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At Brandsby-hall, York, aged 45, Cecilia, eldest dau. of the late Gerrard Edward Strickland, esq., Loughglyn-house, co. Roscommon, and sister of the present Mr. Charles Strickland, of Loughglyn, who is a magistate for co. Roscommon, and who represents a branch of the ancient Roman Catholic family of Strickland of Sizergh, Lancashire.

At his residence, Brunswick-sq., Camberwell, aged 63, John Jas. Wilkinson, esq., Accountant, House of Commons.

At Plymouth, aged 68, Richard Freeman, M.D.

July 24. At Coley-park, Reading, Catherine, wife of Sir Thomas Wathen Waller, bart. Her ladyship was the eldest of the three daus. of the Rev. Henry Wise, of the Priory, Warwick, and of Offchurch, in the same county, by Charlotte Mary, dau. of Sir Stamer Porten, and sister of Henry Christopher Wise, esq., of Woodcote, Warwickshire, who is a magistrate and DeputyLieutenant for that co., and is married to a dau. of Sir Gray Skipwith, bart. She married, in October, 1836, Sir Thomas Wathen Waller, second baronet, who was for many years in the Diplomatic Service. His only brother, the Rev. Ernest Adolphus Waller, is married to the youngest sister of the deceased lady.—London Review.

In Grosvenor-st., Grosvernor-sq., aged 32, Elizabeth, the wife of Bernard Edward Brodburst, esq. Her death was the result of her dress catching fire on the preceding evening.

Aged 41, William Hunt, esq., of St. John's College, Cambridge, and St. John's-wood-terrace, London.

At Ramsgate, aged 74, Robert Denby Woodifield, esq., of Connaught-sq., London, late Inspector-Gen. of H.M.'s Customs.

In Beaumont-st., Portland-pl., Elizabeth, relict of Rear-Adm. William Fisher.

At Banff, from the effects of an accident, aged 66, Lieut. George Mackay.

At Aylesford, Nova Scotia, Charles Inglis, esq., son of the late Right Rev. John Inglis, D.D., Lord Bishop of Nova Scotia. It will be remembered that, only in our last number, a correspondent, through error, represented the decease of this gentleman as having occurred some time previously, in the United States of America.

July 25. In Randolph-road, Maida-hill West, aged 90, Anna Maria, relict of Cornelius Tree, esq., and mother of Mrs. Quin, Mrs. Bradshaw, Mrs. Charles Kean, and Mrs. Chapman.

At Sea-view, Isle of Wight, aged 22, Alice Elizabeth Le Marchant, dau. of Le Marchant Thomas, esq.

July 26. At Worton-hall, Isleworth, aged 31, Dulcibella Jane, wife of J. S. Bland, esq.

July 27. At his residence, Upton, near Southampton, aged 73, Major-Gen. John Swinburne. At Southsea, aged 82, Mary, widow of the Rev. B. Massingberd, Rector of Kettlethorpe, Lincolnshire.

At Southampton, George Abercromby Mitchell, esq., Member of the Council of the Island of Grenada.

Very suddenly, at Portland-ter., Southsea,

Commander John Aldershaw Bathurst, R.N., youngest son of the late Commodore Walter Bathurst, R.N.

At Poulton-cum-Seacombe, aged 73, William Chambres Chambres, esq.

At Upton, aged 72, Major-Gen. John Swinburne, of the old Northumbrian family of that name. He was the eldest son of Col. William Swinburne, an officer of distinction in the American war, and was born at Folkestone in 1788. He entered the army as ensign in 1804. He served with the 43rd regiment at the siege of Copenhagen, in 1807, and in the campaign of 1808 in Portugal, and was wounded in the head in the retreat to Vigo. He took part also in the subsequent campaigns in the Peninsula till 1812, including the action of the Coa, the battle of Fuentes d'Onor, the action of Sabugal, the battle of Busaco, the retreat to and the occupation of the lines of Torres Vedras, the subsequent advance in pursuit of Massena, and the actions of Pombal and Redinha, where he was wounded in the hip. He joined the army at Toulouse in 1814, and was present in the following year at New Orleans. He subsequently joined the Duke of Wellington's army at Brussels, and was present at the capture of Paris, where he remained with the army of occupation until 1818. He had received the war medal with two clasps for Busaco and Fuentes d'Onor. He had become a Colonel in 1854, and a Major-General on the retired list in 1861. General Swinburne married, in 1824, Jane, dau. of John Burge, esq., by whom he has left two sons and two daughters,-William, a Commander, Royal Navy; John, a Captain in the 18th Foot; Isabel, married to Charles Castleman, esq., of St. Ives, Hunts; and Eleanor, married to the Hon. Henry Curzon, son of Earl Howe.

