the ground that the parish registers produced in court to prove the descent of the plaintiff had evidently been tampered with, as was proved by comparing them with the transcripts in the Bishop's Court. Among other instances was a register said to contain an entry of the death of Marriott Angell in the year 1728, which name occurred in the will of the testator, in virtue of which this property is claimed. On comparing the register with the transcript, it appeared that the real name had been Margaret Ange, which had been altered in the register to Marriott Angell. The learned Counsel, however, completely exonerated the lessor of the plaintiff and his advisers from the charge of tampering with the registers, inasmuch as for the last thirty years the registers had been in the possession of the vicar of the parish. For many years before that period, however, different persons had been making claims to this property, and to some one of the former claimants these tamperings with the register were attributed. The Court granted a rule nisi on all the grounds.

Wreck of the Royal George.-The operations which have been for some years in progress for clearing away the wreck of the Royal George at Spithead are at length completed. When the Royal George went down, in 1782, there were 100 guns on board, viz. 28 iron 32pounders, 16 iron 12-pounders, 28 brass 24-pounders, and 28 brass 12-pounders. Of these, six iron 12-pounders and nine brass 12-pounders were removed in the course of the same year by means of the diving-bell; after which nothing was done till the year 1834, when Mr. Charles Anthony Deane first brought his diving helmet and dress, which was a very old idea, suggested in various books for nearly three centuries back, to such a state of perfection as to render it available for practical purposes. In the years 1834, 1835, and 1836, Mr. Deane recovered seven iron 32-pounders, 18 brass 24pounders, and three brass 12-pounders, 28 in all; for which he received salvage from the Board of Ordnance; after which the remaining guns being buried in mud, or under the timbers of the upper parts of the wreck, eluded his efforts, as nothing but gunpowder could render them accessible. In 1839, when Major-general Pasley, then Colonel of the Royal Engineers, commenced his operations, in which he has never spared that most essential article, without which nothing could have been done, he recovered 12 guns, 11 more

in 1840, and six in 1841; but in 1842 he only recovered one iron 12-pounder, because he then directed that the divers, who had got down to the floor-timbers and keel, should confine their efforts to the removal of the woodwork of the hull; and he pursued the same system in the summer of 1843, until the whole of the keel and bottom planking were got up, after which the half-anchor creeper drawn transversely, and a frigate's anchor longitudinally across the original position of the hull, proved that no more woodwork remained, when he directed that guns only should be sought for, in consequence of which no less than 13 have been recovered this season. Hence 42 guns in all have been recovered by the divers employedunder Major-General Pasley,which, with 15 recovered in 1782, and 29 recovered by Mr. Deane, as before mentioned, amount to a total of 86, leaving 14 guns still at the bottom, of which number six are iron 12-pounders, one is a brass 24pounder, and six are brass 12-pounders. The quantity of iron ballast in the hold of the Royal George when she sank was 126 tons 12 cwt., generally in pigs of seven to the ton, of which more than 119 tons have been sent up by the military divers and delivered into Portsmouth dockyard, so that the quantity now remaining at the bottom is less than seven tons, being only 47 pigs, which, having been scattered about by the constant creeping, and by the numerous explosions, cannot obstruct the anchorage. In respect to the 14 guns still remaining, all buried about four feet under the mud, and of which one only is a heavy gun, should a ship's anchor hereafter get hold of one of them, which is possible, though very unlikely, it will, on being weighed, raise the gun up to the surface of the mud, or a little above it, after which it will release it, and it may then be slung with ease. The quantity of gunpowder fired this season amounted to 19,193 lbs. that is, to nearly 214 barrels.

Mr. Purdo, the principal masterattendant of Portsmouth dockyard, having examined the spot, by dragging a frigate's anchor repeatedly over it, and meeting no obstruction, has reported to Rear-Adm. Hyde Parker, that the ground where the wreck of the Royal George formerly lay is now clear and quite as fit for the use of her Majesty's ships as any other part of the anchorage at Spithead; which report, in corroboration of General Pasley's opinion, having been communicated officially to the Admiralty, their lordships have ordered the wreck buoy to be removed from the spot, as

being no longer necessary. Formerly there were six or seven fathoms of water only over the wreck of the Royal George, the hull of which, then nearly perfect, stood 33 feet higher than the general level of the anchorage ground. At present, the ground where the wreck lay is on the same level nearly with the remainder of the anchorage.

