Imágenes de página
PDF
ePub

burgh, the Hon. Baron Rutherford, of Fairníngton. Mrs. Newton, of Charles-street, Berkley-square, widow of Dr. Newton, late Lord Bishop of Bristol. At his house in bitchfield-street, Soho, Mr. John Gerrard, Auctioneer. Mrs. Lyall, widow of Mr. John Lyall, of Thetford, Banker, whom she survived but a month and three days. At his house in the Exchequer, Westminster, in the 74th year of his age, the Most Noble Henry Fienmes Pelham Clinton, Duke of Newcastle upon Tyne, and Newcastle under Line, Earl of Lincoln, Lord Lieutenant and Cuftos Rotulorum of the county of Nottingham, Steward, Keeper, and Guardian of the Forest of Sherwood, and Park of Folewood, in Nottinghamshire, High Steward of East Retford, Auditor of his Majesty's Exchequer, Comptroller of the Customs in the port of London, High Steward of Westminster, President of the Westminster Hospital, Knight of the Garter, L. L. D. and F. R. S. His Grace is succeeded in his titles and estates by his only son, the Right Hon. Thomas Pelham Clinton, Earl of Lincoln, now Duke of Newcastle, who is mar ried, and has issue. Sir William Burnaby, Bart. of Broughton, in Oxfordshire, a Captain in his Majesty's navy. At his house in St. James's Place, Sir Francis Drake, Bart. Mr. John Skutt, Attorney, and ore of the Clerks to the Commissioners of the Court of Requests for the Tower Hamlets. At Chatham, Lieutenant Bunbury, who was wounded by his antagonist in a duel a few days since at Brompton. Captain Harvey, late of the Wivenhoe cutter. The Rev. W. Hughes, vicar of All Saints, Northampton. At Nassau, New-Providence, Major Sir Henry Marr, Knt. of his Majesty's 47th regiment this gallant veteran commenced his military career under General Braddock, and was in the action in which that unfortunate officer lost his life. Capt. James Turing, of the Madras Establishment, brother to Sir Rob. Turing, Bart, at the Fort of Panagra, which he commanded. Thomas Brand, Esq. of the Hoo, in Hertfordshire. At Woolwich, in the 96th year of his age, Dr. Irwin, Surgeon General to the OrdSir John Sebright, of Beachwood, Herts, Bart. a General in the army, and Colonel of the 18th regiment of foot. In the East-Indies, Mr. Caleb Tripass, formerly of the Contractor East-Indiaman. At Dublin, the Rev. Thomas Hastings, L. L. D.. Archdeacon of Dublin, Vicar-General of the Dioceses of Dublin and Clogher, Rector of St. Peter's, &c. George Middleton, Esq. comptroller of the customs at Leith. At her house in Lower Brook-street, the Right Hon. the Countess of Digby. At Stamford Baron, aged 84, the Rev. Michael Tyson, Dean of Stamford, Archdeacon of Huntingdon, rector of Gretford in Lincolnshire, and of Wittering in Northamptonshire. The Rev. William Young, A. M. Archdeacon of Norwich, Rector of Threxton, and vicar of Swaffham, both in Norfolk. The Right Honourable Maria, Lady Eardley: her Ladyship was the daughter of Sir Eardley Wilmot, Lord Chief Juftice of the Coura of Common Pleas, and was married to his Lordship in 1766. At Hanover, Colonel Van Sporck. At his house in Lincoln's-Inn Fields, aged 84, the Hon. Sir Henry Gould, Knt. one of his Majesty's Justices of the Court of Common Pleas, which distinguished office he had held upwards of thirty years. Aged 80, Samuel Chamberlayn, Esq. of Drake-street, Red Lion square. At the Countess of Mornington's, the Right Hon. Lady Mary Wesley, sister to the present Earl of Mornington. At Bath, Samuel Stephens, Esq. of Tregenna Castle, Cornwall. Major Gore, Deputy Lieut. Governor of the Tower. Rev. William Steggall, Rector of Wyverstone and Hawstead, both in Suffolk. At her house in Queen-Ann-street East, Lady Jane Buller, in the 75th year of her age: she was daughter to the late Earl Bathurst, and mother to the Hon. Mr. Justice Buller. In child- bed, the Right Hon. Lady Catherine Rodney, wife of the second son of the late Lord Rodney, and sister of the present Earl of Westmeath, of the kingdom of Ireland. At Newport, Isle of Wight, the Rev. Mr. Dickenson, Mayor of that town. At Stubbings, on Maidenhead Thicket, Charles Ambler, Esq.

nance.