July 28. At Baldovan-bouse, Dundee, the Lady Jane Ogilvy. Her ladyship was the Lady Jane Elizabeth Howard, third dau of Thomas, sixteenth Earl of Suffolk, and ninth Earl of Berkshire, by the Hon. Elizabeth Jane Dutton, eldest dau. of James, first Lord Sherborne, and sister, consequently, of the present earl. She was born in 1809, and married, in April, 1836, as his second wife, Sir John Ogilvy, bart., of Innerquharitz, Forfarshire, and of Baldovan-house, who has been M.P. for Dundee since 1857, and by whom she has left a youthful family. It was under her ladyship's auspices that, in 1848, the "Home" was inaugurated at Dundee as an institution for the reformation of fallen women. A few years afterwards, the Baldovan Orphanage and Asylum for Idiot Children was established by her exertions; and only so late as last year the Convalescent Hospital at Dundee was established mainly by her influence. Her private charities, though less conspicuous, were also very great.-London Review,

At Marseilles, aged 70, Admiral the Hon. Sir Fleetwood B. R. Pellew, C.B., K.C.H. He was the second son of the first Viscount Exmouth by the second dau. of Mr. James Frowd. He was born in 1789. Entering the navy at an early age, he was engaged at the destruction of the

Dutch naval force in the Indian seas, and continued to serve on the East India station till the reduction of Java in 1811, especially distinguishing himself at Samanep, in the Batavia roads, and near Samarang. In 1813 he was present and assisted at the capture of a French convoy in Port d'Anzo. He served from 1818 to 1822 on the Mediterranean station. In 1852 he was appointed to command the Indian station, but was recalled in 1854, and became an Admiral of the Blue in 1858. In recognition of his services he was created a Companion of the Bath in 1815, and Knight Commander of the Hanoverian Guelphic Order in 1836, receiving at the same time the honour of knighthood. He was appointed Naval Aide-de-Camp to the Queen in 1842. The deceased was twice married-in 1816 to the only dau. of the late Sir Godfrey Webster, who, however, died in 1849, and secondly, in 1851, to the dau. of the late Comte Edouard de Melfort, from whom he was divorced in 1855.

At her residence, South-terrace, Brompton, Ann, widow of James Lowther, esq., of the Foreign Department in the General Post-office.

July 29. Richard Plantagenet, second Duke of Buckingham and Chandos, K.G. See OBITUARY.

At New-cross, of consumption, aged 22, Chas. Anstruther, youngest son of the late Thos. Wilkinson, esq., of Ely lodge, Gravesend, and grandson of the Hon. Colonel David Leslie Anstruther.

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At Whitburn West House, co. Durham, aged 76, Joseph Simpson, esq., J.P. He was the only son of the late Charles Simpson, esq., of Sunderland (who purchased Whitburn - house), by Betty, dau. of Walter Farrimond, esq., and was born in 1786. He succeeded to the property of Whitburn in 1833, and had long been in the Commission of the Peace for his native county. By his wife, Margaret, dau. of John Goodchild, esq., of Pallion, co. Durham, he had issue a married dau., and also four sons. He is succeeded by his eldest son Charles, barrister-at-law, who was born in 1812, and married, in 1837, Matilda Gertrude, dau. of George Rooke, esq., of Williamfield, near Edinburgh. His next son, John Eyres, was born in 1816. His third son, who was in the commissariat service, is dead, and the fourth is in holy orders.-London Review.

At Earlsdale, Shropshire, aged 49, Frederick Jones, esq., of Lincoln's-inn, barrister-at-law. Rebecca, wife of the Rev. W. Brocklebank, Vicar of Udimore, Sussex.