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Trophies from China.. -A curious collection of guns and swords, captured during the late war in China, by Commander W. H. Hall, at that time Captain of the Nemesis iron steamer, and now the Commander of the Royal Victoria and Albert yacht, has arrived at Windsor Castle, having been accepted by her Majesty, a portion of which may be thus briefly described :1. An immense brass gun, 12-pounder, upwards of eleven feet in length, and beautifully cast. This was captured from the war-junk of the Chinese Admiral, at the mouth of the Canton river, in 1841. 2. A brass four-pounder, nearly six feet in length, beautifully carved with dolphin's heads. This gun was taken from the junk of the Chinese Commodore, and presented to Commander Hall by the officers of the ship's company of the Nemesis. 3. A small brass silk gun, so denominated from its being elaborately bound round and ornamented with silk, over which, still further to preserve it, is also bound, with great taste, various folds of catgut. This gun, which was taken at Tzykee, in 1842, is about two feet in length, and will carry a ball of 3lb. This description is considered a great curiosity; only nine such guns were captured during the whole war. The piece is not mounted upon a carriage, but on either side are two handles, to be held by four men when it is discharged. 4. Two gingals, or long muskets, with sights, and of recent manufacture. These muskets, which are about eight feet in length, proved the most destructive weapons, and did the greatest execution during the war. When discharged they are loaded with at least three, and sometimes four and five, small bullets, which they will carry an immense distance. They were taken in the north of China in 1842. 5. Three Chinese matchlocks, or muskets, with inscriptions, in Chinese characters, on the locks. These were also captured in the north of China during the last year. 6. A curious matchlock, with a rest; the barrel bound round with rings, apparently to give it increased strength. 7. A double-handed sword, or, rather, pair of swords, fitted into one scabbard; the blades being about two feet six inches in length.

PROMOTIONS, PREFERMENTS, &c.

GAZETE PROMOTIONS.

Nov. 25. Fife Militia, John Balfour, esq. to be Lieut.-Colonel.

Nov. 27. James Miller, esq. Advocate, to be Sheriff Depute of the shire or sheriffdom of Selkirk.

Nov. 28. Daniel Florence O'Leary, esq. (now Consul at Puerto Cabello,) to be Chargé d'Affaires and Consul-General to the Republic of New Granada.-Alexander Macbean, esq. to be Consul at Leghorn.

Dec. 4. Letters patent passed under the Great Seal, appointing the Right Rev. Edward Bishop of Salisbury to exercise all the functions and powers, as well with regard to the temporalities as the spiritualities, of the Right Rev. George-Henry Bishop of Bath and Wells.

Dec. 5. Thomas Fred. Elliot, John George Shaw Lefevre, and Charles Alex. Wood, esqrs. to be Commissioners for superintending the sale and settlement of the waste lands of the Crown in the British Colonies, and the conveyance of emigrants thither.-1st Foot, Major Charles Deane to be Lieut.-Col.; Capt. A. B. Montgomery to be Major.

Dec. 8. John Blakiston, esq. late brevet Major and Captain h. p. 27th Foot, to be one of Her Majesty's Hon. Corps of Gentlemen at Arms.

Dec. 11. Thomas Lax, of Mellifont Abbey, co. Somerset, Gent. and Emma-Phippen his wife, eldest dau. and coheir of Richard Gilling, late of Cheddar, esq. to take the name of Gilling only, and bear the arms.

Dec. 12. Lieut.-Gen. Sir Peregrine Maitland, K.C.B. to be Governor and Commander in Chief of the Cape of Good Hope.-James Hudson, esq. (now Sec. of Legation at Washington) to be Secretary of Legation at the Hague; John Kennedy, esq. (now Secretary of Legation at Naples) to be Secretary of Legation at Washington; George John Robert Gordon, esq. (now First Attaché at Rio de Janeiro) to be Secretary of Legation at Stockholm; and Augustus Craven, esq. (now First Attaché at Brussels) to be Secretary of Legation at Stutgardt.-75th Foot, Major R. D. Hallifax to be Lieut.-Colonel; brevet Major J. H. England to be Major.

