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cast or model the guillotined heads of those she had known and loved, or those whom she detested-Charlotte Corday or Marat, the Princess de Lamballe or Robespierre. Herself suspected of loyalty, she relates that she was taken from her bed at night by gensd'armes, and cast into prison, where she had for her companions Madame Beauharnais and her child, the one afterwards Napoleon's Empress, Josephine; the other, the Queen of Holland. From all this she escaped, and in 1802 came to England with her children. Here she commenced her exhibition, travelling from town to town, and after twelve years of struggle and anxiety, she had so far succeeded as to have a goodly collection, and a small sum of money. She then resolved to visit Ireland; but, in the transit, the vessel in which she had embarked her all was wrecked, and with great difficulty the lives of the passengers were saved, so that when she landed at Cork with her boys she landed penniless. She then began the world anew, and it was with still greater success. Thus was she, as it were, twice the architect of her own fortune, and she has left a large family of children and grandchildren to reap the fruits of her exertions.

MR. RICHARD J. WYATT., May 27. At Rome, of apoplexy, in his 57th year, Mr. Richard J. Wyatt, sculptor.

Mr. Wyatt went first to Rome in 1822, and worked for Mr. Gibson. After a few years he commenced on his own account, and was very successful.

An Englishman, writing from "the Eternal City," pays the following earnest and deserved tribute to his memory: "I have to-day the painful duty of recording the death of Mr. Richard Wyatt, the eminent British sculptor, whose works are so well known at home, and whose fame is spread in every part of the world where the fine arts are valued. It was only a few days since I visited his studio, and admired the last touches which his graceful chisel had given to the finished statue of Flora, on which he had been for some time engaged. Judging from the health he then enjoyed, and the elasticity of his mind, I could not anticipate that ere the week was out I should have to attend his funeral; but he was taken off after a brief interval, and he lives now only in bis works and in a fame that will, no doubt, be everlasting. I am more than partial to his style, as, in my opinion, he surpassed all living artists in representing the pure and delicate beauty of the female form. His Nymphs' are the perfection of ideal and physical grace, and I believe in that department of sculpture he was

unrivalled. I understand that the Penelope' in possession of her Majesty, which I have not seen, is a work of higher merit, but I only know him from those statues now in his studio- A Nymph coming out of the Bath,' A Shepherd-boy protecting his Sister in a Storm,' and, above all, from the Flora,' on the perfection of which his whole mind was engaged."

"His marble group of a Huntress, with a leveret and greyhound, in the present exhibition of the Royal Academy, is as perfect a specimen of his genius as could be quoted. Nearly all his invented productions partook of the same character of simplicity and nature, and his subjects were generally suited to that taste. With the grand or heroic he did not employ his fine talent; but, in his own way, was one of the most successful and highly considered of our countrymen artists resident in Italy."-Literary Gazette.

Mr. Wyatt was as much respected in private as he was eminent in public life. His funeral (at the English burial-ground) was attended by artists of all countries. The hearse was followed by Mr. Freeborn the British Consul, the American Chargé d'Affaires (Mr. Cass), and about fifty friends and artists of all nations. /It is

said that he has executed commissions to the extent of 20,000l. sterling. No will had been found; but his property was secured by the British Consul, assisted by the Chancellor of the Consulate, and Mr. Macdonald and Mr. Spence, English sculptors.

CLERGY DECEASED. Feb. 8. At Falmouth, Jamaica, the Rev. James Alfred Jones.

March 19. At Ceylon, the Rev. John Fearby Haslam, for nearly twelve years a missionary in that island in connection with the Church Missionary Society, and principal of the Native Theological Institution at Cotta. He went to Ceylon in 1838, having been previously curate at Chesterfield.

May 5. At Southampton, aged 36, the Rev. Charles Henry White, jun. M.A. of Oriel college, Oxford, son of the Rev. C. H. White, Rector of Shalden, near Alton.

May 6. Aged 80, the Rev. Henry Wintle, Rector of Matson, Gloucestershire. He was formerly of Pembroke college, Oxford, M.A, 1791; and presented to his living in 1831 by the Dean and Chapter of Gloucester.

was

May 11. At Largs, Ayrshire, aged 43, the Rev. William Mackey, late incumbent of Scremerston, Northumberland.