At Stamford, aged 65, Francis Simpson, esq., alderman of that borough, and mayor in 1853-4. The deceased, from early manhood, was exceedingly clever with his pencil, and his volume of "Baptismal Fonts," published upwards of thirty years ago, will be an enduring memorial of his skill as a draughtsman. His unpublished drawings, chiefly of local subjects, are very numerous. As an amateur artist in water-colour drawing he was also very clever. At the time of his death, Mr. Wilkinson, of London, was employed in engraving a view of the magnificent west front of Crowland Abbey, from a drawing

by the deceased, in which all the very numerous details of that interesting ruin are faithfully pourtrayed. The deceased was the eldest son of the late Mr. Francis Simpson, who served the office of Mayor of Stamford in 1814 and 1824. At a meeting of the Stamford Town Council held on the 6th of August, Mr. Octavius Nolan Simpson was elected an alderman to fill the vacancy caused by the demise of his brother.

At Bayswater, Frances Cecilia, widow of Edw. Leveson-Gower, Capt. Rifle Brigade, and dau. of the late William Powell, esq., Waterloo, Hants.

July 30. At Woodbridge - house, near Guild ford, aged 81, the Hon. Edward Mainwaring Mainwaring Ellerker Onslow. He was the third and youngest son of the Right Hon. Thomas, second Earl of Onslow, by Arabella, third daughter and co-heir of Elton Mainwaring-Ellerker, esq., of Risby-park, co. York, (whose name he assumed by royal licence, in 1843, on inheriting a large portion of his mother's property); he was consequently brother of the present Earl, and of the late Hon. Col. Thos. Cranley Onslow. He was born Oct. 2nd, 1779, was educated at Harrow, entered the army in 1797, and became Lieutenant-Colonel in the 3rd Foot Guards in 1810, but retired on that rank at the close of the war. He lived and died unmarried. The Onslow family were anciently seated in Shropshire, where they enjoyed extensive possessions, and, among others, the lordship of Ondeslow, situated within the liberties of the town of Shrewsbury. Sir Richard Onslow, bart., (afterwards first Lord Onslow, and father of the first Earl Onslow,) was Speaker of the House of Commons in five successive Parliaments, occupying the entire reign of George 11.-London Review.

At Paris, Emma, widow of Henry Matthews, esq., Puisne Justice of the Supreme Court of Ceylon.

At Teignmouth, Devon, aged 61, Catharine, relict of Captain C. W. Griffith Griffin, R.N.

At Henley-on-Thames, Fanny, wife of Colonel George Talbot, 43rd Light Infantry.

In Victoria-st., Westminster, William Lemos Willoughby, esq., late Captain 23rd Royal Welsh Fusiliers.

At his residence, Cheltenham, aged 78, Commander Thomas Mitchell, R.N.

July 31. At Eaton, near Norwich, aged 62, Caroline Elizabeth, wife of Peter Day, esq., solicitor.

At Fairfield-cottage, Sunning-hill, aged 80, Robert Mangles, esq., of Sunning-dale.

At Hastings, Sussex, aged 63, Elizabeth, widow of John James Lambert, esq., of Dorchester, Dorset.

Aged 61, Charles Edward MacCarthy, esq., of the Bank of England, Leeds.

Aug. 1. At the residence of his son-in-law, Elgin-crescent, Notting-hill, aged 83, Philip John Money, esq., a magistrate of the city and county of Norwich, and late Captain in the 17th Regt.

At his residence, Upper-terrace, Hampsteadheath, after a long illness, Edward Magrath, esq., late Secretary of the Athenæum, Pall-Mall, F.R.G.S., F.Z.S.

At Worthing, aged 50, Charles Hill, Esq., of Wollaston-house, Second Major of the Northamptonshire Militia.

At Leyton, Essex, aged 69, Isabella Mary, widow of the Rev. William Johnson Rodber, late Rector of St. Mary-at-Hill, London.

John Frederick Leary, esq., librarian of the House of Lords.

Aug. 2. At Wilton-house, Salisbury, Lord Herbert of Lea. See OBITUARY.

