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83 Sentences With "departed this life"

How to use departed this life in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "departed this life" and check conjugation/comparative form for "departed this life". Mastering all the usages of "departed this life" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The departure board at Pennsylvania Station in Manhattan has departed this life, but unlike Elvis, it has not left the building.
DEPARTED THIS LIFE JUNE 17, 24 "He was murdered," Ms. Miller said of the man buried beneath this very large, flat rectangular stone slab, also in Plat 21991.
The First of which is dedicated > in memory of Catherine the daughter of Anthony and Elizabeth Trethewy who > departed this life the 29th July 1792. The second of which is dedicated to > the memory of Anthony Trethewy who departed this life on the 6th day of > August 1799. Also Elizabeth Trethewy, who departed on the 7th May 1805. Also > Anthony the son of Anthony and Elizabeth Trethewy, who departed this Life on > the 2nd of July 1801.
Also Amy the daughter of Anthony and Elizabeth > Trethewy who departed this life on the 28th July1804.
St. George's. [Burial site]"; September 8, 1777, The New-York Gazette and the Weekly Mercury, No. 1350, page 3: "Departed this Life the 6th Instant, Mrs.
2, 1666; was consecrated Bishop of Ossory Apl. 22, 1672; and departed this life 21 December 1677. Benjamin Parry DD was promoted to the Deanery of St Canices Kilkenny 19 February 1673, to the Deanery of St. Patrick's Dublin 17 February 1674, was consecrated Bishop of Ossory on the death of his brother John Parry and departed this life 4 October 1678. On the repairing of this church AD 1848 by permission of the Rev.
From his tombstone in the ruined church Anglican Church of Finglas: "Hereunder lieth the body of Sir Edward Bagshawe, Knight, who departed this life the 6th day of October, 1657" .
2, 1666; was consecrated Bishop of Ossory Apl. 22, 1672; and departed this life Dec. 21st 1677. Benjamin Parry DD was promoted to the Deanery of St Canices Kilkenny Feb.
2, 1666; was consecrated Bishop of Ossory Apl. 22, 1672; and departed this life Dec. 21st 1677. Benjamin Parry DD was promoted to the Deanery of St Canices Kilkenny Feb.
Stenton, Anglo-Saxon England, p. 220. According to the Croyland Chronicle "he (Ecgfrith) was seized with a malady, and departed this life." His reign lasted 141 days.Swanton, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, p. 50.
Ecclesall Skinner was buried on Monday 12 December 1881 in a vault at "the centre of the upper portion of the churchyard" at All Saints Church, Ecclesall. The plot has a "handsome monolithic column" which bears the inscription, "In affectionate remembrance of Mellond, the beloved wife of Thomas Skinner who departed this life Nov 24th 1876 aged 56 years. Also the above Thomas Skinner who departed this life Dec 6th 1881 aged 62 years." Burial records are in Sheffield Archives.
His gravestone survives in the north cloister of Westminster Abbey, inscribed: Here lyeth interrd the body of John Fox Esq. who departed this life the 19 day of Novemb. 1691 in the 80 year of his age.
The incised text reads as follows: > Near this place lies enterrd the body of John Ayshford of Ayshford in the > county of Devon Esq.r who departed this life the 24th day of Febru: 1689 in > ye 49th year of his aage (sic). As also the body of Susanna Ayshford his > wife daughter of Lucy Knightley of London, merchant, the youngest son of > Ritchard Knightley of Fausley in the county of Northamton Esq.r who departed > this life the 6 day of Decem: 1688 in the 24 year of her age.
The inscription on the top slab of Henry's tomb reads: > (Here lies)? the body of ...ry Ayshforde sone of Arthur Ayshforde Esq.r who > departed this life the 17th day of January Anno Dom. 1666 aged one yeare and > nine mo.
Who departed this life on 6 August 1867, in the 64th year of her > age. A kind and affectionate wife and sister, a sincere and devoted friend. > None knew her but to love her. None named her but to praise.
William Porter, A sermon occasioned by the death of Robert Cruttenden, Esq. (who departed this life June 23, 1763, aged 73 years) preached at Mile's-Lane, on Lord's-Day, August 7. To which are added, several poetical composures (London, 1763).
Hiscock 2002 p.207 In 1982 the Canadian Conservation Institute gave the faded inscription on the extant gravestone as follows:Hiscock 2002 p.211 :Here lieth the body of John Pike, Sen. who departed this life 14 July 1753, aged 63.
19th 1673, to the Deanery of St. Patrick's Dublin Feb. 17th 1674, was consecrated Bishop of Ossory on the death of his brother John Parry and departed this life Oct. 4th 1678. On the repairing of this church AD 1848 by permission of the Rev.
19th 1673, to the Deanery of St. Patrick's Dublin Feb. 17th 1674, was consecrated Bishop of Ossory on the death of his brother John Parry and departed this life Oct. 4th 1678. On the repairing of this church AD 1848 by permission of the Rev.
