Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Obiuary.
bloody hand ? The following , we understand , are the principal among the bequests of his will : to his widow , during her life , his houses in Doverstreet and Hertfordshire , with all their fixtures and furniture , with his landed estate of 3000 Ia- ; to his two
. year daughters io , oool . each ; to his eldest son io . oool . payable immediately , with the reversion of the houses and estate after his mother ' s death ; and to each of his o . ther seven sons 6000 I . assigning , as a reason for leaving them no more , that he had given each of them advanced themin
a profession , and , his life time , as far in their respective professions as he could .. His widow is his residuary-legatee . As physician in ordinary to the King and the Prince of Wales , he is succeeded by Dr . Turton , who , as p hysician-extraordisucceeded
nary to the King , is by Dr . Reynolds . 21 . At his seat at Plastow , Kent , Peter Isaac Thelluson , esq . of'Brodsworth , co . York , M . P . f . r Malmsbury , Wilts . The fortune which he disp ' oses of amounts to between 6 and 7 oo , oool . The legacies to his wife and children are not quite ioo , cool . His
large estates in Yorkshire , and the residue of his fortune , he leaves to trustees to accumulate , and be laid out in the purchases of estates in England , until all the male-childre n of his sons and grandsons be dead . The term of accumulation cannot be probably less than fro 90 to 120 if it should
m years , terminate at the first period , the property would amout to about thirty-five millions ; if at Ihe latter to one hundred and forty millions . If at this remote period , ' he should have no lineal descendants , the whole estates are to be sold , and the money app lied to the direction of
Sinking Fund , under the Parliament . He concludes thisextraordinarv disposition of the bulk cf Jus property by expressing a hope that the Legislature will not alter it . Latelv , at Barnes , Surrey , in an advanced ' age , the Right Hon . Dorothy Sandwich of
Countess-dowager of , one the four . laughters cf Charles first Lord Vi- 'coimt Fane , and one of the two surviving sisters and coheiresses of Charles the Second and lastLord Viscount Fane . In March , 1740 , she was married to John late Earl of Sandwich , by whom she has left the present Earl of Sandwich , he / only surviving issue .
Lately , in his 53 d year , Capt . Geo . Coote , of Ipswich , nephew of the late Sir Eyre C . commander in chief m the East Indies . Capt . C . accompanied Gen . Burgoyne on the expedition , in 177 6 . to Canada and Ticonderago , and taken prisoner at Saratoga .
Havwas , ing been marched several hundred miles through the different provinces , and experiencing various hardships and difficulties , he continued captive till the conclusion of the war , when he returned home , retiring on half-pay . He was the friend and confident of Lady and to whom she
Harriet Auckland , first imparted her design of going to the enemy ' s camp in search , of her husband , who was there wounded and taken prisoner by Gen . Gates ; which she afterwards did , in an open boat , procured by Capt . Coote , attended by lain to
the Rev . Mr . Brudenell , chap the artillery , and two servants , rowing across Lake Champlain , and arriving over against the enemy ' s post ; but , it being night , were refused permission to land bv the sentinel , and the lady and hercompanions remained seven or eight dark and cold hours exposed to the inclemency of the weather .
Lately , at Copenhagen , in Ins 62 < i year , smcerelv regretted , that great statesman , Count Bernstolf . According fo his desire , his body was deposited in the church of Saint'Frederick , till it could be removed to Holstem , where it then was interred by the side of his late countessHe was certainly
. one of the greatest statemen of Europe . To him his country owes a wise neutrality , the education of the Prince-Regent , and his consequent judicious government . The police of Denmark , the bank of Copenhagen , and the arrangement and occonomy of her finances , of his directive
are the happv fruits and consummate wisdom . The biography of this great man would raise a fairer and more extensive monument to his memory than a statue or a cenotaph ; such testimonies of posthumous merit are the best encourage- . the situation
ments to others in same to leave a track of bright renown when they have passed off the stage of life ; while they are memorandums strictly due to those who have passed their lives in promoting the common welfare . At Dublin , the Rt . Hon . E . Carey . At Poulton-in the-Fylde , co . Lancaster , aged 117 , Mrs . Jane Stephenson .
