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Moth, G. Portsea, vintner Mitchell, J. sen. Herts, dealer Nash, J. Bath, fishmonger

Nelson, R. Neckinger, Bermondsey, fellmonger
Newmarch, C. Cheltenham, stone-merchant
Nobles, R. A. Swindon, Wilts, plumber
Norton, L. New Union-street, stage-coach-master
Owen, J. Madeley, dealer in coals

Parsons, J. Long Acre, coach-lace-manufacturer
Pennell, P. Whitborne, Herefordshire, farmer
Pethurst, J. Cranbrook, draper
Philpots, R. Banbury, draper

Sager, W. Chaddeston, Lancashire, merchant
Sager, E. jun. Chaddeston, Lancashire, merchant
Saunders, J. Duke-street, St James's, surgeon
Shakespear, J. Fillnagley, Warwickshire, draper
Shipden, R. Hythe, grocer

Shorey, J. Croydon, coal-merchant
Sidwell, R. Bath, shoemaker

Skey, R. S. Stratford-upon-Avon, carter
Smithies, J. Huddersfield, victualler

Stead, R. Huddersfield, corn-dealer

Symes, W. Crewkerne, Somersetshire, linen-drap

er

Phillips, C. and W. Parsons, Broseley, Shropshire, Thurtell, J. and J. Giddens, Norwich, bombazine iron-masters

Pitts, J. Hereford, timber-dealer

Poole, A. Haydon-square, merchant

Priddy, J. Oxford-street, wine-merchant Pryer, T. C. B. Birchin-lane, saddler

Pullinger, J. Itchingswell, Southampton, tanner Purkis, W. Portsmouth, cabinet-maker

Reid, W.jun. Newcastle-place, Clerkenwell, watchmaker

Reeve, B. Hilgay, Norfolk. dealer

Richards, J. Deritend, Warwickshire, brewer Richardson, T. Iron Acton, Gloucestershire, tan

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manufacturers

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Vigor, M. Bristol, cabinet-maker

Vipond, T. E. Newcastle-upon-Tyne, grocer Walpole, T. White Lion-street, Goodman's Fields, victualler

Watts, T. Combe Martin, Devonshire, dealer Wilburn, W. F. North Shields, hardware-man Wildman, J. Whitechapel-road, plumber Williams, W. and A. White, New Bond-street, hatters

Wilkinson, J. and W. Blackburn, cotton-manufacturers

Wise, J. Wellingborough, Northamptonshire, saddler

Wotton, T. Bristol, leather-factor

Young, J. Bristol, woollen-draper

ALPHABETICAL LIST of SCOTCH BANKRUPTCIES and DIVIDENDS, announced February 1821, extracted from the Edinburgh Gazette.

SEQUESTRATIONS.

Campbell, John, Glasgow, merchant
Crichton, Peter, Dundee, corn-merchant
Gordon, James and Matthew, Overland and Kirk-
land, Stewartry of Kirkcudbright, cattle-deal-

ers

Green, Edward, Montrose, merchant
Hamilton, John, and Co. Glasgow, merchants
Johnston and Wright, Leith, merchants
Johnston, Robert and John, Stewartry of Kirk-
cudbright, cattle-dealers

Kid, David, Leith, fish-curer

Landles and Calder, Helmsdale, fish-curers and merchants

M'Call, James, and Co. Ayr, masons and builders Mackie, Alexander, Aberdeen, merchant M'Farlane, Duncan, Inveresragan, Argyllshire, cattle-dealer

Rattray, James and David, Bannockburn, manufacturers

Ross, William, Inverness, merchant

Russell, Alexander, Glasgow, builder and auctioneer

Russell, John, Hamilton, grocer

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M'Symon, John, junior, Dumbarton, baker and grain-dealer; by the trustee there

Ness, James, Edinburgh, merchant; by J. Spittal, merchant there

Rhind, James, Leith, merchant; by A. Bruce, accountant in Edinburgh

Robertson, John, Leith, merchant; by M. Smillie, writer there

Steel, William, Glasgow, merchant; by J. M'Ewan, merchant there

Vallance, Hugh, and Co, Paisley, timber-merchants; by J. Lamb, iron-merchant there

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In Gloucester Place, London, the lady of John Lawrie, Esq. a daughter. 15. The lady of Major G. Cunninghame, B. S. a son.

At Albury Park, Lady Harriet Drummond, a son.

19. At South Richmond Street, Edinburgh, Mrs Begg was safely delivered of a boy and two girls, all of whom, with the mother, are doing well.

At Edinburgh, the lady of Captain Robertson, 88th regiment, a daughter. 20. At 8, Maitland Street, Edinburgh, Mrs Macalister of Balinakill, a daughter. 21. Mrs J. S. More, Great King Street, Edinburgh, a daughter.