Who Departed this Life 28th January A. D. 1848 in the 97th Year of his Age. He was a Native of Sutherlandshire Scotland. Served during the American Revolutionary War as an Officer in the Queen’s American Rangers Regiment of Foot. And was for many Years Colonel of the Charlotte County Militia.
Braddock, the English commander, unhappily lost his life. Gladwin was buried in Wingerworth Church, and his monument there survives inscribed as follows:Quoted by Moore, p.610 > Here lieth the remains of General H. Gladwin. He departed this life on the > 22nd day of June, 1794 (sic) in the 62d year of his age.
After the death of Thomas Hobbes Blount produced an anonymous broadsheet of "sayings" from Hobbes' book Leviathan. The last sayings, or, Dying legacy of Mr. Thomas Hobbs of Malmesbury who departed this life on Thursday, Decemb. 4, 1679, London, 1680. In 1693 Blount used his ironic approach to argue for the validity of William and Mary.
Dummer was also one America's foremost early portrait painters. Among his paintings are a self-portrait and portrait of his wife, Anna, together with portraits of many of his contemporaries. He died on May 24, 1718 in Boston. His obituary printed in the Boston News-Letter on June 2, 1718 said: > Departed this life Jeremiah Dummer, Esqr.
The grave of Sarah May Hardie is located on the eastern side of Woody Island south of the North Bluff light. It is a concrete headstone with the words "SACRED TO THE MEMORY OF SARAH MAY HARDIE WHO DEPARTED THIS LIFE AUG. 8 1883 AGED 19 YEARS "KEPT"," engraved on it. It is surrounded by a recently constructed painted, timber, picket fence.
GEORGE COOK, who died Octᴿ 1st 1772, Aged 4 Months. All Children of > the first mentioned CAPᴺ. JAMES COOK, by ELIZABETH COOK, who survived her > Husband 56 Years, & departed this life 13th May 1835, at her residence > Clapham Surrey in the 94th Year of her Age. Her remains are deposited with > those of her Sons JAMES & HUGH in the middle Aisle of this Church.
Jesty (of Downshay) who departed this > Life, April 16th 1816 aged 79 Years. He was born at Yetminster in this > County, and was an upright honest Man: particularly noted for having been > the first Person (known) that Introduced the Cow Pox by Inoculation, and who > from his great strength of mind made the Experiment from the (Cow) on his > Wife and two Sons in the Year 1774.
The grave marker text reads: :Colonel John Francis Hamtramck, Esq. :The First United States Regiment of Infantry and Commandant of Detroit and its dependencies. :He departed this life on the 11th of April 1803 aged 48 years, 7 months and 28 days. :True patriotism and zealous attachment to national liberty joined to a laudable ambition led him into military service at an early period of his life.
The memorial reads: "This tablet is erected to the memory of Thomas Clabburn, manufacturer, by upwards of six hundred of the weavers of Norwich and assistants in his establishment as a mark of esteem for his many virtues as an employer and a kind good man. He departed this life March 31st 1858 aged 70." Clabburn was a Silk Weaver, Manufacturer & Merchant in Magdalen Street, Norwich.
Henry is buried in the churchyard of French Church, Portarlington. His grave is nestled in the right angle of two low stone walls, directly behind the church. The headstone reads: :Sacred to the memory of the :Rev Archdeacon Henry :Cary who departed this life :the 27th of October 1769 in :the 52nd Year of his Age. :This stone is laid by his :afflicted Widow Deborah.
Father Haydock was interred in his family's plot at St. Mary's Church (now known as St. Mary's Newhouse) in Newsham, Lancashire. After the death of his mother and one of his sisters, a family gravestone was laid. Barely legible today, it reads: In memory of the Rev. JAMES HAYDOCK of Lea, son of George and ANN HAYDOCK, of the Tagg, who departed this life, the 25th of Apr.
General Aaron Hankinson Who departed this life Oct IX > 1806 Aged 71 years 8 months 2 days Let all his children in a word Unite and > praise the eternal God For the sweet hope that he has gone To rest with > Christ God's only Son Hankinson and his wife Mary (née Snyder) had 13 children, and among his descendants include William A. Newell, former Governor of New Jersey.
Mary Langton, a mother of three small children under 4 years old, who committed suicide by taking poison at the age of 28 years. Her husband, John Langton, carried goods from Townsville to Dalrymple Township. The inscription reads: > Sacred to the Memory of Mary Langton Who departed this life 6th December > 1873 Aged 28 years The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away Blessed by the > name of the Lord 3\.
Dr. Aleck Che-Mponda was born in Lifua, Manda, Ludewa District in what was then Tanganyika, to Mary Gandula Makatochi and Emmanuel Obadiah Hauli Mponda. He departed this life on Monday, March 30, 2015 at Massana Hospital in Dar es Salaam after losing his fight with cancer. He studied at Manda Primary School, Chidya Secondary School and Minaki High School. He started showing an interest in politics while in High School.