Aged 41, the Rev. Thomas Pugh, Rec

Pap)

tor of Hirnant, Montgomeryshire. He was of Magdalene college, Cambridge, B.A. 1834, and was collated to his living by the Bishop of St. Asaph.

May 17. At Wingrave, Bucks, aged 64, the Rev. Isaac Denton, Vicar of that place, and Perp. Curate of Wytheburn, Cumberland. He was presented to the latter church in 1812 by the Vicar of Crosthwaite, and to the former in 1816 by the Earl of Bridgewater.

At Ashton-under-Lyne, aged 85, the Rev. Ignatius Traneker.

May 19. At Whitby, Yorkshire, aged 69, the Rev. Robert Taylor, M.A. Rector of Clifton Campville, and Harlaston, Staffordshire (1824), and a magistrate for that county.

May 20. At Whitby, aged 71, the Rev. Myles Jackson, late Minister of the Episcopal Chapel, and formerly Curate of St. Paul's church, Leeds.

May 22. Aged 38, the Rev. Henry James, Vicar of Willingdon, Sussex. He was of Trinity college, Cambridge, B.A. 1836, M.A. 1839, and was presented to his living in 1843 by the Dean and Chapter of Chichester. He was walking with his daughter and a reverend friend near Beechy Head, when he attempted to descend the cliff, and, missing his footing, fell and was killed on the spot.

May 22. At Elmsett, Suffolk, aged 76, the Rev. James Speare, Rector of that place. He was some time senior Fellow of Clare hall, Cambridge; where he graduated B.A. 1797, as 12th Senior Optime, M.A. 1800. In 1808 he became curate of Sawston near Cambridge, which curacy he held until presented by his college in 1816 to the rectory of Rotherhithe, Surrey. The latter he exchanged for Elmsett, which is in the same patronage, in 1817. He became a widower in 1841.

May 24. At Sywell rectory, Northamptonshire, aged 75, the Rev. Thomas Ager, Curate of that parish. He was of Oriel college, Oxford, M.A. 1799.

May 25. Aged 31, the Rev. Charles John Graham Jones, M.A. Incumbent of Waterloo, Crosby, co. Lanc. He was the second son of the Rev. J. Jones, M.A. rural dean, incumbent of St. Andrew's, Liverpool. He was formerly Fellow of Clare hall, Cambridge, B.A. 1842, M.A. 1845.

May 30. At Wretham, Norfolk, aged 37, the Rev. Frederick Lane Birch, Rector of that parish, to which he was presented in 1836 by W. Birch, esq. He was of St. John's college, Cambridge, B.A. 1836, M.A. 1840.

At Brighton, aged 28, the Rev. Richard Walker Nourse, M.A.; youngest son of the Rev. William Nourse, Rector of

Clapham, near Worthing, Sussex. He was of Gonville and Caius college, Cambridge, B.A. 1846, M.A. 1849.

May 31. At Doddington, Kent, aged 85, the Rev. John Radcliffe, M.A. Rector of St. Anne's, Limehouse, Middlesex, and Vicar of Doddington and Teynham. This gentleman (we presume) was son of the Rev. Houstonne Radcliffe, D.D. Chaplain to Archbishop Moore, Archdeacon of Canterbury, Subdean of Wells, Prebendary of Ely, Rector of Ickham and Vicar of Gillingham in Kent, of whom further notices will be found in Nichols's Literary Illustrations, vol. vi. p. 650, by Mary, daughter and coheiress of John Gooch, D.D. younger son of the Right Rev. Sir Thomas Gooch, Bart. Bishop of Ely. Archdeacon Radcliffe died in 1822, aged 83. His son was of Brasenose college, Oxford, M.A. 1787; was presented to Doddington in 1807 by his father as Archdeacon of Canterbury, to Limehouse in the same year by his college, and to Teynham in 1811 also by the Archdeacon of Canterbury. He had given 100l. towards the repairs of Limehouse church (recently destroyed by fire) only a few hours before his death.

Lately. At Llandinabo, Herefordshire, aged 40, the Rev. John Davies, M.A, Rector of that place.

At Holyhead, aged 24, the Rev. George Lewis, B.A. of Jesus college, Oxford, only son of Henry Lewis, esq. of Hendre.

At Dingestow, Monmouthshire, aged 86, the Rev. Isaac Morgan, Vicar of that parish (1839), in the gift of the Chancellor of Llandaff.

