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daughter of J. S. Brownrigg,
for Boston

Amherstburgh, Canada West,
Je, Deputy Assistant-
General to Agnes, second
Miquor Mutir, Royal Canadian

Welissaune, Warwickshire,
Femmng esy, Bordesley Park,
Catherine Hester, only
Hagt. Davies Griffith, esq.,
Jaffer vonshire.

Nician's Church, Toxteth, Giber Sandbach, Rector of Sam Hadirshire, to Margaret, wter of the late Archibald 6. of Kehre, Kirkcudbright

Regue Church, the Rev. im Hiuras, second son of the Four & lochester Rector of ChiselPar Catherine, third daughter

& Serge's Hanover-square. Lane, of Watnall Hall, NP. for the South f the same county, to Eleanor no saving daughter of the Ame Fraser.

Ninas Church Brighton, Jam Fed Bart, to CorLa cast dughter of General recording

NOVEMBER

Cosme Church, George

Jer's Road Regiment, r-Geen Tobin, RA to der of Thomas WilSoman, Langstone, Devon,

$ & C's Hanover square, Gaste Pages Esp. Royal Free ungest en of the late Fun Persies Pages in Georgiana Theomy child of the Res. J. F. Moore Base of Gandeson Park. Herts. 4. & S. Gerge's Hanover-square, Hagt H. Seymour, es, to Georgiana, marice of Liester-General Robert Elace.

At Digswel Hertfordshire, Sir Jacob Henry Preston Bart, of Beeston Norfolk, to Amelia, youngest daughof the late William Wughby Prestt, esq., of Hendon, Middlesex.

At Whitby, Yorkshire, the Rev. G. J. Morehead, M. A., Rector of Easingin, to Frances Alicia, eldest daughter of he late Major F. Smalpage, Bengal valry.

MARRIAGES.

5. At Trinity Church, Ryde, Isle of Wight, Arthur Oakes, esq., of her Majesty's 13th (Prince Albert's) Light Infantry, to Sarah Caroline, second daughter of the late Rev. J. Bushnell, Vicar of Beanham Valance, Berks.

7. At St. Peter's, Eaton-square, the Earl of Elgin and Kincardine, to the Lady Mary Louisa Lambton, eldest daughter of the late Earl of Durham.

10. At Waltham Abbey, Philip Melmoth Nelson Guy, esq., Captain in her Majesty's 5th Fusileers, to Anne Elizabeth, eldest daughter of Captain J. H. Plumridge, R. N., M.P.

In London, the Marquis of Ailsa, to Julia, second daughter of the late Sir Richard Mounteney Jephson, Bart.

--

At Dalham Hall, Suffolk, the Rev. S. Charles, M. A. of Trinity College, Cambridge, to Marian, youngest daughter of the Rev. Sir Robert Affleck, Bart., of Dalham Hall, and grand-daughter of the late Hon. Sir Elijah Impey, Chief Justice of Bengal.

At Rippingale, the Rev. Henry Harris, A. M., Vicar of Horbling, to Mrs. Thomas Darby, second daughter of the Rev. W. T. Waters, Rector of the former place.

12. At Trinity Church, Marylebone, J. Ireland Blackburne, esq., Captain 5th Dragoon Guards, only son of John Ireland Blackburne, esq., M. P., of Hale, Lancashire, to Mary, eldest daughter of Sir Henry Bold Hoghton, Bart., of Hoghton Tower, in the same county.

At Stoke Church, Plymouth, Frederick John O. Evans, esq., R. N., to Elizabeth Mary, eldest daughter of Captain Charles Hall, R.N., Stoke.

At Llanarth Chapel, according to the rites of the Roman Catholic Church, and afterwards at the parish church of Llanover, John Arthur Jones, esq., eldest son of John Jones, esq., and the Lady Harriet Jones, of Llanarth Court and Treowen, Monmouthshire, to Augusta Charlotte Elizabeth, only child of Sir Benjamin Hall, Bart., of Llanover Court and Abercarne, in the same county.