His tombstone reads: > C. S. In memory of Casper Shaver, who departed this life Dec. the 7th, 1784, > in the 72 year of his age. On 10 December 2009, the grist mill built by Casper Shafer, and operated after his death by his son Abraham, was listed as the Casper and Abraham Shafer Grist Mill Complex on the state and National Register of Historic Places. New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection - Historic Preservation Office.
It is reported that when Bugi was dying he sent for his son Beuno, who came to him, and "After receiving the communion, making his confession and rendering his end perfect he departed this life." It was said that Beuno planted an acorn at the site of Bugi's death, which grew into an oak tree forming an arch; any Englishman passing through this arch would die, while a Welshman would be unharmed.
John Pryce of Newtown in ye County of Montgomery, > Bar(on)et. who departed this life the 5th of Febry. 1720 in the 28th year of > her age in the small pox to the unspeakable affliction of her husband > children and relations and to ye great grieff of all that knew her. She was > a woman that was indued with as much beauty virtue and goodness as ever > lived or ever died.
He was buried in Hopwood Cemetery (also known as the Founding Fathers Cemetery) where the following is inscribed upon his original tombstone :John Hopwood senior who departed this life June 2nd A.D. 1802, aged 57 years. He who can leave a cottage or a throne and alone with his spacious mind dwell. His replacement tombstone, raised in 1991 during the Hopwood bicentennial, also states: "Rev[olutionary War] Aide to George Washington - Village Founder".
Mr. Newte and now belongs to J. N. Fazakerly, Esq. M.P." In 1822 the site of Bampton Castle was the property of Robert Lucas, heir to the Tristram family.Lysons, 1822 A mural monument to John Tristram (1668-1722) exists in Bampton parish church, inscribed as follows: :"In ye vault underneath lyeth ye body of John Tristram Esqr. of this Towne who departed this life ye 28th June 1722 aetat(is) suae 54.
Harting died aged 86 on 16 January 1928 in Weybridge, Surrey, where he lived most of his life, and is buried in the Town Cemetery. His headstone reads: > Pray for the Soul of Elizabeth Maria wife of James Edmund Harting of > Weybridge, in the Co.[unty] of Surrey, who departed this life 25th Jan 1907. > Also of James Edmund Harting Died 16th, January 1928 Aged 85 Years . Also > Etheldreda Mary Harting Died 23rd, Jan 1942 Aged 71.
Lawson died in 1688. He had married Jane Musgrave, daughter of Sir Edward Musgrave, 1st Baronet of Hayton CastleField p.196 (1937) and had five sons and eight daughters, twelve of whom survived to be married. The following is the epitaph in the chancel of Isel church: > Here lies Sir Wilfrid Lawson, baronet, and his Lady Jane > He departed this life 13th day of December 1688 aged 79 > And she the 8th June 1677 aged 65.
Wisdom, 4:10, > Placens Deo factus est dilectus et vivens inter peccatores translatus est. > This book appears only in Roman Catholic Bibles. Underneath and on the left > hand of the abovesaid Jn. Courtenay Esq. are reposited the remains of > Margaret (his late wife & widow) who departed this life August the 30th > 1743. The other surviving sister of John Courtenay (died 1732) was Elizabeth Courtenay (1693–1763), who married, as his first wife, John Chichester (1707–1783) of Arlington Court.
This estate became known as Currioman and its owner as John Chilton of Currioman. He lived in Westmoreland County some 30 years and died in July 1726. His grave marker has been preserved, and reads: Here / Lyeth in hopes of a / Joyful Resurrection the / Body of Mr. John Chilton / Merchant who departed / this life the 11th day of July / Anno Domini 1726 / about 60 years. See descendants: Thomas Chilton, William Parish Chilton, Robert H. Chilton, Robert Emmett Bledsoe Baylor, Robert A. Lovett.
A mural monument on the west wall of the north transept is inscribed with the following much faded text: > M(emoriae) S(acrum) of Mary the wife of William Risdon of this parish , > gent., who departed this life ..d of September An(n)o Dom(ini) 16(90?) > aetatis suae 66.o as allso of Mary ye daughter of Joseph Prust, gent., by > Mary his wife who dyed the 6th of August in the same year An(n)o aetatis > suae 4.o.
Gravestone for Thomas Hindle, watchmaker The graveyard contains a headstone to Thomas Hinde (d. 1836) clock and watchmaker with the amusing inscription: > Here lies in a horizontal position the outside case of Thomas Hinde, Clock > and Watchmaker, who departed this life wound up in the hope of being taken > in hand by his Maker and being thoroughly cleaned, repaired and set a-going > in the world to come. On the 15th of August 1836 in the 19th year of his > life.
In the summer of 1811, he wrote: "About the first week in June some few were taken sick with fevers, and on the 19th, Anthony Tann a colored man departed this life, having Peggy his wife a white woman and 6 children among the believers. This was the first death that occurred after the Eagle Creek people were settled on Prairy." A number of the Shakers who settled here had also been Revolutionary War veterans.See McClelland's annual obituary notices in his diary.
