Lady Burrell and William Clay retired to West Cowes, Isle of Wight, where she died on 20 June 1802, aged about 52.
Domestic Monetary Policy and Technology- Chair: Ron Paul, Ranking: William Clay, Jr.
William Clay may refer to:
The whole affair dates back to the 1742 will of William Clay.
His father, William Clay, was an officer in the American Revolutionary War, who moved to Grainger County, Tennessee.
In 1794, he married Eliza Maria Clay, daughter of William Clay, but they had no children.
Sir William Clay, 1st Baronet (1791-1869)
He was the eldest of four children; there were two brothers, William Clay and the late Benson Ford, and a sister, Josephine.
The product was "rotten hot and rotten cold", according to his friend, William Clay He refunded the licensees' money and an additional £5,500.
William Clay is the grandson of Henry I and the brother of Henry II.