1

BANKRUPTS.

John Warwick, of Friday-street, London, warehouseman. John Anderson, of Holborn, London, bookseller. William Peter Watson, of Selby, Yorkshire, mercer. Richard Boxall, of Duke-street, St. Mary-le-bonne, victualler. William Pennington, late of Halliwell, Lancashire, manufacturer. Thomas Liddiard, of Great Pulteneystreet, Westminster, carpenter. William Williams, of Lambeth Burts, Surrey, broker. William Pearne, of Leicester-square, hardwareman. Thomas Moss, late of

[ocr errors]

Charing Cross, taylor. Jonas Freemantle, of Gray's Inn-lane, horse-dealer. Richard Watson, of Upton Magna, Salop, iron-master. Anthony Calvert, of New-street, Covent Garden, glass-seller. John Humphreys, of Webb-street, in the parish of St. Olave in the Borough of Southwark, victualler. John Lawrence, Thomas Yates, and David Holt, all of Manchester, in the county of Lancaster, cotton spinners. Peter Morris and Peter Morris the younger, both of the city of Bristol, carpenters. John Haywood, of Birmingham, brass-founder. Daniel Sinclair, of Conduit Vale, Greenwich, Kent, master mariner. John Seller, late of Garlick-Hill, London, glassseller. Robert Capps, of St. Margaret's Hill, Southwark, vintner. Richard Roche, of Bow-street, Covent Garden, haberdasher. Humphry Clarke, of Ausley, Warwickshire, maltster. Thomas Gray, of Camberwell, Surrey, malt-factor. Joseph Smith, of Stanhope-street, and late of Knightsbridge, money-scrivener. Thomas Woodford, of Bath, linen-draper. William Watts, of Bristol, plumber and shot-maker. John Tull, of Lower Brook-street, Grosvenor-square, dealer. Stephen Moorhouse, of Aberford, Yorkshire, mercer. Charles Gilbert the elder, Charles Gilbert the younger, and William Atkins, of St. George's-Fields, back-makers. John Sanders, of Chipstead in Surrey, coal-dealer. Richard Lloyd, of Lewes, draper. Thomas Shipway, of Hoxton, scavenger. Thomas Raymond, of Southampton, ship-builder. Hammond Nicholls, of Canterbury, watchmaker. John Lynam, High-street, Southwark, hatter. Thomas Weaver, of Oxford-street, carpenter. William Mason, of Leeds, tanner. Thomas Chambre, of Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, money-scrivener. Stephen Carter, of White-Horse-yard, Drury-lane, woollen-draper. James Bell the younger, of Thornton in Craven, Yorkshire, dealer. John Conrad Treiby, of Great Russelstreet, Covent-Garden, haberdasher. William Gillett, of Bristol, brewer. James Fletcher, of Manchester, cotton-manufacturer, Richard Bentley, of Manchester, cotton-manufacturer. John Smith, of Birmingham, millwright. Joseph Boardman Orme, of Manchester, hardwareman. William Whittaker, of Manchester, merchant. William Line, of Hayfield, Derbyshire, cotton-spinner. John Carrington of Manchester, maltster. James Hulley, of Hurst-Brook, in Ashton-under-Line, cottonmanufacturer. Thomas James, of Oswestry, in Salop, grocer. Edward Jones, of Bridgend, Glamorganshire, sadler. Edward Harvey and John Dye, of St. Martin's-leGrand, Newgate-street, warehousemen. Edward Thompson the younger, of Cambridge, cabinet-maker. Thomas Holgate of Rochdale, in the County Palatine of Lancaster, sadler. John Kayley of Grindleton, Yorkshire, maltster. Thomas Lloyd, of Broseley, in Salop, dealer in coals. John Tarrant, of Ramsbury, Wiltshire, innholder. William Burge, of Bath, money-scrivener. Charles Johnson and John Lyon 'Tomlinson, of Oxford-street, linen-drapers. William Page, of Erdington, in Aston, near Birmingham, butcher. Thomas Babbs, of Finchingfield, near Saffron-walden, Essex, tanner. Thomas Jones, of Cateaton-street, London, Manchester-warehouseman. Jacob Hall, of Newcastle upon Tyne, hatter. John Jackson, of Upper Berkley. street, St. Mary-le-bonne, apothecary and man-midwife. Jacob Mendes Da Costa, Richard Matson, and John Bible, of Thames-street, druggists. Dennis Howard, of Peterborough, Northamptonshire, shopkeeper. William Charter, of Brambam, Yorkshire, maltster. Edwin Humphry Sundys, of Kingston, Kent, money-scrivener. Richard Watenhall, late of Pall-mall, wax-chandler. John Linghard, late of Rathboneplace, Middlesex, haberdasher. Thomas Ward and Richard Claxton, of Brook-street, New Road, St. Pancras, carpenters. William Zachary and Samuel Glaister, of Shoreditch, brewers. John Bellingham, of Oxford-street, St. Mary-le-bonne, tin-plate worker. Richard Phillips, of Little St. Martin's-lane, Long Acre, coal-merchant. Jesse Marchant, of Burwash, Sussex, carrier. Moses Taylor, of Walsall, Staffordshire, plater. William Wilcox, of Bath, haberdasher. John Sykes, late of Newport, Essex, maltster. Stephen Young, late of Burford, Oxfordshire, fellmonger. Richard Bounsall, of Long Acre, victualler. John Close, of Paradise-row, Chelsea, cabinetmaker. John Slack, of Manchester, cotton-dealer. Edmund Taylor, of Newton, Lancashire, tanner. William Duncan, of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, cabinet maker. Peter Sefton, and John Sefton, of Blackburn, Lancashire, cotton-manufacturers. Richard Anstee Sheppard, of Bath, money-scrivener. Joshua Broadhead, of Manchester, ironmonger. James Laman, of Leadenhall-street, London, grocer. Charles Le Caan, of Bankside, Southwark, coal-merchant. John Arnaud, of Greek-street, Soho, confectioner, Charles Pitt, of Paradise-street, Mary-le-bonne, mason.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS.

