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  • Sept. 1, 1797
  • Page 71
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Sept. 1, 1797: Page 71

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    Article OBITUARY. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 71

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Obituary.

Mr . V . was remarkably chearful in his disposition ; his talents in conversation were of the lirst rate , his manners of the most insinuating kind ; his benevolence anient and extensive . With these accompaniments his piety became as engaging as it was sincere ; and the young and the careless were often

struck , in his company , with admiration of the benefit of religion , which diffused a glow of happiness and of good will to bis fellow-creatures , to which the vicious cannot but own themselves slrangers . Capt . John Eaton , who with the rank of master and commanderhad

, been appointed to the command of the Marlborough , provisionally , when Captain Nicolls was put on shore , in consequence of the mutiny . He arrived on the 3 d of July at the Admiralty , about eleven o ' clock , enquired for Earl Spencer , aud seemed to be extremely agitated . There were several

gentlemen waiting in the same room , and they conversed together for some time ; when Captain E . suddenly and uuperceived by any person , drew his hanger , and slabbed himself in the belly , repealing his thrust within two

inches of the first wound , and , before the weapon could be wrenched out of his hand , he wounded himself twice in the neck , and died in half an hour . He gave no explanation of thecause of this horrid act , but muttered some inarticulate sentences respecting the mutiny , and accused an officer of false

charges against him . The suicide was committed at the very moment when a commission , appointing him a post-captain , ivas making out , as a reward for his behaviour in the late insurrection . It was evident that an impression , which disordered his senses , had been made upon his mind by these shocking

disturbances . On the next day a coroner's inquest was held upon his body , when it appeared clearly from the evidence of Capt . Otighton and several others , that the deceased was in a state of insanity previous to the commission ofthe fatal act . Mr . W . Lj-nn of

Par-, surgeon , liament-street , deposed , that lie was called in just at the moment the deceased appeared to be dying from loss of blood , occasioned by his wont-its . On opening the body , he found several wounds , in none of which the-

instrument had penetrated deeply , exrent irl one , in which it had entered into the cavity of the belly , slig htly wounded the liver arid the gall-bladder , and let out tlie contents of it ; it then passed and scratched the colon , and I lien divided a branch ofthe superior mesenteric artery . He also found about two

quarts of blood in the cavity of the abdomen ; and entertained no doubt but that the wound was the cause of lus death . The jury brought in a verdict of Lunacy . Capt . E . was born m America , Jan . 7 . 170 S . His father was engaged in a commercial line , and quitted . England with a view of settling in that

country . The unhappy subject of this account entered into the navy , under tlie late Commodore Edward Thompson , during the American war , at which time ihe rest of his family returned 16 England . In 1790 he was promoted lo

tlie rank of lieutenant , and served in the present war as lieutenant of tlie Arethusa and the Aquilon . In the last frigate he was first-lieutenant in the action with the French fleet on the istof June , 1794 , when the Aquiloil was the signal frigate , and towed the Marlborough , then commanded by the

Hon . Capt . G . Berkeley , from between two French ships of war that were attacking her . From the representation made of his services by Capt . Stopford , who was captain ofthe Aquilon , he was promoted to a master and commander ; went out in the temporary command of the Marlboroughwhen she sailed

, with Lord Bridpovt on the last cruise ; and it is feared the intemperate and violent conduct of her crew excited an anxiety , and created a fatigue , by which his mind was totaly exhausted . He had risen entirely by his own professional merit . His mother is at this

time the mistress of a respectable boarding house at Margate . He was married , about six months ago , to the niece of a banker at Plymouth , with whom he acquired some property , and whom he left at Plymouth when he set off for London . His body was interredon the 7 thin a

, , vault under the church of St . Anne , Soho . It is unnecessary to add any tiling to what has been already said of his professional merit ; the uniform testimony of every man who has served with him , and the high rank he had attained in the service , considering