From fever caught in visiting his afflicted flock, the Rev. R. B. Townsend, of Skibbereen, co. Cork, whose activity in allaying the sufferings caused by the late famine had been very conspicuous.

June 3. At Malden, aged 47, the Rev. George Trevelyan, Vicar of Malden with Chessington, Surrey. He was the eldest son of the Rev. George Trevelyan, Archdeacon of Bath, and Canon Residentiary of Wells (third son of Sir John the fourth Baronet, of Nettlecombe, co. Somerset), by Harriet, third daughter of Sir Richard Neave, Bart. He was of Brazenose college, Oxford, M.A. 1820, and was presented to his living by Merton college in 1834. He married first, April 2, 1833, Frances-Anne, only daughter of Lieut.Colonel Lumsden, and secondly, May 14, 1835, Anne, only daughter of Henry Gosse, esq. of Epsom.

June 4. At Salisbury, aged 61, the Rev. Francis Rivers, for many years alternate morning preacher and lecturer of the chapel in Berwick steeet, Piccadilly, and of Belgrave chapel.

June 6. At Louvaine, in Belgium, the Rev. George Ingram, Rector of Chedburgh, Suffolk. He was a ten years' man of Queen's college, Cambridge, and received the degree of S.T.B. in 1839.

He was for some time curate of Chedburgh, and was instituted to the rectory of that parish in 1839, on the presentation of the Marquess of Bristol. He was the author of-1. The True Character of the Church of England, as exhibited in her Antiquity, Orders, and Liturgy. London, 1838, 8vo. 2. Three Letters on the Sacrifice of the Mass. 3. An Answer to M. de la Militiere's impertinent dedication of his imaginary triumph, entitled "The Victory of Truth; or, an Epistle to the King of Great Britain (Charles II.)"; wherein he invited his Majesty to forsake the Church of England, and embrace the Roman Catholic Religion. By the late Rev. Father in God, John Bramhall, D.D. Bishop of Derry, and afterwards Archbishop of Armagh. Reprinted from the Dublin edition of 1677, with notes, and a memoir of the Archbishop, 1841.

At Halesworth, Suffolk, aged 48, the Rev. Joseph Charles Badeley, Rector of Halesworth with Chediston, and of Shipmeadow, in the same county. He was only son of the Rev. Joseph Badeley, Rector of Halesworth and Chediston, who died 12th Sept. 1837, aged 65. He was of Caius college, Camb. LL.B. 1829. In 1833 he was instituted to the rectory of Shipmeadow, Suffolk, on the presentation of his father, and in 1839 to the rectory of Halesworth, with the vicarage of Chediston, on the presentation of his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Badeley. He married, 28th Sept. 1831, Frances, eldest dau. of the Rev. William Boycatt, Rector of Ormsby, in Norfolk, and leaves a family.

June 8. Aged 73, the Rev. Philip Neville Jodrell, Rector of Yelling, Huntingdonshire. He was of Jesus college, Cambridge, B.A. 1800, and was presented to his living in 1805 by the Lord Chancellor.

At Ilfracombe, aged 67, the Rev. William Palmer Stawell, Rector of High Bickington, Devonshire, to which he was presented in 1808 by the Rev. William Moggridge Stawell, of South Molton; who was formerly Rector of High Bickington, and died in 1833 (see our Magazine for March, 1833, p. 282).

June 11. At his father's residence, aged 24, the Rev. Thomas Bullock, B.A. of Brasenose college, Oxford, Assistant Curate of the parish church, Bradford, Yorkshire; only son of Thomas Bullock, esq. of Macclesfield.

At Baldock, Herts, aged 36, the Rev. David Henry Morice, for nearly six years

Curate of that parish. He was of Trinity college, Cambridge, B.A. 1842.

June 12. At Ormside, Westmerland, the Rev. William Abbott, M.A. Fellow of Queen's college, Oxford.

June 16. At St. Leonard's-on-Sea, the Rev. John Hodgson, Vicar of Bumpstead Helion, Essex. He was formerly Fellow of Trinity college, Cambridge, where he graduated B.A. 1818, M.A. 1823, and was presented to his living by that society in 1833. Having lost his first wife in 1836, he married secondly, Jan. 2, 1838, Elizabeth, only surviving daughter of James Law, esq. of Cambridge.