He was a trustee of this chapel, and for many years faithfully > discharged the duties of book-steward to the Methodist New Connexion, of > which communion he was for upwards of half a century a consistent member, > and a highly acceptable preacher. He was diligent, upright, and enterprising > in business as a citizen. He associated enlightened views with active > usefulness ad his piety was sincere and unostentatious. He departed this > life full of years, leaving an unblemished reputation and fragrant memory.
Security and privacy in the harem were the most strict anywhere and no one knew when Selim II had actually died. Nurbanu told no one and hid the dead body of her husband in an icebox and sent to Manisa for her son to come to Constantinople immediately. All the while no one was the wiser that Sultan Selim II had departed this life. It was not made known publicly until twelve days later when Murad arrived and Nurbanu delivered up the body of her late husband.
She had come to Canada via Berlin, Brittany and Connecticut, and now, just a few days short of her 94th birthday, she fell ill with pneumonia and departed this life on March 29, 1978. Tania suffered personal tragedy again in 1981, when her son Robert Gray died at the age of forty-six. Although he had been married, he had no children. Eventually Tania's inner resolve once again gave her the strength to carry on since she has never been one to suffer life's adversities lying down.
788 ; List of Volunteer and Yeomanry Corps of the United Kingdom, Lindon, 1804 He was the son of Henry I Beavis, Mayor of Barnstaple in 1738 and 1751, whose portrait survives in Barnstaple Guildhall. He died on 7 December 1813, and his small mural monument survives in Pilton Church inscribed as follows: ::Sacred to the memory of Josiah Crane Esq., Captain and Adjutant of the North Devon Regiment of Local Militia. Colonel Henry Beavis, Commandant, who departed this life 7th December 1813 aged 77 years.
His mural monument survives in the Fulford Chapel of Dunsford Church. Inscribed: :"Underneath lies ye body of Francis Fulford of Fulford Esqr who departed this life the 26th day of 7ber(7ber = September) 1700 in the 34th year of his age. He was twice marri'd. First to Margaret a daughter of John Lord Poulett the 2d Baron of Henton StGeorge and next to Mary daughter of John Tuckfeild of Fulford near Crediton Esqr by whom he had one son which died nine months old".
A later unrelated hearing from 1565 makes reference to William and Richard Hart from Hart Common. The family name is further mentioned in the Dean Parish Register, which reads "Burial at Dean, 14th September, 1655, Roger Hart of the Hole at Westhoughton". A headstone in Dean Churchyard reads "Here lyeth the body of Mr. James Hart of Hart Common in Westhoughton who departed this life ye 26 day of July 1709 in ye 34 year of his age". Little else is known about the family after the late 1790s.
Mural monument to Lord Clermont in St Andrew's Church, Little Cressingham, Norfolk A mural monument survives in St Andrew's Church, Little Cressingham, inscribed as follows:Lord Clermont, 1880, p. 214. :Near this place lyeth the body of William Henry Fortescue Viscount Clermont, and Earl of Clermont in Ireland, who departed this life on the 29th day of September, 1806, in the 85th year of his age. This monument is erected in obedience to his will by his executor William Charles Fortescue, now Viscount Clermont, who was in Ireland at the time of his decease.
The envoy of the Medici family summed up Sixtus' reign in the announcement to his master 'Today at 5 o'clock His Holiness Sixtus IV departed this life-may God forgive him!' Perie, The Triple Crown, Spring 1935 p.26 Pope Sixtus's tomb was destroyed in the Sack of Rome in 1527. Today, his remains, along with the remains of his nephew Pope Julius II (Giuliano della Rovere), are interred in St. Peter's Basilica, in the floor in front of the monument to Pope Clement X. A marble tombstone marks the site.
Foster was born and baptized at Exeter, 6 September 1697. Most of our biographical knowledge of him comes from memoirs attached to a sermon preached at his funeral by his friend and colleague, Caleb Fleming.Caleb Fleming, A sermon preached at Pinners-Hall on occasion of the death of the late Reverend James Foster, D.D. who departed this life Nov. 5, 1753 : with memoirs of his life and character, London, 1753 His grandfather had been a conformist minister at Kettering in Northamptonshire, and his father, James Foster, was a successful Devonshire dissenting businessman (a fuller).
In the Life of St. Tigernach of Clones there is an anecdote about Dubhthach- ‘The fame of our Saint's virtues being diffused abroad, many holy men flocked to visit him, and to engage in useful and pious conferences. Among others, Duach (Doachus), Bishop of Armagh, was received with great honour and attention, by the saint. At his departure, Tigemach offered up earnest prayers to God. While travelling through a plain, called Magh Glas (or Machaire Glas or Glassen) the Bishop departed this life, a circumstance which was revealed to our saint.
Knobelsdorff died on September 16, 1753. Two days later the Berlinische Nachrichten reported, "On the 16th of this month the honorable gentleman, Mr. George Wentzel, Baron of Knobelsdorff, artistic director of all royal palaces, houses and gardens, director-in-chief of all construction in all provinces, as well as finance, war and domain councillor, departed this life after a prolonged illness in the 53rd year of his renowned existence." On September 18 he was buried in the vault of the German Church on Gendarmenmarkt. Four years later his friend Antoine Pesne was buried next to him.