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-09-01, Page 71” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01091797/page/71/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO CORRESPONDENTS, &c. Article 3
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICE OF MR. WILLIAM WHITE. Article 4
ADDENDA TO THE MEMOIR OF MR. THOMAS HULL, Article 5
ON THE PECULIAR EXCELLENCIES OF HANDEL'S MUSIC. Article 6
HISTORY OF THE SCIENCES FOR 1797. Article 7
CURSORY REMARKS ON SHAKSPEARE'S MEASURE FOR MEASURE. Article 10
THE COLLECTOR. Article 12
THE LIFE AND ADVENTURES OF PETER PORCUPINE; Article 18
A BRIEF SYSTEM OF CONCHOLOGY. Article 22
DESCRIPTION OF THE PEAK OF TENERIFFE. Article 26
ACCOUNT OF A REMARKABLE SLEEP-WALKER. Article 30
THE FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 34
OPINIONS CONCERNING MASONRY. WITH THE CHARACTER OP A TRUE FREEMASON. Article 36
A CHARGE Article 37
A VINDICATION OF MASONRY. Article 40
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 41
GRAND LODGE OF SCOTLAND. Article 41
REVIEW OP NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 42
POETRY. Article 50
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 54
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 57
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 62
OBITUARY. Article 70
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 73
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Obituary.

Mr . V . was remarkably chearful in his disposition ; his talents in conversation were of the lirst rate , his manners of the most insinuating kind ; his benevolence anient and extensive . With these accompaniments his piety became as engaging as it was sincere ; and the young and the careless were often

struck , in his company , with admiration of the benefit of religion , which diffused a glow of happiness and of good will to bis fellow-creatures , to which the vicious cannot but own themselves slrangers . Capt . John Eaton , who with the rank of master and commanderhad

, been appointed to the command of the Marlborough , provisionally , when Captain Nicolls was put on shore , in consequence of the mutiny . He arrived on the 3 d of July at the Admiralty , about eleven o ' clock , enquired for Earl Spencer , aud seemed to be extremely agitated . There were several

gentlemen waiting in the same room , and they conversed together for some time ; when Captain E . suddenly and uuperceived by any person , drew his hanger , and slabbed himself in the belly , repealing his thrust within two

inches of the first wound , and , before the weapon could be wrenched out of his hand , he wounded himself twice in the neck , and died in half an hour . He gave no explanation of thecause of this horrid act , but muttered some inarticulate sentences respecting the mutiny , and accused an officer of false

charges against him . The suicide was committed at the very moment when a commission , appointing him a post-captain , ivas making out , as a reward for his behaviour in the late insurrection . It was evident that an impression , which disordered his senses , had been made upon his mind by these shocking

disturbances . On the next day a coroner's inquest was held upon his body , when it appeared clearly from the evidence of Capt . Otighton and several others , that the deceased was in a state of insanity previous to the commission ofthe fatal act . Mr . W . Lj-nn of

Par-, surgeon , liament-street , deposed , that lie was called in just at the moment the deceased appeared to be dying from loss of blood , occasioned by his wont-its . On opening the body , he found several wounds , in none of which the-

instrument had penetrated deeply , exrent irl one , in which it had entered into the cavity of the belly , slig htly wounded the liver arid the gall-bladder , and let out tlie contents of it ; it then passed and scratched the colon , and I lien divided a branch ofthe superior mesenteric artery . He also found about two

quarts of blood in the cavity of the abdomen ; and entertained no doubt but that the wound was the cause of lus death . The jury brought in a verdict of Lunacy . Capt . E . was born m America , Jan . 7 . 170 S . His father was engaged in a commercial line , and quitted . England with a view of settling in that

country . The unhappy subject of this account entered into the navy , under tlie late Commodore Edward Thompson , during the American war , at which time ihe rest of his family returned 16 England . In 1790 he was promoted lo

tlie rank of lieutenant , and served in the present war as lieutenant of tlie Arethusa and the Aquilon . In the last frigate he was first-lieutenant in the action with the French fleet on the istof June , 1794 , when the Aquiloil was the signal frigate , and towed the Marlborough , then commanded by the

Hon . Capt . G . Berkeley , from between two French ships of war that were attacking her . From the representation made of his services by Capt . Stopford , who was captain ofthe Aquilon , he was promoted to a master and commander ; went out in the temporary command of the Marlboroughwhen she sailed

, with Lord Bridpovt on the last cruise ; and it is feared the intemperate and violent conduct of her crew excited an anxiety , and created a fatigue , by which his mind was totaly exhausted . He had risen entirely by his own professional merit . His mother is at this

time the mistress of a respectable boarding house at Margate . He was married , about six months ago , to the niece of a banker at Plymouth , with whom he acquired some property , and whom he left at Plymouth when he set off for London . His body was interredon the 7 thin a

, , vault under the church of St . Anne , Soho . It is unnecessary to add any tiling to what has been already said of his professional merit ; the uniform testimony of every man who has served with him , and the high rank he had attained in the service , considering

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