[list-cumbria] Carlisle Patriot, 11 Oct 1823 - BMD
Petra Mitchinson
petra.mitchinson at doctors.org.uk
Sun Jan 28 10:21:51 UTC 2024
Saturday 11 Oct 1823 (p. 3, col. 5)
MARRIED.
At St. Cuthbert's church, in this city, on Monday, Mr. George TINDAL, to Miss Elizabeth HOLBROOK.-Same day, Mr. John WALKER, to Miss
B. MAXWELL.
At St. Bees, Mr. Thos. FOX, surgeon, of Whitehaven, to Miss KAY.-Mr. Jonathan SIM, grocer, to Betsy, daughter of Capt. FLETCHER,
Irish-street.
At Whicham, Mr. Thomas BIGLAND, of Stennerley, to Miss KING, late of Lowick Bridge.
At New Church, St. Mary-le-bone, Thos. BATEMAN, Esq. of the Middle Temple, London, and of Halton Park, near Lancaster, to Julia
Margaret, second daughter of the late John CHAMPAIN, Esq.
At Kendal, John RIGG, Esq. of Newton Road, near Manchester, to Miss BALDWIN, of the same place, but late of Kendal.
At Ulverston, Benson HARRISON, Esq. of the Lund, to Miss Dorothy WORDSWORTH, fifth daughter of Rich. WORDSWORTH, Esq. late of
Whitehaven.
At Dumfries, on Monday, David JOHNSTONE, Esq., writer, to Ann, only daughter of the late William JARDINE, Esq., surgeon, R. N.
On the 3rd inst. at Ghent, Thomas Molyneux STEELE, Esq., of Hurst House, Lancashire, to Agnes Mary, third daughter of Sir R.
BEDINGFIELD, Bart., of Oxburgh Hall, Norfolk.
At South Shields, on Monday se'nnight, Mr. BISHOP, to Mrs. FARROW, of North Shields. The united ages of the enamoured pair amount to
152 years, the bride being 77, and the bridegroom 75.
DIED,
On Monday, in the Market-place, after a short illness, Mrs. MARTINDALE, wife of Mr. MARTINDALE, druggist, and daughter of Mr.
STUDHOLME of St. Nicholas, near Carlisle, aged 33.
On Monday morning, in Fisher street, Mrs. BROWN, mother of Mr. Charles BROWN, aged 78 years.
On Tuesday last, at Know-Hill, in this vicinity, Mr. SOWERBY, father of Mrs. IRVING, of the Blue Bell, Carlisle, aged 73.
This week, Mr. Wm. CASLET, Brown's-row, aged 50.
At Hesket-New-Market, on Saturday last, Elizabeth, wife of Mr. John BEATTIE, aged 29 years.
At Penrith, on the 4th, Mr. Henry HOLMES, of the Town-head, aged 23. Same place, on Tuesday last, Sarah, wife of Mr. George MOUNSEY,
shopkeeper, 74.
At Whitehaven, Mrs. Margaret MOUNSEY, aged 42. Mrs. Jane SMITH, widow, aged 78.-Miss Mary Ann TURNBULL, dress maker, Duke-street,
aged 18.
At Workington, Thomas, the fifth son of W. DICKINSON, Esq. surgeon, aged 25.-Isaac BOND, Esq. aged 79.-Mrs. WILLIAMSON, aged 38.
At High Ireby, Mr. John BIRKETT, aged 45.
On the 4th inst., at Hendon, near London, Mr. BLAMIRE, eldest son of the late Mrs. BLAMIRE, of Cockermouth.
Mr. Joseph FISHER, of Fellside, Kendal, aged 36.-Mr. James WALLER, of the Pack Horse Inn, Kendal, aged 27.-George, the son of Mr. W.
STEPHENSON, bookseller, Kendal, aged 7 years.
On the 25th ult. the Rev. Edward ELLERTON, minister of Colton, near Ulverston, aged 65.
At Ulverston, Mrs. Hannah SAUL, in her 101st year.
At Crag, near Ulverston, Mr. Joseph TAYLOR, in the prime of life. The body, when laid out, measured six feet seven inches in length.
In Portland Place, London, the Dowager Lady Templeton, mother of the Hon. Fulke Greville HOWARD, M. P. of Levens Hall, Westmorland.
At Dumfries, James KIRKPATRICK, aged 69. About 30 years since he was guard of the mail coach between Carlisle and Glasgow.
Suddenly, at his seat, Pulrose, near Douglas. Isle of Man, John MOORE, Esq. Captain of the Parish of Kirk Braddan, aged 52 years.
On the 26th ult. in Ransford-street, Dublin, in the 76th year of her age, Mrs. Mary GOFF. She was born in the room she died in, was
married in the same room, and had one-and-twenty children in the same room. She was interred on Sunday, and had not a single
relative living to attend her funeral.
Death of Young WATSON.-The Columbian Observer, a Philadelphia paper, of the 3d September, in its obituary gives an account of the
decease of this young man:-"At Mount Vernon, Bullit county, Kentucky, on the second day of August, of a billious fever, Dr. James
WATSON, jun., a native of England, aged 27 years. On account of a speech he made some years since at a meeting at Spafields, his
father, and THISTLEWOOD and others, were arrested and committed to prison, charged with treason. THISTLEWOOD and two or three others
were executed, the elder WATSON was acquitted, and young WATSON made his escape to this country. He eventually settled in Tenessee,
and about two years since was arrested in Nashville, charged with breaking open a store, was tried, and sentenced to be hanged; but
was pardoned by Governor CARROLL, who, it is said, was convinced of his innocence. After his misfortune in Tennessee, young WATSON
wandered from place to place, until within a few weeks of his death, when he settled in Mount Vernon, with a view of commencing the
practice of physic. He was an eccentric character, and as eloquent and persuasive as he was eccentric."
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