8.11.1803 miss Mellor & Smith dine / 22.11.1803 P(hebe) G(odwin) dines adv E Mellor / 15.12.1803 theatre, w. M(ary) J(ane), C(harles), J(ane), miss Mellor & M(arshall? or Mary?), Shylock, & Caravan / 26.12.1803 mrs Mellor & G(race) M(ary) C(ooper) dine / 23.1.1804 theatre with M(ary) J(ane), EM, M(arshall?) & children; Way to Keep Him, & Cinderella / 21.2.1804 M(arshall) dines: adv. Jo G(odwin). EM / 15.3.1804 Smith dines: theatre, w. Smith, M(ary) J(ane), EM & F(anny) / 5.7.1804 mrs Mellor calls (from sa fille) / 15.1.1806 EM calls
Phebe, Godwin's niece, was 15 in 1803, Fanny his stepdaughter was nearly 10 in March 1804, Charles Clairmont his stepson was 8 in 1803, Jane (Claire Clairmont) his stepdaughter was 5 in 1803, Mary his daughter was 6 in 1803 - where the M may have been her or James Marshall. Miss Mellor (and E Mellor) would have been 18 if she was Elizabeth Harriet Mellor who married Joseph Herring of Kensington at St Martin i t Fields 20.5.1809. If this was Joseph Herring of the Audit Office he died early in 1810 aged 27 (Morning Chronicle 27.2.1810). In 1817 Eliza Harriet Herring was plaintiff in a suit in Chancery against Joseph Herring and others. She was bapt at St Botolph Bishopsgate 1785 dau of Samuel and Catherine Mellor (nee Comerford) who were married at St George i t East in 1782, and she died 1868 age 83 Carisbrooke Isle of Wight. Her aunt Sarah married John Mason Neale (qv, and note the Hodges connection) in 1788 and her father Samuel of Princes St was buried at St Geo i t East age 41 in 1802. Mrs Mellor was perhaps the Catherine Mellor widow who married William Johnson bach at Stepney in 1824, when she would have been in her sixties. Mrs Herring's dau Josephine born Kensington about 1811 was still living with her mother in the 1851 and 1861 censuses at Carisbrooke. A Samuel Mellor was clerk to Willaim Clarkson of Doctors Commons in 1787 (Old Bailey Online). On 15.3.1804 Godwin didn't note the play, but at Drury Lane was The Soldier's Daughter, and The Counterfeit, and at Covent Garden, The Mourning Bride, and The Paragraph