At Wokingham, the Rev. Henry Le Grand Boyce, M. A., to Cordelia, eldest daughter of Captain Henry Browne Mason, R.N., of Hillfield, Yateley, Hants.

16. At Bruck in Styria, the Duc de Bordeaux (son of the Duc de Berri, and claiming to be King of France), to the Princess Theresa of Modena.

17. At St. George's, Hanover-square, Lieutenant-Colonel Everest,

George

F. R. S., late Surveyor-General of India, of Claybrook Hall, Leicestershire, to Emma, eldest daughter of Thomas Wing, esq., of Gray's Inn, and Hampstead, Middlesex.

--

At St. John's, Paddington, the Rev. Charles Burney, M. A., Incumbent of St. James the Apostle, Greensted Green, eldest son of the Venerable Archdeacon Burney, to Mary, eldest daughter of the late Lieutenant-Colonel John Carmichael.

- At Blithfield Hall, Staffordshire, Captain H. Bagot, R. N., second son of the Bishop of Bath and Wells, to Miss Frederica W. Bagot, youngest daughter of the late Right Hon. Sir Charles Bagot.

At Dunchideock, the Rev. Henry Palk, Rector of Bridford, second son of Sir Lawrence Vaughan Palk, Bart., of Haldon House, to Isabella Mary, daughter of James Pitman, esq., of Dunchideock House.

21. At the Sardinian Embassy Chapel, Miles Gerald Keon, esq., only son of the late Miles Keon, esq., and the Countess Magawley, of Keon Brooke, Leitrim, to Ann de la Pierre, second daughter of Major Hawkes, late of her Majesty's 21st Light Dragoons.

24. At Christ Church, Albany-street, the Rev. William Whitehead, Fellow of Worcester College, Oxford, and Curate of Camberwell, to Harriet, youngest daughter of the late Rev. Richard Loxham, Rector of Halsall, Lancashire, and Incumbent of St. John's, Liverpool.

At Muff, county of Londonderry, John Scaife, esq., to Emily Sarah Frances, eldest daughter of the late LieutenantColonel H. W. Wilkinson and Lady Hesilrigge.

25. At St. Thomas's, Dublin, Henry Brownrigg, esq., only son of Thomas Brownrigg, esq., of Greenfield, County Dublin, to Mary Matilda, eldest daughter of the late Capt. Alexander Hanna, 56th Regiment.

26. At Welwyn, Herts, the Hon. and Rev. Richard Godolphin Henry Hastings, youngest son of the late and brother of the present Earl of Huntingdon, to Agnes, the sixth daughter of Henry Fynes Clinton, esq., of Welwyn.

At St. Peter's, Dublin, John Scudamore, esq., to Anne, relict of John Holland, esq., Lieutenant R. N., and daughter of the late Capt. William Boxer, R. N.

28. At St. George's Hanover-square, the Hon. Beilby Lawley, eldest son of Lord Wenlock, to the Lady Elizabeth Grosvenor, third daughter of the Marquis of Westminster.

MARRIAGES.

At St. James's, Dover, the Rev. Robert Twigg, A. M., Vicar of Tilmanstone, Kent, fourth son of the late Rev. Thomas Twigg, Vicar of St. Stephen's, Coleman-street, to Ann Frances, youngest daughter of the late Charles Green, esq.

DECEMBER.

1. At Broughton, Oxfordshire, the Rev. Thomas Dend, M. A., Rector of Blechington, in the same county, to Elizabeth Susan Ann, only daughter of the Rev. C. F. Wyatt, M. A., Rector of Broughton.

At Bathford Church, Bath, Fitzjames Stuart Macgregor, esq., son of Lieutenant-General J. A. Paul Macgregor, Bathford House, to Louisa Jane, daughter of John Wiltshire, esq., of Shockerwick.

2. At Currie House, Borthwick Ebenezer Wallace, esq., writer to the Signet, to Isabella, youngest surviving daughter of the late Ralph Hardie, esq.

3. At Walcot Church, Bath, Peregrine Henry Fellowes, esq., R. M., son of Capt. Sir Thomas Fellowes, R. N., C. B., to Caroline Elizabeth, only daughter of Major-General Forbes, Royal Artillery.

