Chetwood had a daughter by an early marriage, Richabella, (fl. 1738–1771), who became an actress and married an Irish actor, Tobias Gemea. His second marriage, on 15 June 1738 at
St Benet's, Paul's Wharf, London, was to the actress Anne Brett (1720 – ), a granddaughter of
Colley Cibber. They had two daughters, both of whom died in early childhood in the 1740s. This second marriage may have contributed to severe financial difficulties by 1741, when a benefit performance of
William Congreve's
The Old Bachelor was given for him at
Covent Garden. A collection called
Five New Novels appeared in the same year. There are mentions of him working in Dublin in 1741 and 1744, and Belfast (with his daughter) in 1753. At the end of the decade there appeared his
General History of the Stage (1749), which includes valuable accounts of the contemporary London and Dublin theatre. Other efforts to make a living included
A Tour through Ireland (1748, with
Philip Luckombe) and a poem called ''Kilkenny, or, The Old Man's Wish
(1748). His British Theatre'' (1750) includes a list of
Shakespeare quartos, of which several are spurious. Chetwood died on 3 March 1766, probably in a
debtors' prison:
The Marshalsea, Dublin. ==Notes==