Mrs Dallas, St John Street, Edin. burgh, a son.

Lately, a woman, in the neighbourhood of Modena, was delivered of five children, three boys and two girls, which survived the birth for several hours. The same woman had four other deliveries of twins each time.-Gazette de France.

At Northumberland Street, Edinburgh, Mrs Mackenzie of Strathgarve, a daugh

ter.

MARRIAGES.

Jan. 12. At Balaphetrish, in the island of Tyree, Neil Maclachlan, Esq. Mingary, Mull, to Mrs Campbell, widow of Malcolm Campbell, Esq. late of Barmalloch, and eldest daughter of the late Colin Campbell, Esq. of Kilmartin.

21. At Edinburgh, W. Smith, Esq. to Jessy, daughter of the late Mr Wm. Hoy, surgeon, New York.

22. At Burntisland, Mr John Archbald, merchant there, to Grace, daughter of the late Henry Murray, Esq. merchant, Edinburgh.

23. At Greenock, the Rev. William Ritchie Thomson, to Frances, eldest daughter of Mr John Rodger.

26. At Dundee, Mr John Cooper, Dalmeny, to Margaret, daughter of the late Rev. John Scott, Kinclaven, and widow of Dr Power, of St John's, Newfoundland.

30. In Hill Street, Edinburgh, Wm.

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At Bonjedward, James Jackson, merchant, Jedburgh, to Elizabeth, second daughter of Thos. Caverhill, Esq.

6. At the Manse of Kirkpatrick Juxta, the Rev. John Bennet, of Ettrick, to Elizabeth, eldest daughter of the Rev. Dr Singer.

Mr Wm. A. Lawrie, to Harriet Oakley, youngest daughter of the late Robert Beatson, of Kilry, Esq.

- At Dover, Captain Robert Deans, of the Royal Navy, second son of the late Admiral Deans, to Mary, eldest daughter of the late Richard Clay, Esq. of Gloucester Place, London.

8. At Aberdeen, Thomas Lumsden, Esq. of the East India Company's military service, on the Bengal establishment, to Miss Hay Burnett, youngest daughter of John Burnett, Esq. of Elrick.

At Edinburgh, John Fairrie, Esq, Greenock, to Helen, daughter of the late William M'Cormick, Esq.

10. At St George's, Hanover Square, London, William Frederick Chambers, M. D. to Mary, third daughter of the late Wm. M'Kinnon Fraser, M. D. of Lower Grosvenor Square, and of Balnain, Inverness-shire.

12. At Langley Park, Alexander Cruickshank, Esq. of Keithock, to Mary, youngest daughter of James Cruickshank, Esq. of Langley Park.

13. At Knockormal, Capt. Robert Cuthbertson, to Miss Agnes, youngest daughter of Mr Hugh M'Kissock, in Knockormal.

16. At Stornoway, Mr Thomas Thompson, R. N. to Miss Isabella Laing, daughter of the late Mr James Laing, conjunct depute city clerk of Edinburgh.

19. At Prestonpans, Mr Robert Hislop, to Ann, second daughter of F. B. Sydserff, Esq. of Ruchlaw.

20. At Edinburgh, the Rev. James Walker, to Miss Madeline Erskine.

21. At Aberdeen, P. Macarthur, Esq. Delnies, to Ann, fourth daughter of Alexander Galloway, Esq. merchant in Glasgow.

23. At Edinburgh, Alexander Burnet, A. M. rector of the united schools of Jedburgh, to Mary Ann, eldest daughter of the Rev. George Thomson of Melrose.

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At Edinburgh, Mr William Steven, merchant, Edinburgh, to Ann, only daughter of the late William Stewart, Esq. of Perth.

Lately. At Dublin, the Rev. James Carlile, of the Scotch Church, Mary's Abbey, to Jane, youngest daughter of Mr William Wren, Kendal.

At Laurieston Castle, Cramond, George Drummond, Esq. of Dumcryne, Dumbartonshire, to Alfreda Louisa, second daughter of John Law M'Lellan, Esq.

DEATHS.

April 16, 1820. Of a rapid consumption, off the Cape of Good Hope, on board of the Castle Huntly East Indiaman, on his passage to join his corps in Bengal, Lieutenant Alexander Chisholm Robertson, of his Majesty's 24th regiment of foot.

July. At Madras, Lieut. James Brown, 2d battalion 10th regiment native infantry, son of the Rev. Dr Brown, Eskdalemuir.

11. At Trincomalee, of cholera morbus, much respected and beloved, in his 18th year, Mr Thomas, a midshipman of the Leander, and eldest son of Sir George Thomas, Bart.