At St. George's, Hanover-square, John Cater, esq., son of Major Cater, Royal Artillery, to Margaret Corsane, daughter of the late John Reid, esq., Advocate, Edinburgh, and sister of Sir James John Reid.

5. At Broughton Church, Oxon, Henry Wenman Newman, esq., of Thornbury Park, Gloucestershire, and Clifton, Bristol, to Frances Margaret, eldest daughter of the Rev. John Joseph Goodenough, D. D., Rector of Broughton Pogis, Oxfordshire.

8. At All Souls' Church, Langhamplace, Rear-Admiral Earl Waldegrave, C. B., to Sarah, widow of the late Edward Milward, esq., of Hastings.

At St. Luke's, Heywood, John Cunliffe Kay, esq., of Ferefield Hall, Yorkshire, eldest son of Ellis Lister Cunliffe, Kay, esq., of Manningham Hall, in the same county, to Ann, only daughter of James Fenton, esq., of Bamford Hall, Lancashire.

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Allen, esq., of Inchmartine, Perthshire, late of the 8th Hussars, to Barbara Elrington, third daughter of Lieutenant-General Sir Neil Douglas K. C. B., K. C. H., Commander of her Majesty's Forces in North Britain.

9. At Henny Church, near Sudbury, Suffolk, the Rev. John Wingfield Harding, of Tong, Shropshire, to Elizabeth Anne, daughter of the late Charles Raymond Barker, esq.

At Burgany, John Dalrymple, esq, M. P., younger, of Fordel, to Louisa Jane Henrietta Emily, eldest daughter of the Duc and Duchesse de Coigny.

At Melksham, the Rev. Charles Wadham Diggle, M. A., eldest son of Colonel Diggle, K. H., to Georgiana Augusta, eldest daughter of the Rev. T. Heathcote, of Shaw Hill, Wilts.

10. At Adare Church, Sir John Nugent Humble, Bart., of Cloneoskeran, County Waterford, to Eliza Philippa, only daughter of George Fosbery, esq., of Currabridge, County Limerick.

12. At St. Dunstan's West, William Johnstoun Neale, esq., Barrister-at-law, second son of the late Ådam Neale, M. D., Physician to the Forces, to Fanny Herbert, daughter of the late Captain Josiah Nisbet, R. N.

14. At Edinburgh, William Speid, esq., to Johanna, youngest daughter of the late William Wallace, LL. D., Professor of Mathematics in the University of Edinburgh.

16. At Abbot's Ripton Church, Huntingdonshire, William H. Moubray, esq., R. N., son of Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Robert Moubray, K. C. H., of Cockairne, Fifeshire, to Selina Mary Anna, fourth daughter of John Bonfoy Rooper, esq., of Abbot's Ripton.

17. At Thorpe Arnold, the Rev. J. Denny Gilbert, Rector of Cantley and of Rillington, Norfolk, to Florence Margaretta, eldest daughter of the Rev. Plumpton Wilson, Rector of Newmarket.

At Llangattock Church, Breconshire, James Stuart Menteath, the eldest son of Sir Charles Granville Stuart Menteath, Bart., of Closeburn, Dumfries-shire, to Jane, daughter of Joseph Bailey, esq., M. P., Glanusk Park, Breconshire.

21. In Guernsey, Philip W. S. Miles, esq., M. P., to Pamela Adelaide, fifth daughter of Major-General William F. P. Napier.

22. At Pilton Church, Devon, R. J. Hayne, esq., B. A., of Exeter College, Oxford, eldest son of the Rev. Dr. Hayne,

DEATHS.-1845.

Incumbent of Pilton, and Rural Dean, to
Georgiana, youngest daughter of William
Austin White, esq., of Gorwell House,
near Barnstaple.

23. At Edinburgh, George Hair Newall, esq., of Dundee, to Eliza Syme, youngest daughter of Dr. Richard Huie, Edinburgh.

29. At Mansfield, Woodhouse, Notts, Robert Gill, esq., to Fanny Susannah, second daughter of the late Colonel Need, of Sherwood Hall, in the same county.