Preached at Denham in Suffolke. At the celebration of the solemne and mournfull funerals of the right worshipfull Sir Edward Lewkenor Knight, and of the vertuous Ladie Susan, his wife, both at once. By M. Robert Pricke their beloued and faithfull minister: now also since that time (to the encrease of our sorow for the losse of so excellent a light) departed this life (For S.L. by Thomas Creede, London 1608). Edward the son erected an elaborate canopied table monument featuring painted stone carvings of Sir Edward, his wife and their eight children at prayer, within a chapel in the church recently built for that or another purpose.
Mural monument to Thomas Pollard (1681–1710), natural son of Sir Amyas Pollard, 3rd Baronet, Abbots Bickington Church, Devon, NE corner of chancel A newly re-painted mural monument exists to Thomas Pollard (1681–1710), in Abbots Bickington Church, Devon. On a rectangular panel with arched top between two Corinthian columns and below a broken classical pediment is the following inscription: Here under lyes ye body of Tho: Pollard ye son of Sr. Ames Pollard Bart. who departed this life Decem(be)r ye 9th 1710 ye 29th year of his age. He had to wife Sarah ye daughter of Jonathan Prideaux of Thu(borough) Esqr.
Benjamin Hafner, who departed this life in the spring of 1899, was at that time the oldest engineer - in point of service - in the United States. "Uncle Ben," as he was affectionately and familiarly known on the Erie, was born in Baden, Germany, on March 24, 1821, and came to the United States with his parents in 1832. His father was Valentine Hafner, one of Napoleon's soldiers, serving as a first lieutenant, and was in the march to Moscow. Mr. Hafner began railroading as a fireman in 1839, and in 1840 commenced running as engineer on the old slab-rail road between Baltimore and Cumberland, Maryland.
1 :A Chrystall Glasse for Christian Women. :Containing a most excellent Discourse of the Godly Life and Christian Death of Mistris Katherine Stubs, who departed this life in Burton upon Trent in Stafford-shire, the fourteenth of December. :With a most heavenly confession of the Christian Faith, which shee made a little before her departure, as also a most wonderfull combat betwixt Satan, and her Soule: worthy to be printed in letters of Gold, and to be engraven in the Table of everie Christian heart. :Set downe word for word as she spake, as neere as could bee gathered, by Philip Stubbes, Gent. :Revel.14.
135 Prince David had been arrested under a warrant issued in the name of his father the decrepit Robert III, by his uncle, Robert Stewart, Duke of Albany and Douglas. Both Albany and Douglas, were rumoured to have been the authors of any foul play suspected. This can be shewn by the fact that both men were summoned to appear before Parliament. However, on 16 March, both men were acquitted when Parliament passed an act stating that the Prince had: "departed this life through Divine Providence, and not otherwise", clearing both of High Treason, and any other crime, and strictly forbidding any of the King's subjects to make the slightest imputation on their fame.
Dr. Maguire died at Enniskillen, County Fermanagh on 23 December 1798 at the age of 77 and was succeeded as Bishop of Kilmore by Dr. Charles O'Reilly. Dr. Maguire was buried in the cemetery attached to the Church of Saint Molaise on Devinish Island in Loch Erne, County Fermanagh, beside the graves of his brothers Bryan and James Maguire. His gravestone, a massive horizontal slab close to the south wall of the church, is still visible and reads :Erected in memory of the :late Most Rev. Doctor Dennis Maguire :Catholic Bishop of Dromore :Who was translated to Kilmore :Who departed this life on the :23rd day of December in the year of :Our Lord 1798.
'" The Methodist funeral liturgy for non- Christians beseeches God to "look favorably ... upon those ... who scarcely knew your grace. ...Grant mercy also to those who have departed this life in ignorance or defiance of you. We plead for them in the spirit of him who prayed, 'Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.'" Likewise, the Church of England, mother Church of the Anglican Communion, has a prayer for the unlearned: "God of infinite mercy and justice, who has made man in thine own image, and hatest nothing thou hast made, we rejoice in thy love for all creation and commend all mankind to thee, that in them thy will be done.
Gertrude Curran died in 1792 at the age of 12 as the result of a fall from a window. Curran had her buried in the grounds of the Priory and over the grave he placed a recumbent slab, on which was fixed a metal plate bearing the inscription: :Here lies the body of Gertrude Curran :fourth daughter of John Philpot Curran :who departed this life October 6, 1792 :Age twelve years. The position of the grave was clearly marked on the early editions of the O.S. maps. It was about midway along the northern boundary of the corner field facing the fortification, on the north side of the boundary bank and a few yards from it.