At Traquair-house, Peeblesshire, aged 80, the Right Hon. the Earl of Traquair. See OBITUARY.

At Canterbury, Mr. Charles Frederick Smart, third son of Mr. George Smart, formerly a musicseller in Oxford-street, (who was the founder of the new Musical Fund,) and only surviving brother of Sir George Thomas Smart, the celebrated leader and composer. Mr. C. F. Smart was himself a successful musician, and was for many years a member of the Ancient Concerts and the Philharmonic Society. As a teacher he was very successful, and had many of the nobility for his pupils. An accident to his left hand obliged him to quit the profession. He passed his latter years in retirement, and after a long and painful illness died on his 79th birthday. Aug. 3. At Penair, Cornwall, aged 76, Adm. Sir Barrington Reynolds, G.C.B. See OBITUARY. At his residence, Melina-pl., St. John's-wood, aged 82, George White, esq., Deputy CommissaryGeneral.

At Rockville, Helensburgh, aged 78, Hugh Maclean, esq., of Coll.

At Harrow School, aged 15, William Edward, youngest son of the late Rear-Admiral Sir W. Edward Parry.

At the School-house, Rugby, aged 61, Caroline, widow of John Salter, esq.

Aged 61, Mrs. Nasmith, widow of David Nasmith, esq., the founder of the London City Mission, Country and Town Missions, the Female Aid Society, Monthly Tract Society, &c.

At Versailles, Father Ventura. See OBITUARY. Aug. 4. At Slindon-house, Sussex, aged 98, Anne, relict of Anthony James, fourth Earl of Newburgh. See OBITUARY.

At his residence, in Cadogan-place, aged 68, Vice-Admiral Sir Thomas Herbert, K.C.B.

At Ospringe-house, Faversham, aged 80, Mary, relict of Gen. Sir Thos. Gage Montresor, K.C.H. At Edinburgh, Mrs. Margaret Caroline Lindesay, relict of Patrick Orr, esq., W.S., and last surviving sister of the late Major-Gen. Sir Henry Lindesay Bethune, bart., of Kilconquhar.

At Stoke, near Devonport, aged 76, Charlotte Catharine, relict of Charles Greaves, esq., of Devonport, who died in 1829. She was the last surviving daughter of the late Robert Mylne, the architect of Blackfriars-bridge.

At Brixton, Surrey, aged 41, William Newton, eldest son of the late William Harriott, Vicar of Odiham, Hants.

At Newcastle-on-Tyne, aged 91, William Losh, esq. See OBITUARY.

Aug. 5. In London, aged 11, Francis Ulysses, third son of the Earl of Clonmell.

In Soho-sq., aged 59, Major-General Charles

Franklyn, C.B. He entered the army in 1823, had served long in India, and much distinguished himself in the recent campaign in Oude.

At his residence, Oakfield - court, Tunbridge Wells, aged 85, Demetrius Grevis James, esq. He was the only son of the late Charles Grevis, esq., (of the ancient family of Greves, or Grevis, of Moseley-hall, Worcestershire), by Elizabeth, daughter of Demetrius James, esq., a colonel in the army, third son of Wm. James, esq., of Ightham-court, son of Sir Demetrius James, of Ightham, who was knighted by Charles II. He was born in May, 1776, and inherited the estate of Ightham on the death of his cousin, Richard James, esq., without issue, in 1817, whose father was High Sheriff of Kent in 1732, and was for some years Usher of the Black Rod in Ireland. He formerly held a commission in the army, and saw some active service at Copenhagen and elsewhere; he was also a magistrate and DeputyLieutenant for Kent, for which county he served as High Sheriff in 1833. By his wife, Mary, daughter of James Strutt, esq., of Humbleton in Holderness, Yorkshire, he had issue two sons and seven daughters. He is succeeded by his eldest son, Demetrius Wyndham, Major 2nd Foot, who was born in 1819.-London Review.

At Holcombe, near Teignmouth, Devon, aged 22, Nicholas Watts, esq., only child of the late Rev. Nicholas Watts, of Ambrook-house, Ipplepen, and grandchild of the late Rev. Nicholas Watts, of Kingsteignton.

