On the 4rh of January, at Weymouth, Captain J. R. Franklin, of the Hon East India Company’s service, to the eldest daughter of John Butler Butlers, Esq.Marriage - Naval Chronicle - Vol 19 – January to June 1808, page 86
On the 17th March, at Charlton, in Kent, John Collins, Esq, commander of the Hon East India Company’s ship Travers, to Jane, daughter of J. L. Sheriff, Esq, of Deptford. Naval Chronicle - Vol 19 – January to June, 1808 (Page 263)
William Manwaring, Esq, chaplain in the Company’s naval service at Bombay, to Miss Connell, daughter of Major-General J. J. Connell, in the service of the Queen of Portugal. Marriage - Naval Chronicle - Vol 19 - January to June, 1808 (Page 352)
At Walthamstow, on the 5th of May, by the Rev Wm Douglas, prebendary of Westminster, etc, J. T. Timmins, Esq, late commander of the Royal George East Indiaman, to Elizabeth, eldest daughter of R. Anderson, Esq, of Walthamstow. Marriage - Naval Chronicle - Vol 19 - January to June, 1808 (Page 439)
On the 2d of June, at St George’s, Hanover-square, by the Rev Mr Hodgson, Captain William Ireland Jones, of the Madras establishment, to Margaret, eldest daughter of the late Captain David Thompson, commander of the Earl of Dartmouth East Indiaman. Marriage - Naval Chronicle - Vol 19 – January to June, 1808 (Page 515)
At Winchester, Lieutenant Godfrey, of the Hon East India Company’s marine service, to Miss Mary Francis Silver, eldest daughter of J. A. Silver, Esq, of Winchester. Marriage - Naval Chronicle - Vol 20 – July to December, 1808 (Page 80)
Lately, at St Mary-la-bonne church, by the Rev T. Rivett, Henry Shank, Esq, of the Hon East India Company’s civil service, to Anna Maria, eldest daughter of the late James Rivett Carnac, Esq, member of council at Bombay. Marriage - Naval Chronicle - Vol 20 – July to December, 1808 (Page 166)
Lately, at Thornhill, Yorkshire, Captain John Sykes, of the Hon East India Company’s service, to Miss Maria Morgan, second daughter of Aaron Morgan, Esq, of Savage Gardens, London. Marriage - Naval Chronicle - Vol 20 – July to December, 1808 (Page 493)
On the 6th of December, at St George’s, Hanover-square, Lieutenant-Colonel Gascoyne, in the Hon East India Company’s service, to Mrs Denton, of Tavistock-square, widow of the late Samuel Denton, Esq, purser in the Royal navy. Marriage - Naval Chronicle - Vol 20 – July to December, 1808 (Page 493)
DEATHS
At Naples, on the 30th January last, Lieut. J. Ireland, of his Majesty’s ship Gibraltar, to Miss Mallack, only daughter of the late Captain Mallack, in the Hon East-India Company’s service. Marriage - Naval Chronicle - Vol 11 - January to June, 1804 (Page 421)
Lately, in London, S. Williams Esq, son of the late Captain Williams, of Herrinstone, Dorset. He was formerly Captain of an East Indiaman, but for some years past has held the honourable situation of being a Brother of the Trinity House, and an East India Director. Death - Naval Chronicle - Vol 13 - January to June 1805 (page 246)
Of a wound he received from a cannon-ball, in cutting a French Prize out of harbour in the East Indies, Mr Z. Betty, son of the late Mr Z. Betty, apothecary-General to his Majesty’s Forces in the West Indies, and nephew of Mr H. W. Betty, Father of the Young Roscins.Death - Naval Chronicle - Vol 13 - January to June 1805 (page 335)
On the 19th of April, after a severe illness, of four months’ duration, Mrs Collett, widow of the late Pitt Collett Esq, commander of the Hon East India Company’s ship Hillsborough. Death - Naval Chronicle - Vol 17 – January to June, 1807 (Page 440)
At his house, in Upper Conway-street, Fitzroy-square, Nathaniel Tanner, Esq, formerly a commander in the Hon. East India Company’s service, in the 82d year of his age. Death -Naval Chronicle - Vol 19 – January to June, 1808 (Page 263)
At Ingatestone, Essex, aged 81, Anthony Eglington, Esq, formerly commander of the Hon. East India Company’s ship Prince. During the many years of his retirement his life has been a continued series of acts of benevolence. Death - Naval Chronicle - Vol 19 – January to June, 1808 (Page 264)
Extract from Memoir of Late Philip Affleck, Esq and the Late Sir Edmund Affleck, Bart.
The Affleck family, whose name is modernised from that of Auchinleck, is of Scotch extraction; and the gentlemen, whose services we are about to notice, belonged to a branch which had long been settled in the country of Suffolk.
Philip Affleck Esq was the younger brother of the late Admiral Sir Edmund Affleck, Bart, (Rear-admiral of the Red Squadron) and the uncle of Sir Gilbert, the present representative of the family.
Mr Philip Affleck (Admiral of the Blue Squadron) was born about the 1725. He was originally in the service of the East India Company; but afterwards entered into the royal navy, and obtained a lieutenant's commission on the 2d of May, 1755. He served in this rank, either on board the Hunter sloop, or the the AEtna bomb ketch, at the siege of Louisbourg (which began on the 2nd June, 1758, under the commander of Admiral Boscawen) and so particularly distinguished himself at the time that the Prudente and Bienfaisant were boarded by the boats of the squadron, that he was promoted by Admiral Boscawen to the rank of master and commander. Naval Chronicle - Vol 21 – January to June 1809, page 445