Dec. 13. The Right Hon, Richard Pakenham, sworn of Her Majesty's Privy Council. -John Gregory, esq. to be one of Her Majesty's Hon. Corps of Gentlemen at Arms.

Dec. 14. Lieut.-Col. James M'Laren, C.B. 16th Bengal N. Inf. to accept the Order of the Dooranée empire of the third class.

Dec. 15. Paul Iyy Sterling, esq. to be Attorney General for the island of Hong Kong. 13th Foot, brevet Col. Sir R. H. Sale, G.C.B., to be Colonel; Major H. N. Vigors to be Lieut.Col.; Capt. R. M. Meredith to be Major.Brevet Col. P. Brown, on half-pay Unattached, to be Commandant of the Royal Military Asylum at Chelsea.

Dec. 22. Col. Edmund Morris, C.B., to be Civil Commissioner and Magistrate for the district of George, Cape of Good Hope.7th Dragoon Guards, Major Robert Richardson to be Lieut.-Col.; Capt. T. Le Marchant to be Major.-44th Foot, Capt. A. H. Ferryman, to be Major.

Dec. 23. The Marquess of Granby to be a Lord of the Bedchamber, and Admiral Lord Colville an extra Lord of the Bedchamber, to his Royal Highness Prince Albert.

NAVAL PROMOTIONS.

Promotions. - Lieutenants, Sir W. Hoste, Bart. C. W. Mathison (Flag Lieutenant to Admiral Sir C. Rowley), and J. Moore (son of the late Sir Graham Moore), to the rank of Commander.

Appointments.-Commander R. B. H. Rowley, to the Satellite; Commander W. Chambers, to the Albion; Thomas Read, to the outpension of Greenwich; T. H. Mason, and J. E. Bingham, to the Royal Naval College; J. Wolfe, to the Tartarus.

Member returned to serve in Parliament. Kilkenny Co.-Pierce Somerset Butler, esq.

ECCLESIASTICAL PREFERMENTS.

Rev. W. B. Knight, to be Dean of Llandaff.
Rev. W. M. Wade, to be Dean of Glasgow.
Rev. John Sinclair, M.A. to be Archdeacon of
Middlesex.

Rev. W. Crawley, to the new Archdeaconry of
Monmouth.

Rev. J. Garbett, to be Preb, of Chichester.
Rev. H. Woolcombe, to be Preb. of Exeter.
Rev. R. C. Clifton, to be Canon of Manchester.
Rev. E. Brown, to be a Minor Canon of Carlisle.
Rev. W. G. Allfree, Southease R. Sussex.
Rev. H. Ashington, Quarrington R. Linc.
Rev. T. Booth, Bedingham V. Norf.

Rev. W. J. Butler, Aston Tirrold R. Berks.
Rev. W. A. C. B. Cave, Stretton-en-le-Fields
R. Derb.

Rev. W. K. Clay, Holy Trinity P. C. Ely.
Rev. R. Cowpland, Hints and Weeford P. C.
Staffordshire.

Rev. J. C. Crawley, St. John's R. Cornwall.
Rev. C. Day, St. Swithen's R. Norwich.
Rev. H. Elliott, Castle Sowerby V. Cumberl.
Rev. W. Grigson, Whinburgh and Westfield
R. R. Norfolk.

Rev. B. Guest, St. Katharine's P. C. Northampton.

Rev. L. Guthrie, Cranley R. Surrey.
Rev. J. Hutchinson, Blurton P. C. Staff.
Rev. C. H. Hutton, Tubney R. Berks.
Rev. H. B. Jones, St. Paul's, Werneth P. C.
Cheshire.

Rev. R. H. King, Broomswell R. Suffolk.
Rev. T. Knox, Runwell and Ramsden R. R.
Grays, Essex.

Rev. R. Leigh, Halsall R. Lanc.

Rev. E. A. Litton, St. Thomas's, Stockton
Heath P. C. Cheshire.