DEATHS.

LONDON AND ITS VICINITY.

May 1. Aged 38, Capt. William St. Leger Angelo, of the 3d West India Regt. May 8. At Clapham, aged 57, John Absalom Edwards, esq. formerly of Oxford.

May 13. In Hyde Park-sq. Ellen-Mary, only child of the Rev. Joseph Thackeray, Rector of Horstead and Coltishall, Norfolk. May 14. In Bedford-sq. aged 83, Divie Robinson, esq.

Aged 40. Mr. Charles A. Brookfield, of Gray's Inn-sq. solicitor, son of Mr. Brookfield of Sheffield.

May 15. In London, aged 70, Major James Palmer, late Inspector General of Prisons in Ireland.

In Edwardes-sq. Kensington, aged 86, Thomas Warington, esq.

In Euston-place, New-road, aged 65, Joseph Lazarus, esq.

At Brompton, aged 75, Mrs. M'Gowan, formerly of Gerrard-st. Soho.

In Melcombe-pl. Anne-Maria, relict of Capt. John Goad, Bengal Est.

May 16. In Weymouth-st. Louisa, wife of Lieut.-Col. Garrett, K.H. 46th Regt.

Aged 28, Robert, youngest son of the late Richard Thompson, esq. of the Clapham-road.

In the Wandsworth-road, aged 87, Mary, relict of the Rev. John Davy, Vicar of Pytchley, Northamptonshire.

Aged 30, James Kinneer Hancock, esq. Lieut.R.N. youngest son of the late RearAdm. R. T. Hancock.

Richard Hewitt, esq. of the Lawn, Tulsehill, and Calvert's-buildings, Borough.

May 17. At Clapton, aged 85, Ann, widow of Francis William Leigh, Capt. E. I. Co's. service.

At Clapham Rise, aged 63, William Turner, esq. of St. Katharine's Docks.

May 18. Francis Ellerker Lewin, esq. of Duke-st. Portland-pl. second son of the late Rev. S. J. Lewin, of Ifield, Sussex.

In Oxford-terr. aged 19, Adelaide, wife of Henry Hamilton Cafe, esq.

In Southwick-pl. Aun Lyon, eldest dau. of the late Hon. Thomas Lyon, of Hetton house, Durham.

May 19. At Chelsea, aged 93, John Strutt, esq.

Mary, wife of John D. Lannoy, esq. of Peckham.

Caroline, eldest dau. of Thomas Richard Downes, esq. of Upper Belgrave-place. At her son's, in Doughty-st. aged 74, Mrs. Ancell.

Of apoplexy, aged 56, John Bigg, esq. of Adelaide-pl. London Bridge.

May 20. At Bermondsey, by accidently falling under the wheels of a waggon, aged 66, Capt. Henry Whittingham, of the merchant service, for upwards of a quarter of a century in the service of the General Steam Navigation Company. He has left a widow, and eight children, the youngest only 12 months old. Baron Rothschild has headed a subscription for the benefit of the widow and family.

In Gray's-inn-sq. Richard Holland Ash, esq.

In South Molton-st. aged 58, Louis J. P. Fauquier, esq. fifth son of the late Thos. Fauquier, esq. of Hampton court Palace.

In Half-moon-st. aged 63, Allen Blizard, esq.

May 21. Elizabeth, wife of Matthew Norton, surgeon, Gloucester-place, Newroad.

May 23. Aged 51, Benjamin Tucker, esq. late of John-st. Bedford-row, and of Ramsgate.

May 25. At Hammersmith, aged 65, Joseph Jones, esq. a Capt. on the retired list of the Bombay Army.

In Upper Berkeley-st. aged 29, Margaret, wife of Edward Borton, esq. barrister-at-law.

Mag 26. At Mile End, aged 73, Henry Whytehead, esq. late of the Customs.

In Albany-terr. Regent's Park, aged 82, Martha, relict of the late Peter Alley, esq. barrister-at-law.

Ann, wife of Treyer Evans, esq. of the Haymarket, and late of Kensington Gore. May 27. In Russell-pl. Fitzroy-sq. aged 37, John Poyer Poyer, esq. of Barbados. May 28. In Sloane-st. aged 95, Mrs. Helen Hargrave.