31. At St. Pancras Church, Charles Reynolds Williams, esq., of Lincoln's Inn Fields, second son of the late LieutenantColonel Monier Williams, SurveyorGeneral of the Presidency of Bombay, to Margaret Marshall, only daughter of John Romer, esq., of Cambridge-terrace, Regent's park, formerly Member of Council of the same Presidency.

DEATHS.
1845.

JUNE.

12. At Hartburn, Northumberland, aged 66, the Rev. John Hodgson, Vicar of that parish, Vice-President of the Society of Antiquaries of Newcastle; a gentleman of great antiquarian erudition, and an indefatigable collector of all documents and reliques connected with the northern counties. He was the author of many archæological treatises, and published part of a very minute and elaborate history of the county of Northumberland.

OCTOBER.

13. At Brighton, aged 75, Sir Charles Rowley, Bart. Admiral of the White, G. C.B., G. C.H., K. M.T. This officer was the fourth son of Vice-Admiral Sir Joshua Rowley, Bart., by Sarah, daughter of Bartholomew Burton, esq., of Petersham, Deputy-Governor of the Bank of England; and a grandson of Sir William Rowley, K.B. Admiral of the Fleet, Vice-Admiral of England, and a Lord of the Admiralty. He, Mr. Rowley, was made a Lieutenant in 1789, and was appointed acting Captain of the Hussar frigate in the summer of 1794. He subsequently commanded the Lynx sloop, and captured numerous French merchant vessels, on the North American station. In March, 1796, being then acting Captain of the Cleopatra frigate, he captured

l'Aurore, a French privateer of ten guns. When He attained post rank in 1795. commanding l'Unité 36, he displayed great firmness during the general mutiny in 1797. He subsequently captured the French 18-gun corvette Découverte, the brig-privateer Brunette, of ten guns and eighty men, and several other armed vessels, on the Channel station. Captain Rowley left l'Unité, in consequence of bursting a blood-vessel; but after the lapse of a few months he was appointed to the Prince George 98, the flag-ship of his brother-in-law the late Admiral Sir Charles Cotton, Bart. In the spring of 1801 he was removed into the Boadicea frigate, and entrusted with the command of a light squadron employed in Quiberon Bay, where he greatly molested the encmy. In 1804 Capt. Rowley commanded the Ruby 64, successively employed in the North Sea and off Cadiz. Subsequently to his return from thence, he was stationed off the Scheldt, and, in Nov. 1805, was appointed to the Eagle 74, destined to the Mediterranean, which ship he joined at Spithead. She formed part of the squadron under Sir W. Sidney Smith, employed in disarming the coasts of Naples and Calabria in the summer of 1806. On the 11th May that year Capt. Rowley conducted the attack at the capture of the island of Capri; and he was afterwards severely injured by a shell, while employed on shore in the defence of Gaieta. The Eagle was attached to the grand armament sent against Antwerp in 1809; and part of her officers and crew were employed in the defence of Fort Matagorda, near Cadiz, in April, 1810. In Nov. 1811 she captured the French frigate Corceyre, pierced for 40 guns, and mounting 28. At this period Captain Rowley was senior officer in the Adriatic. His conduct at the capture of Fiume, July 3, 1813, was much distinguished; and he afterwards bore a conspicuous part in the operations against Trieste. He continued to serve in the Adriatic until the allies were masters of that sea. In April 1814 he attended Louis XVIII. from England to France. He was advanced to the rank of Rear-Admiral on the 4th June, 1814; and was nominated a Knight Commander of the Bath, Jan. 2, 1815; and in the same year received the order of Maria Theresa from the Emperor of Austria. Towards the close of the latter year he was appointed to the chief command in the river Medway. Sir Charles Rowley's next appointment was, in the autumn of

DEATHS-JAN.