Rev. S. J. Lott, Bradninch P. C. Devon.
Rev. H. M. Marewell, Frampton V. Dorset.
Rev. J. Middleton, Brompton P. C. Yorksh.
Rev. C. R. Muston, St. John's P. C. Moulsham,
Essex.

Rev. H. L. Oswell, Stoulton P. C. Wors.
Rev. W. Parkinson, Langenhoe R. Essex.
Rev. W. Parks, St. Barnabas Openshaw P. C.
Manchester.

Rev. E. Pigot, Longridge P. C. Lanc.
Rev. E. Richardson, Trinity Church P. C.
Louth, Linc.

Rev. W. Richardson, Stainforth P. C. Yorksh.
Rev. L. Sanders, Whimple R. Devon.
Rev. J. Shackley, Osbaldwick V. York.
Rev. J. P. Simpson, Crofton R. York.
Rev. G. W. Stratton, Ayleston R. Leic.
Rev. T. Trevanion, Whitby P. C. York.
Rev. F. E. Tuson, Minty V. Wilts.

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CIVIL PREFERMENTS.

Rev. William Thompson, to be Principal of St. Edmund hall, Oxford.

Rev. Dr. Jelf, to be Principal of King's College, London.

Rev. H. Melvill, to be Principal of the Hon. East India Company's College at Haileybury.

Rev. W. Singleton, M.A. to be Principal of Kingston College, Hull.

A. Easther, esq. B.A. to be Vice-principal of the Collegiate School, Huddersfield, Yorksh. John Robert Kenyon, esq. D.C.L., Fellow of All Souls, to be Vinerian Professor of Common Law at Oxford.

Mr. George Weidemann, Fellow of Catharine Hall, Camb. to be Professor of Bishop's College, Calcutta.

Rev. G. C. Hodgkinson, M.A. to be Second Master of the Grammar School, Bury St. Edmund's.

Rev. A. Anderson, M.A. to be Master of the Diocesan School at Newport.

The Rev. W. J. Kennedy, M.A. (Curate of Kensington), to be Secretary of the National Society.

Sir Augustus Callcott, R.A. to be Keeper of Her Majesty's Pictures.

C. L. Eastlake, esq. R.A. to be Inspector of the National Gallery.

BIRTHS.

Nov. 6. At Gibraltar, on board the Great Liverpool, the wife of Major T. T. Pears, C. B. a dau.. -16. At Pearl-hill, near Southampton, the Hon. Mrs. Harris, a son.-17. At Durham, Viscountess Chelsea, a dau.-20. At Naples, the wife of Major Darby Griffith, dau. of the Hon. Baron Dimsdale, a dau.-21. At Stafford-house, the Duchess of Sutherland, a SOD.-At Cranhill-house, near Bath, the wife of Simon Digby, esq. a dau.-22. In Dublin, the wife of the Rev. Sidney Smith, D.D. a son.

-25. At Fernhill, Shropsh. the Hon. Mrs. Lovett, a son.- -At Warham Rectory, Norfolk, the wife of the Hon. and Rev. Thomas Keppel, a son.In Portman-sq. the Hon. Mrs. Adderley, a dau.-28. At St. Helen's, Derby, the wife of Edward Strutt, esq. M.P. a son. At Cahir, Tipperary, the wife of Col. Vandeleur, 10th Hussars, a son.- -29. At Imberhorne, near Eastgrinstead, Sussex, the wife of Frederick C. Worsley, esq. a dau.-At Clifton, the wife of C. T. Alleyne, esq. a son.

30. The wife of Robert Bristow, esq. Broxmore-park, Wilts. a son and heir.

Lately. In Grenville-st. Brunswick-sq. the wife of Harry Selfe Selfe, esq. Recorder of Newbury, a son.- -The wife of E. A. Holden, esq. of Aston-hall, co. Derby, a son.-At Bolton-le-Moors, the wife of Lieut.-Col. Malet, a son. At Seend, Wilts, the wife of Ludlow Bruges, esq. late M.P. for Bath, a dau.