Perhaps the most important of all are the Mahabharata manuscripts which represent a distinct recension of the great epic. These manuscripts were related a wide range of subjects: vedic literature, ancient epic poetry, classical Sanskrit Literature, and technical and scientific literature. He joined the service of East India Company in 1812 as Register of Zillah Court in South Malabar and rose up the judicial ladder to become finally a Criminal Judge at Cuddapah. Cuddapah Town Cemetery had a tomb in the name of C.M. Whish with the inscription "Sacred to the memory of C.M. Whish, Esquire of the Civil Service, who departed this life on the 14th April 1833, aged 38 years".
Richard Croshawe, of London, esq. sometyme Mr. of the Right Worshipful Companie of Goldsmiths and Deputie of Broad-Streete Ward, a man pious, and liberall to the poor, in the great plague 1625, neglecting his owne safetie aboade in the citie to provide for theire reliefe, did many pyous and charitable acts in his lifetime, and by his will left above £4000 to the mayntenance of lectures, reliefe of poore, and other pyous uses. Since his death his executors have added out of his estate £900. Hee dwelte and lyeth buried in the parrish of St. Bartholomew, by the Exchange, wheare he lived 31 years, and beinge 70 years old, departed this life the 2nd day of June, 1631.
There was formerly a meeting- house in this parish, with a cemetery belonging to the Quakers. The walled Quaker burial ground at near Treglines was used between 1665 and 1742 and twenty-eight burials are recorded.Kelly's Directory 1939 Description of St Minver, Cornwall P238 to 240 The ground contains no headstones - only trees. A small biographical tract was published in 1709, entitled A Brief Narration of the Life, Service, and Sufferings, of That Faithful Servant of Jesus Christ, John Peters; Who Departed This Life, in the 63d Year of His Age; On the 11th Day of the 7th Month, 1708, and was Buried in Friends Burying-Place at Minver in the County of Cornwall, the 13th of the same.
Martin was born at "The Wilderness", near Easton in Talbot County, Maryland in December 1780.A portion of the inscription on Martin's gravestone: ...Daniel Martin, who departed this life on the 11th day of July 1831, aged 50 years and 7 months... This would place his birth sometime in December 1780. He was the son of Nicholas and Hannah (Oldham) Martin, believed to have been a prominent merchant in Talbot County. Daniel entered St. John’s College in Annapolis in 1791, along with his brother Edward, but neither received his degree. Nicholas Martin died in 1807, and by his will, he left "The Wilderness" to Daniel. He married Mary Clare Maccubbin in Annapolis on February 6, 1816, and they had five children.
His second son, Edward, had an impressive altar tomb constructed for George Bromley and Joan Waverton, bearing their effigies. The epitaph he composed reads: :Sir George Bromley, Knight, Chiefi'e Justice of Chester, and of The Covncell in the Marches of Wales : a Jvst man and a Great professor of the Religion now established, departed this life the second of March 1588, Aged 63. The said Sir George Bromley and his younger Brother, Sir Thomas Bromley, Knight, Lord Chancelor of England, were the only sonnes of George Bromley, of Hawkstone, Esqvier, and of Jane, one of the Davghters of Sir Thomas Lakon, of Willey, Knight. :The vertuous matron, Dame Jane, wife to Sir George Bromley, Knight, Daughter and sole Heire of JOHN WANNERTON, of Hallon, Gent.
Colonel of the Royal East Devon Cavalry, who departed this life on the 30th November 1799 in the 42nd year of his age. He was endowed with brilliant and vigorous talents which were cultivated with great care and improvement in the colleges of Winton and Corpus Christi in Oxon. Impressed with a deep sense of loyalty for his sovereign and an ardent attachment to the constitution of his country he strictly maintained justice and peace and good order within the sphere of his influence and authority, in emulation of his great ancestor who in reward of his military services obtained an hereditary title for his family from the hands of King Charles the First. He excited his neighbours to the national defence against the dangers of a threatened invasion.
The record adds : "Be it noted that the said PRIOUR OF TYNMOUTH, hath given unto me, Norrey King of Arms of the North parties, this pedigre and armes of his awne reporte, which he woll offerme at all tymes to verefy and approve before the Kynge and his Counsaill, that this pedigre is true and the armes also." The next source dates from the late 17th Century - nearly two hundred years after Jasper Tudor's death. William Dugdale's Baronage of England (1675–6) states that Jasper Tudor "departed this Life ... leaving no other Issue than one Illegitimate Daughter, called Ellen/Helen, who became the Wife of William Gardner, Citizen of London"."Iasper of Hatfeild Earl of Pembroke and Duke of Bedford", in William Dugdale's Baronage of England (1675–6) vol iii p.
Before the civil war Burghall was schoolmaster at Bunbury, Cheshire, and was probably appointed to the post about 1632. cites: Burghall Diary, 12 May 1632, "Mr. Cole, schoolmaster of Bunbury, departed this life". The parish school at Bunbury, of which Burghall was master, was founded in 1594, and was endowed with "£20 per annum, one house and some land". cites Ormerod Cheshire, ii, 141. The vicar of Bunbury till the year 1629 was William Hinde, a celebrated puritan and biographer of John Bruen of Stapleford. In 1643, during the siege of Nantwich, Burghall says that his goods were seized and himself driven from his home by Colonel Marrow; he thereupon went to Haslington in Cheshire, "where he had a call", and tarried there from 1 May 1644 until 1646. cites: Burghall Diary for 18 March 1644.