sequently accredited Envoy and Minister Plenipotentiary at the Hague, and then sent as Ambassador to France. By patent, dated July 15, 1815, Lord Granville was advanced to the dignity of a Viscount of the United Kingdom. In 1825, he was nominated a Knight Grand Cross of the Bath; and he was invested with the insignia of the Order by the King of France, at the Tuileries, on the 9th of June. On Earl Grey's advent to power as Prime Minister, Lord Granville was again selected to take the post of Ambassador at Paris, and continued to fill that important station at the Court of France until the resignation of Lord Melbourne's Government. By patent dated May 2, 1833, his Lordship received the further titles of Earl Granville, and Baron Leveson of Stone, Staffordshire. Lord Granville married, Dec. 24, 1809, Lady Harriet Elizabeth Cavendish, second daughter of William fifth Duke of Devonshire, K. G.; and by that lady, who survives him, he had issue two daughters and three sons, and is succeeded in the Earldom by his eldest son, the Right Hon. Granville George.

8. At Sundridge, Kent, aged 67, the Rev. George D'Ŏyly, D.D., Rector of Lambeth and of Sundridge, and F.R. S. This learned and eminent divine was born Oct. 31, 1778, and was the fourth son of the Ven. Matthias D'Oyly, Archdeacon of Lewes, and Rector of Buxted, Sussex. His grandfather, the Ven. Thomas D'Oyly, D.C.L., was also Archdeacon of Lewes, and also Chancellor of Chichester and a Prebendary of Ely. The elder brothers of the Rector of Lambeth were the present Mr. Serjeant D'Oyly, Sir John D'Oyly, Resident in Ceylon, created a Baronet in 1821, and Sir Francis D'Oyly, K. C.B., killed at Waterloo; and his younger brother is Major-General Henry D'Oyly, who survives him. Dr. D'Oyly was a fellow of Bene't College, Cambridge, where he graduated B.A. 1800, as second Wrangler and second Smith's prizeman, M. A. 1803, B.D. 1811, D.D. 1821. He was appointed in 1810 a Chaplain in Ordinary to George III., in 1811 Christian Advocate on the foundation of Mr. Hulse, and in 1813, one of the exan. plains to the late Archbishop was collate carage of resigned of Buxte

of his fat that living

In 1815 he to the viwhich he rectory

death anged

r the

rectories of Lambeth, Surrey, and Sundridge, Kent Dr. D'Oyly's sphere of public usefulness has been a very extended one. He was connected with all the more important religious societies; and the foundation of King's College, London, an establishment where religious and secular studies are professedly blended, is generally understood to have been the result of suggestions emanating from him. His literary labours have not been unimportant. He was a frequent contributor on theological subjects to the Quarterly Review, when under the editorship of Mr. Gifford. In 1813 he undertook, in conjunction with the Rev. Richard Mant, the present Bishop of Down, Connor, and Dromore, the preparation of an annotated Bible to be published under the sanction of the Society for promoting Christian Knowledge. Its publication was first commenced in weekly numbers on the 1st Jan. 1814, and under the well-known title of "D'Oyly and Mant's Bible" it has since passed through many impressions, and has been generally recognised as a standard of episcopal examination. Dr. D'Oyly published several works of reputation. He married Aug. 9, 1831, Maria-Frances, daughter of William Bruere, esq., of Chetwynd, Salop; by whom he had issue.

9. At Stoke, in his 60th year, Captain Thomas Smith, R.N. This gallant officer entered the Navy as a volunteer of the first class in 1798, and served under the late Admiral Sir George Campbell, K.C.B., and others, in her Majesty's ships Dragon, Cameleon, Adamant, and Resolution, and saw some service as acting Lieutenant in her Majesty's ships Agincourt and Hound. He was confirmed to the rank of Lieutenant on the 29th Nov. 1808, and served in that rank during the war on board her Majesty's ships Nymphen, Blake, Briseis, Venerable, and Bulwark. He was employed, in October, 1804, in the night attack on the Boulogne flotilla, commonly called the catamaran expedition, in the division of boats under Captain V. Collard. During the remainder of the war he was constantly engaged in active service in various parts of the world. In 1824 he was appointed senior Lieutenant of her Majesty's ship Genoa, and took part in that vessel in the battle of Navarino, being the senior Lieutenant of the whole squadron. After the battle of Navarino he was promoted to the rank of Commander, and received post rank on the 23d Nov. 1841.

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