INCLEDON, CHARLES BENJAMIN (1 English singer, son of a doctor in Cornwall, was the principal English tenor of his day. He sang both in opera and in oratorio, but his chief popularity lay in his delivery of ballads, such as "Sally in our Alley," "Black-eyed Susan," "The Arethusa," and others of a similarly bold and manly type. On retiring in 1822 from the operatic stage, he travelled through the provinces with an entertainment called "The Wandering Melodist." He died at Worcester on Feb. II, 1826.