At Southsea, Hants., aged 33, William Henry Hills, esq., R.N., third son of Captain John Hills, R.N., of Douro-place, Kensington.

Aug. 7. At Morley-hall, Wymondham, Norfolk, aged 55, John Turner Graver-Browne, esq., J.P. for the county of Norfolk.

At Paris, Louisa Catherine, Princess de Montléart, dau. of the late Gen. Sir Wm. Keir Grant. At Leamington, Louisa, eldest dau. of the late Rev. John Holt, Vicar of Wrawby-with-Brigg, Lincolnshire.

At Wilburton, Cambridgeshire, Read Tansley, youngest son of the late Wm. Camps, esq., High Sheriff of Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire. Aug. 8. At Woolley-lodge, Berks, aged 53, Wm. Lee-Jortin, esq.

At her residence, Cobham-pk., Surrey, aged 74, Miss Combe.

At Kinross, N.B., aged 23, Adelaide, wife of Richard Watt, esq., of Speke-hall, Lancashire. At Vichy, France, John Clunes Ross, esq., Consul for the Netherlands at Malta.

In Cunningham-pl., aged 79, Frederick Russell Mills, esq., formerly of the Home Office, son of the late Rev. Thos. Mills, Vicar of Hillingdon, Middlesex.

Aug. 9. At Beechfield, Doncaster, John Wm. Sturges, esq., J.P. and D.L. for the West Riding. At the house of Major Pearce, Portishead, aged 71, Lady Whish, relict of Lieut.-Gen. Sir W. S. Whish, K.C.B., of the Bengal Artillery.

At Paris, aged 77, Ann Amelia Turing, dau. of the late Sir Robert Turing, bart., of Foveran, Aberdeenshire.

At Nice, aged 79, Vincent Novello, the emi

nent organist, and musical composer and editor. Though of Italian parentage, he was born in London, September 6, 1781, and he passed the greater part of his life there, holding for many years the post of organist at the chapel in Spanishplace. To his exertions is mainly owing the introduction to England of the works of the great Italian and German masters of sacred music.

Aug. 10. At Clifton, aged 72, Christiana Elizabeth, widow of the Rev. Joseph Holmes, D.D., late of Leeds.

At the house of her uncle, (Col. Tulloh, R.A., Woolwich,) Fanny, eldest dau. of the Rev. James Isaacson, Rector of Newmarket.

Aug. 11. At Cheltenham, aged 78, Sarah, relict of Rear-Adm. Richard Byron, C.B.

At Paris, aged 56, Emma Louisa, dau. of the late Sir Jos. Stracey, bart., and widow of Charles Struth, esq.

At Roccles, Sydenham, (the residence of H. Lee, esq.,) after a few days' illness, Madame Catherine Hayes-Bushnell. See OBITUARY.

At Torquay, aged 48, Algernon Attwood, esq. He was born in 1813, and was the youngest son of the late Thomas Attwood, esq., many years M.P. for Birmingham, who died in 1856. His mother was Elizabeth, dau. of Mr. Wm. Carless, of Birmingham.

Aug. 12. At Plymouth, aged 52, Capt. Wm. Fanshawe Glanville, R.N.

At Margate, aged 84, Martha, widow of John Boys, esq., J.P. for the county of Kent and for the liberties of the Cinque Ports, and third dau. of the late Rev. Athelstan Stephens, Rector of Goodnestone and Vicar of Graveney, in the same county.

At Yeithside-house, Callander, N.B., Major Gregory Paul, late of H.M.'s 57th Regt.

At Herne-bay, aged 68, Commander Richard Bayly Bowden, R.N.

Aged 82, John Kaye, esq., of the Grove, Fulmer, Bucks, J.P. for the counties of Middlesex and Bucks, and Deputy-Lieut. for Bucks.

At his residence, The Lodge, Brook-green, Hammersmith, aged 62, Charles Joseph Pagliano, esq.

At Gloucester, aged 33, Ellen, wife of the Rev. Robert C. Greer, Curate of St. Mary de Crypt, in that city.

Aug. 13. At Lower Walmer, Kent, aged 62, Thomas Witlam Atkinson, esq., F.R.G.S., F.G.S., for many years travelling in Central Asia, and author of "Travels in Siberia and on the Amoor."