May 29. Aged 70, William Birley, esq. of Ribby Hall, Lanc. Justice of the Peace for that county.

May 30. In Elizabeth-st. Eaton-sq. aged 62, Joseph Grieves, esq.

Aged 56, Philip Harden, esq. of Earl'scourt, Old Brompton, and of Pancras-lane. At Barnsbury Park, aged 62, Charlotte, relict of Randle Edward Bruen, esq. May 31. At Upper Clapton, aged 29, Peter, sixth son of the late Thomas Edwards, esq. of Hoddesdon.

In Westbourne-terrace, aged 77, Anne, relict of N. Salisbury, esq. of Liverpool. Lately. At Fulham, aged 61, John Goodered, esq..

In Sloane-st. Miss Parry, for many years Governess to the Countess of Clarendon.

June 2. Aged 45, Thomas Madgshon Parker, esq solicitor, of High-st. Deptford, and New-inn, London.

June 3. Jemima, relict of John Philip Burnaby, esq. of the College, Doctors' Commons.

June 4. In Fenchurch-st. aged 86, James Kitson, esq. Senior Member of the Saddlers' Company.

At Islington, aged 56, Thomas Jones, esq. of the firm of Thomas and Francis Reeve Jones, Brunswick-sq. solicitors.

The wife of Charles Bowyer, esq. of Eaton pl. and Farleigh House, Hants.

Elizabeth-Ann, wife of Samuel Hale Bibby, esq. surgeon, North Audley-st.

In Great Tower-st. aged 61, Mr. John Hurcomb, 32 years principal clerk to the Board of Corn Meters.

June 5. At Queen-st. May Fair, Frances, wife of William Ley, esq. of Woodlands, Devon.

Aged 50, William Charlton Wright, esq. of Charlton, Kent, and Paternoster-row. At Croom's-hill, Greenwich, aged 62, Frederick Finch, esq. M.R.C.S.

June 6. In Westbourne-st. the Hon. Amelia Louisa Noel Hill, youngest sister of the late Rev. Lord Berwick, and of the late Marchioness of Ailesbury.

June 7. In Fitzroy-square, aged 78, William Ross, esq. father of Sir William C. Ross, R.A.

June 8. In Harley-street, Anna-Maria, fourth dau. of the late Michael Duffield, esq. of Sunning-hill, Berks.

June 9. In Montague-sq. Harriet, widow of Lewis William Brouncker, esq. late of Pelhams, Dorset, who died in 1812, and father of the present Richard Brouncker, esq. of Boveridge, in that county.

Aged 20, William-Hill, only son of William Sandys, esq. Devonshire-st.

In Charterhouse-sq. of lockjaw, arising from an accidental pistol-shot through the hand, aged 25, Charles James Webber, Lieut. in the 4th Austrian Lancers, youngest son of the late Rev. J. Webber, D.D. Dean of Ripon.

June 10. At his house in Grosvenorsq. Sir George Talbot, Bart. He was second son of Sir Charles Henry Talbot, the second Baronet, and succeeded his brother in 1812. The first baronet's grandfather was successively Bishop of Oxford, Salisbury, and Durham; his father was a Major-Gen. in the British army, and his uncle was Charles first Lord Talbot, Lord High Chancellor of England. The deceased

married Anne, daughter of the Rev. Thomas Preston, of Swainton, and had issue two daughters; but, from the failure of male heirs, the baronetcy becomes extinct.

BEDS.-May 29. At Biggleswade, aged 66, James Weston, esq.

BERKS.-June 4. At Wallingford, aged 83, Charles Atherton Allnatt, esq. senior magistrate and father of the corporation.

June 5. In Chauntry House, Bray, aged 57, Charles Williams, esq.

BUCKS.-May 17. At Newport Pagnell, aged 90, Mary, widow of Charles Marius Hardy, esq.

May 30. At the vicarage, Chesham, Henry Aylward, esq. surgeon, of Chiselhurst.

CAMBRIDGE.-May 31. At Cambridge, aged 78, Margaret, wife of W. Wallis, esq.

CHESHIRE.-May 14. At Chester, aged 64, Elizabeth-Jane-Winter, wife of John Williams, esq. of the Old Bank in that city, and of Treffos, Anglesey.

