Page:Royal Naval Biography Marshall v2p1.djvu/148

 the Mars of 74 guns, April 26, 1798. We find no mention of him since the latter period.

Agents.– Messrs. Cooke, Halford, and Son. 

 posted May 2, 1798; and died at Titchfield, Hants, Feb. 11, 1823. 

 officer is the representative of a very ancient and respectable family in Dorsetshire, descended from John Ryves, of Damory Court, near Blandford, Esq., one of whose grandsons, Bruno, was Chaplain to King Charles I. in 1628; and at the restoration became Chaplain in Ordinary to his son, by whom he was successively made Dean of Windsor, Secretary of the Most Noble Order of the Garter, and Rector of Haseley, in Oxfordshire, as a compensation for the losses he had sustained during the great rebellion, at the commencement of which he had been deprived of the livings of Stairwell, co. Middlesex, and St. Martin’s in the Vintry, London; his house was plundered; and himself obliged to fly from place to place, for refuge from the fury of the Presbyterians