Elizabeth Pain's gravestone in King's Chapel Burying Ground in Boston, Massachusetts Pain's grave is at King's Chapel Burying Ground in Boston, Massachusetts, and is engraved: > HERE LYES Ye BODY OF ELIZABETH PAIN WIFE TO SAMUEL PAIN AGED NEAR 52 YEARS, > DEPARTED THIS LIFE NOUEMBR Ye 26 1704 Pain's grave is in the same cemetery mentioned in The Scarlet Letter, which ends with a description of Hester Prynne's grave: > So said Hester Prynne, and glanced her sad eyes downward at the scarlet > letter. And, after many, many years, a new grave was delved, near an old and > sunken one, in that burial–ground beside which King’s Chapel has since been > built. It was near that old and sunken grave, yet with a space between, as > if the dust of the two sleepers had no right to mingle. Yet one tomb–stone > served for both.
Swyth's or St. Sithe's church, Cheap-ward under a fair marble tomb, with this inscription, "Here lyeth buried the right worshipful Sir Ralph Warren, knight, alderman, and twice Lord Mayor of London, mercer, Merchant of the Staple at Calais, with his two wives, dame Christian and dame Joan", and "Sir Ralph departed this life the 11th day of July, 1553".Noble p. 23. Mark Noble states that "he bore for his arms, or, a chevron engrailed sable 3 griffins heads erased of the 2nd"; but the visitation of Huntingdonshire, and Dr. Wright in his republication of Dr. Heylin's help to history, give azure on a chevron engrailed argent, between 3 lozenges, or, as many griffins heads erased of the field, on a chief cheeky of the 3d. and gules, a grey hound in full course, ermine collared of the 3d.
Deutsch (1965, 536–7). The obituary appeared in the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung, issue of July 25, 1827, and is likely to reflect a story told to the author by Schack himself. > On the very eve of his death, Mozart had the score of the Requiem brought to > his bed, and himself (it was two o'clock in the afternoon) sang the alto > part; Schack, the family friend, sang the soprano line, as he had always > previously done, Hofer, Mozart's brother-in-law, took the tenor, Gerl, later > a bass singer at the Mannheim Theater, the bass. They were at the first bars > of the Lacrimosa when Mozart began to weep bitterly, laid the score on one > side, and eleven hours later, at one o'clock in the morning (of 5 December > 1791, as is well known), departed this life.
The Chancery suits 'continued to appear from time to time, but Dame Ellen Briscoe, who seems to have been the most contentious member of the [Drake] family, was never satisfied; she bided her time until after the Restoration, when, Sir Henry Rosewell having departed this life, she revived the case against his widow, by applying to the House of Lords for an Act to enable her to have sold a part of the manor of Limington, of which Sir Henry Rosewell had been seized at the time of his death.' Dame Dorothy petitioned against this Act but was finally ordered by act of Parliament on 3 March 1663 to sell the manor of Limington to Francis Summers and James Tazewell. James Tazewell was the grandfather of William Tazewell, who emigrated to Virginia in 1715, and ancestor of Henry Tazewell. Dame Dorothy made her will at Holborn, London on 24 February 1676.
Sara Forbes Bonetta died of tuberculosis on 15 August 1880 in the city of Funchal, the capital of Madeira Island, a Portuguese island in the Atlantic ocean. Her husband, Captain Davies, erected a granite obelisk-shaped monument more than eight feet high in memory of Sara Forbes Bonetta at Ijon in Western Lagos, where he had started a cocoa farm. The inscription on the obelisk reads: > IN MEMORY OF PRINCESS SARAH FORBES BONETTA WIFE OF THE HON J.P.L. DAVIES WHO > DEPARTED THIS LIFE AT MADEIRA AUGUST 15TH 1880 AGED 37 YEARS Her grave is number 206 in the British Cemetery of Funchal near the Anglican Holy Trinity Church, Rua Quebra Costas Funchal, Madeira.Register of Burials, Church Archives, Holy Trinity Church, Funchal A plaque commemorating Forbes Bonetta was placed on Palm Cottage in 2016, as part of the television series Black and British: A Forgotten History.
He died at 34 Via Montebello, Florence, on 24 January 1876, and his will was proved on 21 March under £12,000. His tomb in Florence's English Cemetery carefully depicts his medals:armynavy Sir David Dumbreck K.C.B. Born in Aberdeenshire 1805 Inspector General of Army Hospitals and Honorary Physician to the Queen Served with Distinction in the Crimea Was Present at the Battles Of Alma Balaclava Inkermann and the of Sebastopol, for Which He Received the Crimea Medal With 4 Classes The Turkish Medal and the Knighthood of the Order of the Medjidie He Departed This Life at Florence Jan 24, 1876 Universally Regretted This Monument Has Been Erected to his Memory by His Sorrowing Widow Blessed Are the Dead Which Die in the Lord REV. XIV.15 F5C He is also memorialised at his parents grave in Warriston Cemetery in Edinburgh, close to the old east entrance.