May 16. At Barrow rectory, Fanny, wife of William Hugh Clark, esq. of Cuddington Lodge, Cheshire, and dau. of late Peter Wettenhall, esq. of Winnington Lodge.

May 20. Beckett. May 24. Edward Watson Lloyd, esq. clerk of the Crown and Prothonotary of the Chester and North Wales Circuit, in which office he succeeded his late father eight years ago. He has left a widow and twelve children.

At Frodsham, aged 76, Miss

May 28. At Chester, aged 82, Anne, widow of Roger Barnston, esq. She was dau. of the Rev. John Parker, of Astle, and was left a widow in 1837, having had issue one surviving son the present Roger Harry Barnston, esq. and two daughters, of whom the younger was the wife of the Hon. Charles Napier, and died in 1834.

May 30. At Malpas, aged 77, Katherine, relict of William Harwood Folliott, esq. of Chester, and only surviving dau. of the late John Burscoe, esq. of Stapeley House, near Nantwich.

June 1. At Runcorn, aged 75, Thomas Keeling, esq.

June 13. Aged 57, Mary, wife of Joseph Henry Kent, esq. surgeon, Nantwich. CORNWALL.-June 8. At Truro, aged 72, Juliana, relict of William Penrose, esq. of Tregie.

June 9. At Camelford, John Clode Braddon, esq. of Camelford and Skisdon Lodge, second surviving son of the late Henry Braddon, esq. of Skisdon Lodge.

CUMBERLAND.-June 2. Mary-Eleanor, only dau. of Dr. Ferguson, Heskett, near Carlisle.

DERBY.-May 19. At Highfield, Derby, aged 69, J. Wright, esq. surgeon.

At Matlock, Bath, aged 40, Mrs. Catherine Wasse, third dau. of the late Josh. Wasse, esq. of Lea.

May 20. At Wirksworth, aged 61, Francis Shaw, esq. surgeon.

DEVON.-May 12. At Barnstaple, aged 76, William Brabazon, esq.

May 17. At Plymouth, aged 40, Ellen, dau. of the late S. Wharton, esq. clerk comptroller in the household of King George IV.

May 19. At Dartmouth, aged 90, Elizabeth, widow of Arthur Holdsworth, esq. of Widdicombe and Mount Galpine, Devon. May 21. At Seaton, aged 78, Joseph Horsford, esq. of Weymouth.

May 22. At Ottery St. Mary, Margaret, wife of W. S. Tinney, esq. surgeon. May 23. At Brislington, aged 42, John Burge Plummer, esq.

At the residence of his son, aged 68, John Tunstall, esq. formerly of Hutton House, Essex, and late of Plymouth.

May 28. Selina-Elizabeth, wife of the Rev. Richard Gardner, Minister of St. Michael's Church, Stoke Damerel, and dau. of the Rev. J. H. C. Moor, Rural Dean of Rugby.

At Combe Royal, aged 73, Sarah, relict of John Luscombe Luscombe, esq. of Combe Royal, and fourth dau. of the late James Hawker, esq. Capt. R.N.

May 29. At Exmouth, aged 72, William Charles Lamplow, esq. formerly of Wokingham.

May 30. At Budleigh Salterton, aged 28, Ellen-Frances, dau. of J. L. Martin, esq. of Croft's Lodge, Cambridge, and sister of the Rev. George Martin, Principal of the Diocesan Training College, Exeter. May 31. Elizabeth, wife of John Blatch, esq. Dix's Field, Exeter.

June 1. At Tiverton, aged 80, William Talley, esq. late of Prescott.

June 6. At Exeter, aged 74, Mrs. Divett, mother of E. Divett, esq. M.P. for Exeter. At Dawlish, Capt. Benjamin Chapman, formerly of the Ninth or Queen's Royal Lancers.

June 10. At Plymouth, aged 73, Mrs. Bartlett, sister of the late Mr. N. T. Carrington, author of "Dartmoor," "The Tamar," and other poems.

DORSET.-May 20. At Longfleet, aged 53, Thomas Howel, esq. only son of the late Rev. James Howel, Rector of Clutton, Somerset.

May 29. At Fleet-house, near Weymouth, Theresa, youngest dau. of Samuel Pretor, esq.

May 30. At Blandford, aged 73, Sarah Conyers, dau. of the late Richard Conyers, esq. of Lombard-st. London.

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