Dec. 1. At Longwood, Hants, the Countess of Northesk, a son and heir.-2. At Broadlands, near Romsey, the Viscountess Jocelyn, a dau.- -At Formosa-cottage, Berks, the lady of Sir George Young, Bart. a son.-5. At Peamore, the wife of Samuel Trehawke Kekewich, esq. a dau.At Farleigh-castle, Somerset, the wife of Henry Baskerville, esq. a

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Sept. 20. At Nusseerabad, Lieut. Matthew Ward, 4th Bengal Cav. (Lancers), third son of William Ward, esq. of Connaught-ter. late M.P. for the City of London, to Mary-Ann, eldest dau. of Capt. S. Nash, of the same regt. He died seven days after.

Oct. 10. At Kaioa, Guzzerat, the Rev. Geo. Luscombe Allen, to Sarah, third dau. of the late Thomas Parkinson, esq. of Brook-st. and Kemsing, Kent.

20. At Calcutta, Francis Buller Templer, esq. of her Majesty's regt. and only son of F. J. Templer, esq. of Columbo, Ceylon, to Emma, eldest dau. of Thomas E. M. Turton, esq. Registrar of the Supreme Court.

30. At Walmer, Simon Watson Taylor, esq. of Edinburgh, to Lady Charlotte Hay, dau. of the Marquess of Tweeddale.- -At Bombay, Capt. W. C. Barker, commanding the Hon. Company's steamer Victoria, to Miss Strong, niece of John Pinder, esq. of York-gate, Regent's-park.

31. At Enfield, Middlesex, Edward Caie Tyte, esq. of Harrow, eldest son of Capt. Tyte, R.N. to Fanny, youngest dau. of William Henry Holt, esq. of Enfield, M.D.-At Milton, Kent, William Lee, esq. Capt. R.M. to Mary-Anne, youngest dau. of the late Capt. Mundell, 69th regt.-At Tor, the Rev. T. Shelford, Rector of Lambourne, Essex, to Eliza-Jane, dau. of the late Count de Vismes, of Exmouth, and relict of J. Kane, esq. of Withycombe, Devon.-At St. Gluvias, Jas. Henderson, esq. Royal Dock-yard, Devonport, to Margaret-Anne, dau. of William Kirkness, esq. of Cernick, Cornwall.

Lately. At Florence, the Hon. H. Dudley Ward to Eleanor-Louisa, dau. of T. Hawkes, esq. M. P. At Lewisham, Major A. B. Stransham, R.M., to Eliza, dau. of H. Coombe, esq.At Portsmouth, Viscount Kenmure, to Mary-Anne, dau. of the late James Wildey, esq.At Berne, Hugh Montgomery, esq. to Maria, dau. of the Baron de Fellenberg. John Jocelyn Foulkes, esq. of Erriviatt, co. Denbigh, North Wales, to Beauchamp, eldest dau, of Sir William Beauchamp Proctor, Bart. of Langley-park, Norfolk. The Rev. Henry Glynne, brother of Sir Stephen Glynne, Bart. M.P. to the Hon. Miss Lavinia Lyttelton, dau. of the Dowager Lady Lyttleton, and niece to Earl Spencer. At Brighton, Wm. Easterton, esq. of Manor-house, Chelsea, to Anne, relict of John Allen Cooper, esq. formerly of Cumberwell-park, Wilts.

Nov. 1. At Finsbury Chapel, Charles C. Hennell, esq. of Hackney, to ElizabethRebecca, dau. of R. H. Brabant, esq. M. D. of Devizes.At Dovercourt, Lieut. Thomas Wood, R. N. to Susannah, only dau. of Lieut. Stephens, R.N. of Dovercourt.- -At Dawlish, the Rev. James Hoare Moor, M. A. of Magdalen Coll. Oxf., to Emma-Jane, youngest dau. of the late Capt. G. G. Maitland, Madras European Regt. At the British Embassy, Vienna, the Earl of Shelburne, to the Hon,

Emily Elphinstone de Flahault, eldest dau. of the Comte de Flahault, French Ambassador at Vienna, and the Baroness Keith and Nairn.

-At Albourne, the Rev. Augustus Packe, youngest son of the late C. J. Packe, esq. of Prestwould Hall, co. Leicester, to Frances. Henrietta, youngest dau. of W. I. Campion, esq. of Danny Park.