In our next we shall continue the very valuable Remarks on Druidism, from Mr. Polwhele's History of Devonshire, which came, too late for insertion in the present number.

The Song by Brother J. B. though possessing a peculiar kind of merit, is too incorrect, and something too ludicrous for the Freemasons' Magazine, which depends for support on the purity of its composition.

Our thanks are due to Amicus for his packet, and still more for his offer of future assistance; the legal essay, he will perceive on reflection, is better adapted to a newspaper than to any other mode of publication. The Impeachment (from its age) one half of our readers would not understand; the other half would not thank us for it. The Lines on the Great Duke of Marlborough's Departure for Germany, are not interesting enough for publication at this time. But though Amicus has rather misunderstood the nature of our Work in the present instance, we shall be sincerely thankful for his assistance on subjects of science or entertainment.

A Portrait of Thomas Banks, Esq. R. A. from a painting by James Northcote, Esq. R. A.-with Biography; the Masonic Ode by Mr. William Walker; and the Hint, in our next.

In No. XII. we shall detail our plan for engraving the Portraits in the Grand Hall, under the sanction of the Grand Lodge unanimously conferred on the Proprietor

at the last Quarterly Communication.

We must entreat our Correspondents, who wish an early insertion of their favours, that they will transmit them on or before the 8th day of every month.

04

Any of the Portraits contained in this work may be had in frames, handsomely gilt and glazed, at 3s. each, by applying at the BRITISH LETTER-FOUNDRY, Bream's Buildings, Chancery-lane, where Communications for the Proprietor will be thankfully received.

Subscribers may have their Volumes bound, by sending them to the British Foundry ás above.

[blocks in formation]
« AnteriorContinuar »