Aug. 9. At sea, (during a voyage from Bombay to Calcutta.) Lieutenant Donald Norman M'Donald, 10th Madras native infantry, third son of the late Colonel Alexander M Donald of Boisdale.

20. At Trincomalee, Lieutenant Benjamin Stow, of his Majesty's ship Leander.

28. At Bangalore, Major-General Hare, of his Majesty's service, commanding the Mysore division of the Madras army.

Oct. 5. At Madras, Mr Robert Hunter Stuart, Assistant Garrison Surgeon, eldest son of the late Mr Archibald Stuart, surgeon, Kelso.

24. At Kingston, Jamaica, Robert Fraser, son of Mr Fraser, teacher, 24, St James's Square, being the second son he has lost on that island in the short space of five months.

Nov. 15. At Berbice, George Gordon, Esq. after an illness of a few days. Mr,

Gordon was a gentleman of the brightest talents and of the most polished wit. His society was coveted by men of taste, from the ease and elegance of his manners and the maturity of his judgment. He had been appointed to the situation of President of the Court of Justice in Berbice, by the late Governor Bentinck, but it was vacated only a few weeks before his death, by the re-appointment of Mr Beard, who had been suspended from the office. He has left an amiable widow to lament his loss, in which all who had the honour of his

friendship will sincerely sympathize.

17. At Barbadoes, of the yellow fever, Captain Thomas Roberts, of the royal engineers.

19. At Snowdon, Manchester, Jamaica, Dr Robert B. Wright.

24. At sea, on his passage from Jamaica to England, for the benefit of his health, William, sixth son of Mr Matthew Brearcliffe, late of Bagbie, in the stewartry of Kirkcudbright, and the fifth who has been cut off in the prime of life, from the effects of the climate of Jamaica.

Dec. 10. At Demerara, Thomas Martin, Esq. merchant.

15. In Jamaica, Jonathan Forbes of Waterton, Master in Chancery, and Colonel of St Catherine's regiment.

20. At Campbeltown, Argyleshire, Mrs Catherine M'Callum, relict of Talmack Muir Rowatt, Esq. of Kilkivan.

31. At Killin, Perthshire, Patrick Douglas, eldest son of Mr James Campbell, Catharine Street, Edinburgh.

Jan. 6, 1821. At Naples, after a long illness, Mrs John Cumming, eldest daughter of William Magee, Esq. of Belfast.

7. At Limerick, in consequence of her head dress taking fire from a candle which she held in her hand, the widow of Dr Kelly.

12. At her house, Mound Place, Edinburgh, Mrs Elizabeth Campbell, relict of the late Convener William Fraser, of Kirkbraehead.

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At Inverness, Miss Margaret Warrand, daughter of the late Robert Warrand, Esq.

13. In his 11th year, George, son of Mr G. Asten, farmer, of Martlesham, near Ipswich. He was the youngest of twentyeight children by the same parents; and it is a remarkable coincidence, that the youngest daughter died last year on the same day of the same month, and at the same hour.

14. At Craigflower, Mrs Isabella Colville of Ochiltree, relict of James Wedderburn Colville, Esq.

At Leghorn, whither he had gone for the recovery of his health, George Oswald Sym, eldest son of the Rev. George

Sym, minister of New Kilpatrick, in the 29th year of his age.

15. At London, Lewis Fraser, Esq. youngest son of the late Simon Fraser, Esq. of Ford, writer to the signet.

18. At the manse of Abercorn, Mrs Meiklejohn, senior.

19. At Hamburgh, Mrs Klopstock, widow of the illustrious author of the Messiah, in the 74th year of her age.

At Fareham, aged 89, Joseph Gilbert, Esq. who, in the year 1772, accompanied Captain Cook in his second voyage round the world, and was afterwards many years master attendant in Portsmouth and Deptford dock yards.

At Hasling House, Buxton, John Gillies, Esq.

20. At Leith, Agnes Addison, daughter of Mr William Hunter, of his Majesty's Customs.

21. At Newtonstewart, William Dill, sen. Esq. writer.

22. In Lansdown Place, Bath, Mrs Wilson, relict of George Wilson, Esq. and eldest daughter of the late John Robertson, Esq. of the Royal Crescent.

At Banff, at a very advanced age, John Russell, Esq. of Balmade.

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At Muirton, Miss Louisa Watson, daughter of James Watson, Esq.