2. At Stepney, Mr. Wasey James Newman, of Ampers Wick, St. Osyth, Essex, fourth son of the late Rev. John Newman, M. A. Vicar of Witham and Childerditch, to EmmaMaria, only dau. of Mr. Robert Large, of Great Clacton.- -At Ardoyne, the Rev. L. E. G. Clarke, Rector of Kinnersley, son of J. A. G. Clarke, esq. of Kinnersley Castle, Herefordsh. to Isabella-Horatia, third dau. of Sir Thomas Butler, Bart. of Ballin Temple, co. Carlow. At Hadlow, W. Martin, esq. of East Peckham, Kent, to Ann, second dau. of W. Simmons, esq. of Hadlow. -At Lewisham, Major Anthony B. Stransham, R.M. to Eliza, eldest dau. of Harvey Coombe, esq.- -At St. Marylebone, Henry Myers, esq. of Milton-st. Dorset-sq. to Mary, dau. of the late William Whitehead, esq.-At Paddington, the Rev. Joseph Salt, Perpetual Curate of Penkridge, Staffordsh. fourth son of J. S. Salt, esq. of Russell-sq. to Fanny, second dau. of Henry Alexander, esq. of Clarendon-pl. Hyde Park.

At Fulham, the Rev. Henry Brown, M.A., Incumbent of St. James's, Curtain-road, to Maria, eldest dau. of the Lord Bishop of London.

4. At Marlborough, Stephen Brown, esq. of Wye House, Marlborough, to Elizabetli, eldest dau. of the late John Brown, esq. of Avebury, Wilts.At St. George's, Hanoversq. George Bulkeley Tattersail, esq. of the Ceylon Rifle Regt. to Sybylla-Jane, dau. of the late Rev. John Baker, Vicar of ThorpeArch, Yorksh. and of Westbourne, Sussex.

At Plymouth, George L. Norcock, esq. Lieut. H.M.S. St. Vincent, Portsmouth, to Isabella-Mary, eldest dau. of the late Major Jenkins, 11th Hussars.- -At Bermudas, the Hon. John Noble Harvey, Speaker of the House of Assembly, to Martha, relict of Lieut. C. Esten Hutchison, R.N. and youngest dau. of the late Samuel Brownlow, esq. of those Islands. -At Malta, Lieut. Lionel-Mead Place, esq. H.M.S. Queen, youngest son of the late Rev. John Conyers Place, of Marnhull, Dorset, to Annie, dau. of the late Samuel Woodhouse, esq. of Nuley-hall, Cheshire, and Bronti-house, near Liverpool.

6. At All Souls', Langham-pl. William Jas. Jameson Higgens, esq. of Fairfield, Hamble. don, to Charlotte-Mary, youngest dau. of the late Capt. John Whyte, R.N. of Yapton House, Sussex. --At Montreal, the Rev. Henry Hazard, Missionary, of Sherrington, to Priscilla, dau. of the late James Wilkinson, esq. of London.

7. At Baverstock, the Rev. Charles Raikes Davy, only son of Lieut.-Gen. Sir William G. Davy, C.B. and K.C.H. of Tracey Park, Glouc. to Catherine-Augusta, youngest dau. of Alex. Powell, esq. of Hurdcott, Wilts, and granddau. of the Lord Bishop of Bath and Wells.

-At Aston, the Rev. M. Thomas, Vicar of Tuddenham, Suffolk, to Mary-Campbell, second dau. of Thomas Hinton Hasluck, esq. of Bir. mingham. --At St. Martin's-in-the Fields, Lieut. Hayes Marriott, Royal Mar., to Louisa, only dau. of the late Col. Hamilton, C. B. 30th Foot. -At Ribbesford, the Rev. John Ryle Wood, Domestic Chaplain to the Queen Dowager, and Canon of Worcester, to MarianneElizabeth, youngest dau. of the Rev. Edw. W. Ingram, of Ribbesford, Worc.At Horwood, the Rev. W. H. Carwithen, M.A. Rector

of Challacombe, to Louisa-Albertina, second dau. of the Rev. J. Dene, of Horwood House.