The introduction of "Let us pray for the whole state of Christ's Church militant here in earth" remained unaltered and only a thanksgiving for those "departed this life in thy faith and fear" was inserted to introduce the petition that the congregation might be "given grace so to follow their good examples that with them we may be partakers of thy heavenly kingdom". Griffith Thomas commented that the retention of the words "militant here in earth" defines the scope of this petition: we pray for ourselves, we thank God for them, and adduces collateral evidence to this end. Secondly, an attempt was made to restore the Offertory. This was achieved by the insertion of the words "and oblations" into the prayer for the Church and the revision of the rubric so as to require the monetary offerings to be brought to the table (instead of being put in the poor box) and the bread and wine placed upon the table.
When they have finished their mourning and wailing, they sacrifice in the first place to Adonis, as to one who has departed this life: after this they allege that he is alive again, and exhibit his effigy to the sky." Also in the fertile valley surrounding the river, millions of scarlet anemones bloom. Known as Adonis' flowers, according to legend, they spring from his blood, spilled as he lay dying beneath the trees at Afqa, and return each year in remembrance. In his "Terminal Essay" in the 1885 translation of The Arabian Nights, Sir Richard Burton describes the temple at Afqa as a place of pilgrimage for the Metawali sect of Shia Islam, where vows are addressed to the Sayyidat al-Kabirah or "the Great Lady". In the early 20th century, strips of white cloth were still being attached to the ancient fig that shadows the source, and Metawalis and Christians alike were bringing the sick to be cured at "the abode of Sa’īdat Afkā, i.e.
About 1755 he married Susanna Barnard (1735-1789) and together they had nine children. In 1768 he bought the estate called The Rookery at Westcott in Surrey, previously the home of the economist Thomas Robert Malthus, and he and his wife lived there for the rest of their lives. In 1778, jointly with his brother William, he was executor of the will of his brother-in-law George Flower.The National Archives; Kew, England; Prerogative Court of Canterbury and Related Probate Jurisdictions: Will Registers; Class: PROB 11; Piece:1039 Hay Quire 47-92, p103 He died on 2 January 1782 and his will of 11 October 1781 was proved on 29 January 1782.The National Archives; Kew, England; Prerogative Court of Canterbury and Related Probate Jurisdictions: Will Registers; Class: PROB 11; Piece:1086 Gostling Quire 1-48 No 376 His memorial in the Independent Chapel at Dorking reads : ::« To the Memory of Richard Fuller Esq of the Rookery in this County who departed this life 2 January 1782 aged sixty nine years » Susanna survived him, dying on 11 April 1789.
Robert died on 2 July 1801. He departed this life as he had lived, in grand style. Accompanying the hearse were three divisions of the Ingatestone & Brentwood Volunteers, two companies of Pioneers, two Artillery field pieces and the band of the Royal Buckinghamshire Regiment together with thirty mutes and cloak men, Robert's tenants, two by two, the post-chaise and two carriages from the Thorndon stables, seven mourning coaches, each drawn by six horses, carrying members of the family, clergy and household and a host of outriders, grooms and other mourners. The Chelmsford Chronicle reported the funeral procession on Friday 10 July 1801 thus; > On Thursday Evening the 2d Inst died the Right Honble Lord Petre, Baron of > Writtle, in the County of Essex in the 60th year of his age – and yesterday > his remains were conveyed to the Family vault, at Ingatestone, for interment > attended by his numerous relatives, friends, and tenants, and accompanied by > the Corps of Volunteers and Pioneers, which he had raised and patronised in > the most zealous and liberal manner for the defence of his Country when > threatened by a foreign Invasion.
Among many other bequests, she left a goblet of silver and gilt and a ruby ring to her step-daughter, Lady Anne Grey, and a bed of crimson velvet to her granddaughter, Mary Jerningham. In her will she requested burial at Painswick with her second husband, Sir William Kingston, but was buried at Low Leyton, Essex, on 4 September 1548. Strype records the following verses commemorating her on a brass plate dating from 1557 on the south wall of the old chancel of the Church of St Mary at Low Leyton:Strype, John, A Survey of the Cities of London and Westminster, Appendix 1, Chapter 13, p. 115 Retrieved 26 May 2013. If you will the truth have, Here lieth in this grave, Directly under this stone, Good Lady Mary Kingston, Who departed this life, the truth to say, In the month of August, the twenty-fifth day, And as I do well remember, Was buried honourably the fourth day of September The year of Our Lord reckoned truly MVc forty and eight verily, Whose yearly obit and anniversary Is determined to be kept surely At the cost of her son, Sir Henry Jerningham, truly, Who was at this making Of the Queen’s Guard chief captain.

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