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
Obiuary.
bloody hand ? The following , we understand , are the principal among the bequests of his will : to his widow , during her life , his houses in Doverstreet and Hertfordshire , with all their fixtures and furniture , with his landed estate of 3000 Ia- ; to his two
. year daughters io , oool . each ; to his eldest son io . oool . payable immediately , with the reversion of the houses and estate after his mother ' s death ; and to each of his o . ther seven sons 6000 I . assigning , as a reason for leaving them no more , that he had given each of them advanced themin
a profession , and , his life time , as far in their respective professions as he could .. His widow is his residuary-legatee . As physician in ordinary to the King and the Prince of Wales , he is succeeded by Dr . Turton , who , as p hysician-extraordisucceeded
nary to the King , is by Dr . Reynolds . 21 . At his seat at Plastow , Kent , Peter Isaac Thelluson , esq . of'Brodsworth , co . York , M . P . f . r Malmsbury , Wilts . The fortune which he disp ' oses of amounts to between 6 and 7 oo , oool . The legacies to his wife and children are not quite ioo , cool . His
large estates in Yorkshire , and the residue of his fortune , he leaves to trustees to accumulate , and be laid out in the purchases of estates in England , until all the male-childre n of his sons and grandsons be dead . The term of accumulation cannot be probably less than fro 90 to 120 if it should
m years , terminate at the first period , the property would amout to about thirty-five millions ; if at Ihe latter to one hundred and forty millions . If at this remote period , ' he should have no lineal descendants , the whole estates are to be sold , and the money app lied to the direction of
Sinking Fund , under the Parliament . He concludes thisextraordinarv disposition of the bulk cf Jus property by expressing a hope that the Legislature will not alter it . Latelv , at Barnes , Surrey , in an advanced ' age , the Right Hon . Dorothy Sandwich of
Countess-dowager of , one the four . laughters cf Charles first Lord Vi- 'coimt Fane , and one of the two surviving sisters and coheiresses of Charles the Second and lastLord Viscount Fane . In March , 1740 , she was married to John late Earl of Sandwich , by whom she has left the present Earl of Sandwich , he / only surviving issue .
Lately , in his 53 d year , Capt . Geo . Coote , of Ipswich , nephew of the late Sir Eyre C . commander in chief m the East Indies . Capt . C . accompanied Gen . Burgoyne on the expedition , in 177 6 . to Canada and Ticonderago , and taken prisoner at Saratoga .
Havwas , ing been marched several hundred miles through the different provinces , and experiencing various hardships and difficulties , he continued captive till the conclusion of the war , when he returned home , retiring on half-pay . He was the friend and confident of Lady and to whom she
Harriet Auckland , first imparted her design of going to the enemy ' s camp in search , of her husband , who was there wounded and taken prisoner by Gen . Gates ; which she afterwards did , in an open boat , procured by Capt . Coote , attended by lain to
the Rev . Mr . Brudenell , chap the artillery , and two servants , rowing across Lake Champlain , and arriving over against the enemy ' s post ; but , it being night , were refused permission to land bv the sentinel , and the lady and hercompanions remained seven or eight dark and cold hours exposed to the inclemency of the weather .
Lately , at Copenhagen , in Ins 62 < i year , smcerelv regretted , that great statesman , Count Bernstolf . According fo his desire , his body was deposited in the church of Saint'Frederick , till it could be removed to Holstem , where it then was interred by the side of his late countessHe was certainly
. one of the greatest statemen of Europe . To him his country owes a wise neutrality , the education of the Prince-Regent , and his consequent judicious government . The police of Denmark , the bank of Copenhagen , and the arrangement and occonomy of her finances , of his directive
are the happv fruits and consummate wisdom . The biography of this great man would raise a fairer and more extensive monument to his memory than a statue or a cenotaph ; such testimonies of posthumous merit are the best encourage- . the situation
ments to others in same to leave a track of bright renown when they have passed off the stage of life ; while they are memorandums strictly due to those who have passed their lives in promoting the common welfare . At Dublin , the Rt . Hon . E . Carey . At Poulton-in the-Fylde , co . Lancaster , aged 117 , Mrs . Jane Stephenson .