At Barnstaple, the Rev. Joshua Willoughby Bryan, Rector of Cliddesden, Hants, to EllenSusanna, dau. of the late Rev. Bouchier Marshall, Rector of Bow.-At Grimstone, Norfolk, the Rev. W. C. Fearon, M.A. of St. John's Coll. Cambride, to Eliza, eldest dau. of the Rev. Wm. Forge, M. A., Rector of King's Stanley, Gloucestershire.- -At Stepney, H. P. West, esq. to Sarah, dau. of Capt. Townsend, 60th Rifle Corps.- At Brighton, George M. Livesay, esq. to Henrietta-Phylia; and at the same time J. R. Diamond, esq. youngest son of W. B. Diamond, esq. to Amelia, daus. of the late Horace Ellis, esq. of Horsham.At St. George's, Bloomsbury, Hugh-Lennox, second son of H. H. Mortimer, esq. of Upper Tooting, to Eliza-Watson, second dau. of the late Charles Bartrum, esq. of Peckham.

8. At Buckland, Surrey, Rev. Henry Samuel Eyre, M.A. eldest son of Walpole Eyre, esq. of Bryanston-sq. to Maria-Charlotte, second dau. of the late John Carbonell, esq.--At Camberwell, Joseph Tritton, esq. of Olney Lodge, Battersea, to Amelia, dau. of Joseph Hanson, esq. of the Grove, Camberwell.At Madron, George Dennis John, esq. solicitor, of Penzance, to Wilmot-Anne, only dau. of the late George Hichens, esq. of Penzance. At Quinton, Northamptonsh. the Rev. W. A. Frances, M.A. Curate of Paglesham, Essex, to Emily, second dau. of the Rev. S. B. Ward, Rector of Quinton.-At Swanage, the Rev. T. Grey Clarke, to Matilda-Barbara, dau. of Mrs. Coventry, of the Grove, Swanage.

9. At Compton Valence, the Rev. Edward Wilson, Vicar of Whitchurch Canonicorum, Dorset, to Anne-Louisa Ward, dau. of the late Bishop of Sodor and Man.-At Edinburgh, Jas. Matheson, esq. of Achany, M.P. for Ashburton, to Mary-Jane, fourth dau. of the late Michael Henry Perceval, esq.

-At Tunbridge Wells, Capt. G. S. Reynolds, R.N. to Eliza-Susannah, second dau. of the late James Walker, esq. of Blackheath.At Trinity Church, Marylebone, Edmund Ludlow, esq. of Weymouth-st. Portland-pl. to Mrs. Rooke, late of Bengeo, Herts. At Amsterdam, and on the following day at the Hague, John-Leonard Woltenbeck, esq. to ElizabethGrant, youngest dau. of the late Francis Barrow, esq. of Rochester, Kent.

13. First according to the rites of the Catholic Church, and afterwards at Leamington, Baron Adolph Philipp Ernest de Weiler, First Lieut. of the 1st regt. of Dragoons, in the service of the Grand Duke of Baden, to Louisa, dau. of the late William Le Blanc, esq. of Pippingford-lodge, Sussex.

14. At Stonehouse, Lieut. Harry P. Veitch, of H.M.S. Excellent, to Georgiana-Omanney, youngest dau. of Capt. J. Lawrence, C.B., R.N.At Saxmundham, Suffolk, Jane, fourth dau. of the late John Woods, esq. of Darsham Cottage, to Edward Lubbock, esq. M.D. of Norwich. At St. Margaret's, Westminster, Henry Macgregor Clark, esq. to Anne, dau. of David Robertson, esq. of Great George-street, Westminster. -George, fourth son of William-Mitchell Innes, esq. of Parson's-green, near Edinburgh, to Mary-Lillias, eldest dau. of the Rev. Edwin Sandys Lumsdaine, of Lumsdaine, and rector of Upper Hardres, Kent. At York, Thomas Garnett, esq. of Bingley, to Margaret, dau. of the Rev. John Ogle, M.A. rector of Hunsingore, and sister of the Rev. J. Ogle, M.A. rector of Boston.

15. At Craigdarroch, Dumfriesshire, John George Jarvis, Capt. 52d Light Inf. third son of Col. Jarvis, of Doddington Hall, Lincolnsh. to Philadelphia, youngest dau. of the late

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