Aug. 14. At Llwyngwern, Montgomeryshire, aged 62, Francis Johnson, second son of the late John Ford, esq., of Abbeyfield, Cheshire, and a magistrate for the counties of Chester, Montgomery, and Merioneth.

Aug. 15. At his residence, Gargrave-house, Gargrave, aged 69, John Nicholas Coulthurst, esq., a Dep.-Lieut. and Magistrate for the West Riding of the county of York.

At the Court-lodge, Ightham, Kent, aged 86, Caroline, relict of Capt. Arthur Gregory, R.N.

At Edmonston, Biggar, N.B., of acute diphtheria, aged 20, Honoria, youngest dau. of the late Major-General Sir Henry Havelock.

Aug. 16. At Chelston Manor-house, Torquay, Devon, aged 68, Benjamin Parham, esq., late Judge of the Worcestershire County Courts.

Aug. 17. At St. Catherine's-lodge, Mrs. Willmott, only child of the late Rev. John Cleeve, B.A.

At Elstree Rectory, aged 57, Sarah, wife of the Rev. C. J. Plumer.

At his residence, Blackheath-hill, aged 96, Mr. Anthony Mottley, formerly Principal of the Bank-note-office, Bank of England.

Aug. 18. At his residence, The Cottage, near Tiverton, Evans Riadore, M.D.

At Brighton, aged 63, Commissary-General Bishop.

At Auchlyne-house, aged 29, J. W. Cawood, esq., Secretary to His Highness Prince Dhuleep Singh.

Catherine, wife of the Rev. C. A. L'Oste, Rector of St. Mary-at-the-Walls, Colchester.

At Fleury, near Paris, after a short illness, Henry John, third son of Sir John and the Lady Eleanor Cathcart.

Aug. 19. In Gloucester-terrace, Hyde-park, aged 71, Lieut.-Col. Charles Rogers, late of the Bengal Army.

At his residence, Point-house, Castle Townsend, John Townsend Somerville, esq., J.P. for the county of Cork, and Major on the Retired List of H.M.'s Bengal Army.

At the residence of her son-in-law, (G. C. Churchill, esq., St. James' View, Rusholme, Manchester,) Anna Maitland, widow of the Rev. George Laurie, formerly of Reading, Berks.

At her house, Church-hill, Harbledown, Canterbury, aged 59, Eliza Caroline, widow of the Rev. William Sherlock Carey, M.A.

In Holles-st., Cavendish-sq., aged 61, Edmund Montgomerie, esq., late of the H.E.I.C. Civil Service, Bombay, younger son of the late Archibald Montgomerie, esq., of Belmont, Ayrshire.

Aug. 20. At Pangbourne, Berks, where he bad gone for the benefit of his health, aged 46, John Quekett,, F.R.S., F.L.S., &c., Professor of Histology at the Royal College of Surgeons of England, and Conservator of the Hunterian Museum.

Aug. 21. In Albemarle-st., aged 66, the Dowager Lady Musgrave, relict of the late Sir Philip Musgrave, bart., of Edenhall, Cumberland.

Aug. 22. At Barton Cliff, Hants, aged 20, Frederick, youngest son of the Rev. E. Hull. At his residence, in Bath, aged 93, Francis Moore, Senior General of the British Army.

In Burton-st., Eaton-sq., aged 40, Major Chas. Henry Montresor Smith, late of Auckland, New Zealand, eldest son of the late Lieut. Col. John Charles Smith, Assistant-Adjutant-General, Athlone.

Aug. 26. In Stanhope-st., Hampstead-road, aged 40, Charles, youngest son of the late Major George Burton Phillipson, H.E.I.C.S.

TABLE OF MORTALITY AND BIRTHS IN THE DISTRICTS OF LONDON.

(From the Returns issued by the Registrar-General.)

DEATHS REGISTERED.

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PRICE OF HAY AND STRAW AT SMITHFIELD, Aug. 22.

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Best Wallsend, per ton, 18s. 3d. to 18s. 9d. Other sorts, 12s. 9d. to 17s. Od.

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