At Grange Toll, near Edinburgh, within a few weeks of 100 years old, Duncan Cumming, superannuated officer of Excise, grandson of George Grant, Esq. of Tullochgorum. He was born in March 1721. He lived in St Andrew's in 1745, when the Highland army passed through that place, and was much solicited to join them, which, however, he declined. Till within the last twenty-four hours of his life, he was able to walk out, and, on the Friday before his death, he walked into the Old Town. He was a person of genuine piety, and of a cheerful happy_temper, which he enjoyed to the last. This old man, who witnessed so many changes in all around him, married at 40, and he and his wife (who is yet alive) lived together for 60 years.

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At Dalvey, Alexander Macleod, Esq. of Dalvey.

-At Edinburgh, John Stenhouse, Esq. writer to the signet.

-At Tranent, Mr Andrew Blair, cornmerchant, in the 72d year of his age.

At Logiegreen, Charles Steuart, Esq. writer to the signet.

7. At Stobo Manse, Mr Alex. Ker, preacher of the gospel, eldest son of the Rev. Alex. Ker, minister of Stobo.

At Stirling, at her house, Quality Street, Mrs Alexander Murray, in her 81st year.

At her father's house, St James's Square, Edinburgh, Euphemia Craig, in her 19th year.

8. At Greenock, John Laird, Esq. in the 70th year of his age.

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At Fraserburgh, in the 60th year of her age, Mrs Janet Dalrymple, relict of the late Mr William Greig, merchant there.

9. At Stewartfield, Cornelius Elliot, Esq. of Woollie.

In Hans Place, Sloane Street, London, the Rev. Dr Nicol, minister of the Scots Church, Swallow Street.

- At Blackford, Miss Jane Trotter of Mortonhall.

10. At Dr Langworthy's Asylum, Kingsdown House, Box, in Somersetshire, John Randall, aged 104 years, upwards of 69 of which he had been a patient in that institution, enjoying good bodily health, and working regularly in the garden until a few weeks prior to his death.

At Edinburgh, Mary Crichton Kyle, wife of Hugh Watson, writer to the signet.

At Govan, Mrs Pollock, aged 95, mother of the late Rev. Dr Pollock.

11. At her house in Charlotte Square, Edinburgh, the Right Hon. Lady Abercromby.

At Bogend, Robert, son of James Thomson, Esq. of Earnslaw.

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At Nairn, after severe and protracted sufferings, Mrs Jane Allan, wife of Mr Daniel Fraser, merchant there.

At Richmond, aged 90, Dr Adam Walker, the celebrated Lecturer on Experimental Philosophy.

13. At London, Frederick, the youngest son of Sir George Clerk.

14. At Hamilton, Mrs Hume, wife of Joseph Hume, M. D.

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14. In the parish of Blantyre, Wm. Coats of Woodhouse, Esq. in the 83d year of his age.

At Edinburgh, John Campbell, Esq. Receiver-General of his Majesty's Customs for Scotland.

15. At Milnefield, near Colinsburgh, Thomas Fowlis, Esq. aged 82.

At Balcarras Mill, Mr Thomas Fowlis, Esq. aged 82 years.

16. At Balcarry, Mrs Irving, wife of Lieut.-Colonel George Irving.

At Edinburgh, Lady Dalrymple Hay, younger of Park Place.

At his house near the Chapel, in the City Road, London, aged 73, the Rev. Joseph Benson, formerly of St Edmund Hall, Oxford, and a distinguished preacher and writer, for more than half a century among the Wesleyan Methodists.

At Brompton, at the extreme age of 101, Mr John Heward, carpenter. This venerable man worked 60 years in the employment of the Earl of Carlisle, and daily walked to his labour, a distance of three miles, till he was 96, and was generally the first on the spot.

19. At Montrose, after a few minutes illness, Mr John Balfour, late leather merchant, in the 54th year of his age.

Lately, at Stenhouse, Margaret Clark, in the 108th year of her age. She was born at Dundee, in Scotland, and married there about 80 years since. She was at the battle of Fontenoy with her husband, who was afterwards a serjeant of invalids; she had 15 children, one of whom is drummajor of the East Devon militia; she lost two sons at sea at the time of the great earthquake, and five in the action fought against the French by the fleet under the command of Admiral Keppel. Tea was her constant beverage; and she asserted that she had never drank either beer or spirits.

At sea, on his passage from Jamaica to St John's, New Brunswick, Mr Mungo Murray, second son of the late Lieutenant William Murray, R. N.

At his seat in the county of Roscommon, Arthur French, Esq. M. P.

John Cranmer, of Much Park Street, Coventry, aged one hundred and seven years.

In one of Dovy's alms-houses, Exeter, Mary Heath, aged 100 years; six months after the death of her sister Elizabeth Heath, in the same house, at the age of 103 years.

At Paris, aged 60, M. Marietti, Ex-Conventionalist, who voted for the imprisonment of Louis XVI.

Printed by George Ramsay and Company.

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